Rory Block, Keepin' Outta Trouble: A Tribute to Bukka White (Stony Plain, 2016) Though not as celebrated as Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf, Booker T. Washington ("Bukka") White (1906-1977) lays claim to comparable distinction as an intensely focused performer who gives voice to Mississippi blues of a profound order of magnitude. He is also the composer of dramatic blues narratives -- in which it is possible to detect the influence of ballad traditions -- often lifted from his life history. These almost explosive songs are spun out of White's years as a hobo criss-crossing the South and as a prisoner confined at the notorious Parchman Farm. Besides the scenes of travel and conflict set in the larger world, White confronts the extremes of the dark private experiences of depression and death. His instrument is a National Steel guitar with bottleneck and thumping rhythm, voice and instrument almost supernaturally attuned. All the potential of country blues as an art form is met and amplified in Bukka White's music.
Formidable in her own right, Rory Block is a child, in close to the literal sense, of the 1960s folk revival. Not a Greenwich Village pilgrim but a native resident, she became acquainted with most of its leading figures before embarking on a long career of her own. Attracted in particular to rural folk-blues, she had plenty of opportunities to observe the masters, who were showing up in the flesh after decades as ghosts on antique 78s, as they played for a new, enthralled audience. Keepin' Outta Trouble is the sixth in what she calls her Mentor Series. I have reviewed all but one in this space (most recently Hard Luck Child, devoted to the music of Skip James, on 15 November 2014).
Keepin' and its companions are pretty remarkable. Even superior musicians struggle with music from another time and place, from a life experience far from their own. On her current project Block captures, if not the precise sound, certainly the wild exuberance that renders White's work so instantly recognizable. Only five of the 10 cuts, however, are his originals. The other half are Block-penned tunes about the man's life, at least those parts of it not documented in his autobiographical blues. "Gonna Be Some Walkin' Done" borrows a line from White's 1937 "Pinebluff, Arkansas" and fashions a whole song around it. The title number relates the circumstances under which White left Parchman as an acclaimed bluesman. Lead Belly, we learn, wasn't alone in charming governors. Block's acoustic guitar, augmented with slide, is accompanied by assorted homey oddities such as a Quaker Oats box. Her recording led me back to White's, and I've spent the past two or three weeks alternating between hers and his, without for a second giving thought to the proposition, absurd on its face, that Block's might be redundant. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 3 December 2016 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |