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You can't talk
about blues music for very long without hearing the name "Robert
Johnson." While a real blues musician in the Delta region during
his short, 27 year life, Robert Johnson influenced virtually every
rock-n-roller and blues player with his songs, "Sweet Home Chicago",
"Love in Vain", "Rambling on My Mind" and "Stop Breaking
Down."
You don't think
you've been influenced by Robert Johnson? Hmmm. Check
this out: Eric Clapton covered "Crossroads" and made it into
what we call today a "classic rock song." Eric Clapton said of
Johnson's blues playing and singing, "I have never found anything
more deeply soulful than Robert Johnson." Want some words from
another authority on rock and roll? Keith Richards of the
Rolling Stones observed after listening to Robert Johnson's complete
set of recordings on Columbia Records, "You want to know how good
the blues can get? Well, this is
it."
Robert Johnson's life
sounds like an ancient Delta blues song, born poor, taught to
play the guitar by blues legends like Son House, became an itinerant
musician, drifting from town to town, bar to bar, playing show after
show, but he was more than that. His guitar
technique included complex chords, slide guitar playing up and
down the strings, and walking bass notes patterned after boogie
piano playing style. These traits led him into what's now
considered an American musical legend--that Robert Johnson sold his
soul to the Devil down at a Delta crossroads for his
blues playing guitar skills! This song, memorialized in his
song, "Crossroads Blues", was electrified by Eric Clapton in
his rendition of it known as "Crossroads".
- If you click here, on the Memphis Guide web
site, a short clip from "Crossroads Blues" gives you a sense
of Robert Johnson's music.
- After you hear that
clip, click here on the Barnes & Noble
web site to check out a clip from Eric Clapton's version of
"Crossroads". You have to be tone deaf not to notice the
Robert Johnson influence on Eric Clapton!
Of course, Robert
Johnson's life ended like a mythical blues song--in
tragedy. In 1938, at a juke joint called "Three
Forks", Robert Johnson played a little too close to the razor edge
of life, infuriating some husband at his attention to the man's
wife. Some hours later, a flask of poisoned whiskey was
passed to Johnson who unwittingly drank it. Three days later,
on August 16, 1938, Robert Johnson passed away from the poison and
joined the Great Blues Band in the Sky.
In 1998, on what I
call my "blues history tour", I visited several places relative to
Robert Johnson's life and passing, namely, Dockery
Plantation where he visited at times learned
some guitar tricks, the famous Crossroads of Highway 49
and 61 in Crackled, the Robert Johnson Memorial Monument and
and Robert Johnson's Tombstone. Here are a few pictures
from some of those sites.
Here's the memorial
monument erected after the Robert Johnson complete recordings set on
Columbia records turned out to be a mega-hit in the early
1990s. Columbia Records donated a ton of money to this
monument and paying the debt of Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church
in whose Morgan City, MS cemetery the stone was erected.
(Notice how the ground is sinking which is so typical in the Delta
region. The picture on the stone is the same one that's often
seen of Robert Johnson with the cigarette in his
mouth.)
A little farther up the
Highway 7 is the Robert Johnson Tombstone lays on what is reported
to be his grave in the cemetery of the Payne Chapel Missionary
Baptist Church on Highway 512 West in Quito, MS. Drive fast
and you'll breeze right by this place--it looks abandoned!
And yes, I held true to
tradition--I played Eric Clapton's version of Johnson's "Crossroads"
as I left--after dropping some pennies on his gravestone!
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