Samuel Charters, who
has died aged 85, was a music historian and producer hugely
influential in the revival of the blues, and the promotion of the
vast range of music generated by the African diaspora. His 1959
book, The Country Blues, and the companion record he produced, turned
a spotlight on performers like Robert Johnson, Son House, Skip James,
and Bukka White, moving beyond earlier field recordings by Alan
Lomax, or Harry Smith's famed Smithsonian anthologies of American
folk music. The historian Saul Wilentz called it 'a touchstone at
once captivating and mysterious'. Almost immediately, folk musicians
like Bob Dylan were covering songs from The Country Blues. Then, when
Charters in 1965 produced for Vanguard records the three-LP set
Chicago: The Blues Today, its barewire electric blues by the likes of
Johnny Shines, Otis Rush, and Buddy Guy was imitated by dozens of
rock n roll bands.
Charters' approach
to the blues was at heart literary. He once explained he 'got bored
with all those damn guitar solos, all sounding like BB King. What I
really wanted to hear was great text.' He was hearing the depths of
the story of black people in America, and his pursuit of what he
heard took him to four continents, and the magnificent study/memoir
Roots Of The Blues: An African Search (1981).
He was drawn to the
blues at a young age. Samuel Barclay Charters IV was born 1 August
1929 in Pittsburgh, where his family played and listened to an
eclectic mix of jazz and modern classical music. He was eight when he
was captivated by Bessie Smith singing 'Nobody Knows You When You're
Down and Out'. Playing clarinet, he had his first jazz band when he
was 13. When he was 15 the family moved to Sacramento California; he
finished junior college there, and served in the army. Meanwhile he
was collecting records and making the connections between jazz and
the blues. After the break-up of a short-lived marriage, in 1951 he
moved to New Orleans, immersing himself in jazz while chasing the
history of blues legends like Johnson while field recording
traditional bluesmen he found on his travels.
He also earned a
degree in economics at the University of California, Berkeley, where
he met Ann Danberg, a literature student who became his partner in
research and writing, and in 1959 his wife. In 1958 they traveled to
the Bahamian island of Andros to record the guitarist Joseph Spence;
the trip would be the basis of his moving memoir The Day Is So Long
And The Wages So Small (1999).
Moving to New York,
Charters was central to the Greenwich Village scene. He played in jug
bands with Dave Van Ronk and Danny Kalb, who co-founded the Blues
Project band, and published a remarkable series of blues books,
intended, he said, to draw more people into the field where huge
amounts of research remained to be done. He worked on jazz and blues
for Prestige records and back in California produced the rock band
Country Joe And The Fish, as their music moved from bluesy folk to
psychedelic protest.
Ann Charters became
a leading scholar of the Beat movement, whose affinities with jazz were obvious; she wrote the first biography
of Jack Kerouac and an influential early study of Charles Olson.
Their shared interests were reflected when she provided the photos
for Sam's 1963 book, The Poetry Of The Blues and when Sam edited an
important early anthology of modern American 'underground' poetry: Some
Poems-Poets (1971). Their writing collaborations included the
textbook Literature And Its Writers, and I Love (1979), a joint
biography of the Russian poet Vladimir Mayakovsky and the famed
modernist muse Lili Brik. In 2010 they published Brother-Souls,
another joint biography, this one of Kerouac and John Clellon Holmes; Charters
was hospitalised twice by stress during the writing. He said, 'you
are really on edge; you are always exposed when you are writing.'
Both Charters were
involved in the Civil Rights movement and became early opponents of
the Vietnam war; Sam had put Junior Wells' 'Vietcong Blues' on that
1965 Chicago record. In 1970, they moved to Sweden, where he produced
for Sonet Records, eventually splitting time between Stockholm and
the University of Connecticut, where Ann taught. He was an early
translator of the 2011 Nobel laureate Tomas Transtromer's poetry,
including his seminal collection Baltics (1974).
His fiction,
encouraged by the London publisher Marion Boyars, often drew on
music. Jelly Roll Morton's Last Night At The Jungle Inn (1984) was an
imaginary memoir, while Elvis Presley Calls His Mother After the Ed
Sullivan Show (1992) is an almost Kerouac-like monologue. Lousiana
Black (1986) is a moving story of a man who is radicalised after
seeing a photo of his own father being lynched. Charters' essays are
collected in A Language Of Song and Walking A Blues Road; a selected
poems, What Paths What Journeys was published earlier this year.
Songs Of Sorrows, a biography of Lucy McKim Garrison, who collected
the first book of slave songs, will be published in April 2015. 'My work
is about fighting racism,' he once said. '.. by introducing music I
can have somebody look across the racial divide and see a black face
and see this person as a human being...that's why my work is
unashamedly romantic.'
Charters died 18
March 2015 in Arsta, Sweden, from bone-marrow cancer. He is survived
by Ann, their two daughters, and his son Samuel Barclay V by his first marriage.
1 comment :
Dear Michael
As an old friend of Sam’s I just wanted to say thanks for posting your uncut version of an excellent obit.
Best, Martin Colyer
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