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Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Article Excerpt About A 2000 Reissue Of The 1978 Album "Afro-American Folk Music from Tate and Panola Counties, Mississippi"

Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part I of a two part pancocojams series about the 1978 Album "Afro-American Folk Music from Tate and Panola Counties, Mississippi".

This post presents excerpts of a 2001 article written by Fred McCormick  about Rounder record 2000 reissue of a 1978 Library of Congress album Afro-American Folk Music from Tate and Panola Counties, Mississippi. That booklet was edited by David Evans who recorded the music. David Evans was the person who recorded the music in that album. 

The Addendum to this post presents information about Blues musician/song writer Fred McDowell who is mentioned in that 2001 article.  

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2021/09/pdf-excerpt-of-preface-to-booklet-that.html for Part II of this pancocojams series. Part II presents excerpts from the sixty-four page booklet edited by David Evans. I accessed that booklet from a pdf whose link is given in that post.  The Addendum to that post provides a list of the titles for the music that is found on this record. 

I've presented the excerpt about this 1978 booklet first because it provides some explanations about the musicians and singers who are featured in that record as well as providing information and opinions about that music itself.

The content of this post is presented for historical, socio-cultural, and folkloric purposes.    

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to Fred McCormick and David Evans and all those who are mentioned in this excerpt.

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ARTICLE EXCERPT
 https://www.mustrad.org.uk/reviews/af_am_fm.htm "Afro-American Folk Music from Tate and Panola Counties, Mississippi" Library of Congress Archive of Folk Culture; Rounder CD1515
Fred McCormick - 9.3.01
"If ever a job was worth doing, it is Rounder’s Library of Congress LP re-issue programme.  If ever a job was worth doing well, Rounder are doing it.  At any rate, that goes for their revampings of those discs which the L of C brought out in the 1970s.  I cannot speak for the ones which originated in earlier decades, because until a big bag of money drops from the sky, my scratched and battered and utilitarian looking LP copies will have to suffice.  Whatever about that, this refurbishment of a 1978 original is neither scratched nor battered, and it certainly doesn’t look utilitarian.  The CD comes in a handsome slip case, which also holds a 64 page booklet.  As is pretty standard nowadays, it contains detailed and extensive notes together with some idiomatic photographs.  The principal essay and the song notes are as per the original booklet.  They are the work of the disc’s editor, David Evans, who has also supplied a new foreword, to bring the situation up to date.  I was gratified to learn, from this latter, that the traditions of Tate and Panola still have quite a bit of life in them.  If the music nowadays gets overrun with curiosity seekers, full well do I know the feeling, but perhaps it’s better that than nothing.

Unfortunately, a worthy endeavour does not always guarantee value for money.  … Presumably for reasons of saleability, the double CDs appear to have been slotted into a slightly cheaper price bracket.  …. Not for the first time with Rounder, I wonder at their habit of leaving original contents un-beefed up, thereby denying punters a playing time commensurate with their outlay.  Nevertheless, in a world where this kind of gear sells in minuscule quantities, we have to weigh hard economics and periodic poor sound quality against classic performances and historical importance.  Unfortunately, in this instance, the factors are imbalanced, and the imbalance is not skewed in favour of the buyer.  While the disc lasts a mere forty-three minutes and nine seconds, the performances, though worthy enough, do not have the startling impact of, say, Vera Hall Ward, or Aunt Molly Jackson, or Rebecca Tarwater.  For that matter, blues fans may wonder at the omission of Panola County’s favourite son, Fred McDowell.

That omission does not reflect any lack of admiration on the part of the editor.  Indeed, Evans’ praise of McDowell is nothing short of fulsome.  It’s possible that Evans never managed to record him, although I’d have thought that unlikely.  Alternatively, non-inclusion may simply reflect availability elsewhere.  However, I suspect that the main reason is one of editorial didacticism.  Evans takes as his text the local retention of an unusual array of African musical characteristics; plus an attendant panoply of unusual instruments.  Fred McDowell was neither local, being originally from Tennessee, nor did his music sound as close to his African forebears as some of the examples here.  I’d better say then, that my estimate of this performer, as just a notch or two down from God on good day, has little bearing on my present disappointment.  I am more concerned with the fact that the editor’s purpose has resulted in a rather tautological programme.

A word about the scope of the disc.  It is a survey of the hill country, just east of the more famous Mississippi Delta, which has been compiled from recordings made by David Evans in 1969 -71, together with three takes from Alan Lomax’s famous 1942 visit there.  Although the product claims to embrace the entire hill country, the recordings are mainly from the neighbourhood of Senatobia, Tate County.  I do not know if this makes the survey at all unrepresentative.  …For whatever reasons of history, the region preserved musical forms which were lost to other parts of the South.  Where the blues displaced older forms of music elsewhere, in Tate and Panola, those older forms continued to coalesce.

[…]

To be honest, my enjoyment of this kind of music is fairly small dose, and my opinion may not be replicated by every listener.  Also, we are dealing with an extremely common feature of hill country entertainment.  I wonder though, if its universality is sufficient to justify taking up around one third of the programme.  If it is, then listenability could have been much improved by spreading the examples around the disc.

[…]

Leaving these aids aside; David Evans has contributed extensive notes to the individual tracks, plus a foreword for the present release, plus a detailed descriptive ethnography.  I was glad to see that ethnography, because I was recently taken to task for daring to suggest that such things are desirable, or even that they should be a necessary part of editorial capability.  All I will say is that this one is so damned good, and sheds so much light on the music and the people of the area, that it should be required reading for anyone contemplating anything remotely similar.

More’s the pity, then, that the booklet does not try and explain those African retentions.  Nor does it say whether musical retention is paralleled by other forms of cultural retention.  The point is important because music does not develop or stagnate of its own volition.  It is an element of social culture, which changes in response to changes within all the other cultural elements.  Logically, then, where we find African performance styles in abundance, we should also find well preserved examples of other African cultural forms; dialect, for example, or folk tales.  We should also be able to identify some of the historical or sociological reasons for this apparent lack of musical change.

I do not normally consider myself a follower of origins theories, for they are typically non-empirical, un-utilitarian and subjective.  That is why they have been abandoned by most branches of social enquiry.  Yet I find that Evans’ argument intrigues me.  That is mainly because the music of Tate and Panola contrasts so sharply with most other regions of the American South.  Also, I’m presuming that his statement includes the various sea island communities of the eastern United States, where cultural and geographic isolation have left various forms of African folkways relatively intact….

But if isolation equals retention, how do we explain the fact that the hill country is on the mainland and centrally located?  The terrain does not seem all that hilly; it is well served by roads and railways; and it is fairly close to Memphis.  Nor do we find satisfactory explanations in present day population density, ethnic ratios, class structure, or economic activity.  The preface tells us that Tate and Panola counties, nowadays (ie. 1978) have black and white populations in roughly equal proportions.  Also, the local class/caste structure sounds no different to that of the rest of the South.  Moreover, the sharecropping system, a defining feature of inter-ethnic economic relations throughout Mississippi, is alive and at work in Tate and Panola. …

If the current situation offers little enlightenment, we ought to find a more approachable answer in the region’s economic history.  In engaging the past, though, we need to remember the catastrophic changes which the civil war wrought upon southern society, and accept that no single answer will straddle the martial divide.  We need to ask the same question for the anti and post bellum periods.

Let us take the earlier period first.  As with other aspects of Europeanisation, musical acculturation was a process deliberately entered into by the slave owners.10. Peter Kolchin, American Slavery 1619 - 1877, Penguin, London, 1995; Deena Epstein, Sinful Tunes and Spirituals, Illinois UP, Urbana, 1977.10  They systematically stripped the slaves of their African heritage, partly because they feared that the music might contain coded messages of rebellion, but also to satisfy the owners’ needs for musical entertainment.  It was normal practice for owners to train the more musically talented of their slaves in the accompaniment of ballroom and country dance.  That is an important feature of the development of black music in the American South.  It means that we have to think very carefully about the effects of acculturation, when we encounter an area which does not conform to the musical practices of the rest of the South.

This disc is proof, that at least some of the slaves of Tate and Panola provided entertainment for some of the slave owners.  I do not know how statistically reliable a sample this constitutes, but no less than fifty percent of the tracks show some signs of interaction with white folks.  Nowhere is this interaction more in evidence than with Sid Hemphill’s band.  Hemphill was the son of a musical slave, and his band relied heavily on white patronage.  However, the booklet gives no indication as to how many more bands like Hemphill’s there were.  Neither can we discern the proportion of the white population which used the slaves as servant musicians.  These questions seem important to me, because the extent of African retentionism ought to bear some relationship to the frequency of white patronage.  I’m wondering therefore, whether the poor quality of the land, and the consequent presumed poverty of many of its white inhabitants, inhibited the development of Negro generated, white oriented, entertainment systems in the area.  Was it an exception to what we know of slave acculturation patterns generally?

Despite my remarks, about the isolation of the sea islands, the rate and intensity of slave acculturation generally was less of a geographical phenomenon than one of economic organisation.  According to Peter Kolchin,11. Kolchin.  Ibid.11 it depended on a collocation of factors, not all of which are relevant to the present issue.  In very simple terms, though, large plantations required large labour forces.  The bigger the labour force, the more likely were its members to interact with each other, and to remain uninfluenced by the white population.  Therefore, large plantations made for slow rates of acculturation, and for slow abandonment of African folkways.  If Tate and Panola was a land of small, poor farrmers, we should expect it to be a place of rapid acculturation.  It clearly wasn’t, and the implication I am reaching for is that the poverty of the land made it an exception to the general rule.  Might there have been, in this part of Mississippi, a sizeable element of farmers who were too poor to afford the musical trappings of their more substantial neighbours?  Could it be that slave labour forces were typically too small to provide an identifiable element of musically able slaves?  Could it be that the farmers in Tate and Panola were often too poor to provide them with musical instruments?  Could it be in fact, that plantation dances, while not unknown, were less numerous there than elsewhere, and that the slave’s music was typically less interfered with as a result?

It would have been on the bigger estates where the prestigious balls and country dances were held.  Equally, it would have been the larger owners who had most to fear from slave rebellion, and where sheer imbalance of numbers left owners feeling most vulnerable.  On the other hand, where there were few large concentrations of slaves, it is possible that there was less need to suppress their ‘coded’ musical messages.

I have to stress that, for lack of hard evidence, any ideas I can offer are hunch, rather than hypothesis.  Moreover, what we have accumulated so far only takes us half way through the story.  That is because systematic musical acculturation took place before the civil war, not after.  Therefore, we need to explain what happened after the civil war, when different patterns of interaction and oppression emerged, to influence the music of black Americans.  We need to explain why, in Tate and Panola, certain patterns of music not only survived the convulsions of the civil war, but continued to survive into the present day.  And we need to explain why others have not.  On the one hand, musical forms, which appear identifiably African, are evident in abundance.  On the other, in many of those pieces of what were formerly white entertainment, we find the melodies reduced to mere fragments.  We find the melodies supporting the rhythms instead of the rhythms supporting the melodies.  The suggestion which Evans seems to draw from this is that white entertainment was a cultural aberration as far as the slaves were concerned.  They played it because they had no choice.  Therefore, the breakdown of white patronage was accompanied by a musical reversion to Africanism, in which these ‘white’ pieces became quasi-Africanised.  There seems to be quite a bit of mileage in that theory, and it would neatly explain the reversal of significance vis a vis melody and rhythm.  Unfortunately, it does not explain why this reversal was confined to the Mississippi hill country.  Why do we not find similar regressions in other parts of the American South?

However slender the evidence, it does not prevent us from making a prediction.  It is that the social forces, which gave rise to the blues in the Mississippi Delta, or Texas, or Tennessee or anywhere else, were either absent in Tate and Panola, or else were of comparative insignificance there.  The blues emerged, not during the slave era, and not as the direct result of African experience, but at the end of the nineteenth century.  The idiom bears a family resemblance to the field holler, but the one cannot be explained simply as an outgrowth of the other.  The blues is a psycho/musical consequence of the reassertion of white Southern authority, after the victorious Federal government had ceased to exert armed control over the South.  It is an expression of Negro social alienation; a black reaction to a white backlash.12. Paul Oliver, Songsters and Saints, Cambridge UP, Cambridge, 1984; Lomax, ibid; Dollard, ibid; Davis, Gardner and Gardner, Deep South: A Social Anthropological Study of Caste and Class, Chicago UP, 1941.  See also, my article, Cantometrics; Song and Social Culture, this publication.12  Therefore, if older musical forms survived in Tate and Panola, if there was indeed a reversion to African style performance patterns there, then the social history of the region must be different to the rest of the Deep South.  The implication of all this is that the white population of Tate and Panola had less reason to feel threatened by black emancipation, than did white people elsewhere; also, that anti-Negro pogroms must have been carried out less frequently there, and with less ferocity than in places where the blues took root.  I am not entirely sure why this should have been so.  However, I suspect that, as with pre-civil war acculturation, the root cause is the poverty of the land.  My suspicion is that, in the aftermath of the civil war, the area became a region of external migration for both races; that the resulting depopulation abated competition for land; and also led to an element of geographical segregation between the races.

A lack of population pressure may well have arisen from three directions.  Firstly, if poor soil had originally supported fewer slaves than the average, then a comparative lack of anti-Negro pogroms might in part be a simple function of numbers; fewer Negroes per head of the white population for the whites to feel threatened about.  Secondly, unproductive land encouraged many freed slaves to leave the area, and seek employment on the fertile alluvial soil of the Delta, thus further reducing the Negro population.  Finally, several years ago, I heard the singer Shirley Collins, who accompanied Alan Lomax on that famous Southern Journey field trip, talking about their recording work in the Mississippi hill country.13. Post civil war Negro depopulation of the hill country is touched on in Jeff Todd Titon, Early Downhome Blues: A Musical and Cultural Analysis, Chapel Hill, North Carolina UP, 1994.  Shirley Collins' comments were delivered as part of a lecture, America Over the Water, at the National Folk Festival, Sutton Bonington, Leicestershire, April 1998.13  She too made the point about the hill country being poor land, and said that the Negro population occupied the worst of it.  It was land which the white people had vacated.  They didn’t want it.  She was presumably quoting a personal impression, and one arrived at a long time ago.  Her statement therefore needs to be approached with a fair measure of scepticism.  However, it appears to make sense, because if black people could migrate to the Delta, then white people could do likewise.  The white people would have left land behind, and those black people who stayed in Tate and Panola would logically have been free to occupy the poorest parts of it.

Thus, if re-settlement produced an element of geographical segregation, then the Negro portion of the populace may have been comparatively untroubled by the terror which was going on over the rest of the South.  These arguments do not mean that the Tate and Panola Negro population never came into contact with white people.  Neither would they have avoided the racism, which was an endemic feature of life in the South.  Nor would they have avoided that matrix of social attitudes and behaviour patterns, which underscored the white population’s belief in its own ethnic superiority; and which was itself the legacy of black slavery and white southern civil war defeat.  However, the black population might have been spared some of the worst effects of that racism, and of those attitudes; the beatings, the lynchings, the cabin burnings, and the nocturnal visits by the Ku Klux Klan.

[…]

We close with two pieces, which are no less beguiling for their functionality.  They are Little Sally Walker, a children's game song from Nettie Mae and Aleneda Turner; and the lullaby, Go to Sleepy, Baby from Mary Mabeary.  Both songs are notable for their ubiquity.  They are as likely to exist in the mouths of white people as black, and for very much the same reasons.  At the end of the day, searches for racial roots in music finish up facing the same blank wall.  People do not make music because they are white or black, or because they inherited a particular gene pool or a particular set of cultural parameters.  They make music out of a need to express themselves, and the sounds they make enunciate their immediate social culture, not what went before.  For all the appalling treatment of black people by white Americans, their music is as much a part of America as Paul Bunyan and Johnny Appleseed.  It is not how much of their African heritage the slaves retained which should concern us.  It is how successive generations of black Americans melded that heritage, in the light of the racism and discrimination, and dehumanisation, which were facts of life in deep south America - anti or post bellum.

Against all that, we are better off for the existence of this CD, than if it had never seen the light of day.  Despite my objections, the history of black music in America is a long and muddled trail, and the researches of people like David Evans can only shed light on the problem.  Nor, it must be understood, is Evans’ work in confined to the search for Africanisms in Tate and Panola.  Among my more treasured possessions is a general survey of black rural religious singing, which he produced several years before the disc under consideration.  It is called Sorrow Come Pass Me Around, and in terms of superb it is completely off the scale.15. Sorrow Come Pass Me Around: A Survey of Black Rural Religious Music, Advent 2805.15  If nobody has had the foresight to re-issue that LP, and you happen to see it in some expensive second-hand vinyl catalogue, do not pause to worry about how you are going to raise the asking price.  Once you have the disc home and on your turntable, all qualms about the bank you so rashly decided to stick up, will be utterly dissipated.”

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ADDENDUM- INFORMATION ABOUT FRED MCDOWELL
This information about African American Bluesman Fred McDowell is presented because of this quote from the article excerpted in this post: "
blues fans may wonder at the omission of Panola County’s favourite son, Fred McDowell."...

From 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_Fred_McDowell
"Fred McDowell (January 12, 1906 – July 3, 1972),[1] known by his stage name Mississippi Fred McDowell, was an American hill country blues singer and guitar player.

Career

McDowell was born in Rossville, Tennessee, United States.[5] His parents were farmers, who both died while Fred was in his youth. He took up the guitar at the age of 14 and was soon playing for tips at dances around Rossville.[5] Seeking a change from plowing fields, he moved to Memphis in 1926, where he worked in the Buck-Eye feed mill, which processed cotton into oil and other products.[6] In 1928, he moved to Mississippi to pick cotton.[6] He finally settled in Como, Mississippi, in 1940 or 1941 (or maybe the late 1930s), where he worked as a full-time farmer for many years while continuing to play music on weekends at dances and picnics.[5]

After decades of playing for small local gatherings, McDowell was recorded in 1959 by roving folklore musicologist Alan Lomax and Shirley Collins,[5] on their Southern Journey field-recording trip.[7] With interest in blues and folk music rising in the United States at the time, McDowell's field recordings for Lomax caught the attention of blues aficionados and record producers, and within a couple of years, he had finally become a professional musician and recording artist in his own right.[5] His LPs proved quite popular, and he performed at festivals and clubs all over the world.[8]”…

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This concludes Part I of this pancocojams series on the preface to the booklet for the 1978 album Afro-American Folk Music from Tate and Panola Counties, Mississippi.

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