Book Review: Deep Blues, by Robert Palmer

At the risk of coming across like a cliché–namely, a middle-aged white dude who’s really into the blues–I might as well lean into it, as I put this on my Xmas list for 2025.cover of book, Deep Blues

Sometimes I’m looking for The One Book That Will Explain The Thing I Want to Learn. This is often folly, especially when it comes to things relating to science, philosophy, psychology (and more!), but what I wanted was a way to piece together the myriad of the names I kept coming across in my listening and discovery of blues musicians; to put it into some sort of historical (and, ideally, geographical) context.

Robert Palmer’s Deep Blues does a pretty good job on all counts. It’s unique in that, published in the early 80s, it was written during a period when it was still possible to speak to many of the sources while they were among us, and it benefits from this perspective in ways that a similar book written today could not.

Palmer (no, not that Robert Palmer) begins with Muddy Waters cooling his heels at his home and reflecting on his success. It then goes back to the beginning, to the roots of how the Delta blues was formed. The author does a good job of providing not just a stateside perspective, but also draws parallels in how the fife and drum, and the holler-and-response style of music from the cotton fields of the Delta originated in West African song and instrumentation, such as the instrument that eventually became ubiquitous in the south, the banjo.

If there was an ur-Delta blues musician–someone who tied things together in an original way that hadn’t been done before–it was Charley Patton. I’m struck by the initial reaction to the first blues songs. I’m not talking from white folks, but from established Black performers such as Ma Rainey. The word most commonly used is weird. This is the value of good historical writing: informed perspective.

Because of the sweeping scope of the book inevitably there are parts that contain a roll-call of names that are almost impossible to register in a single reading, but if you have to start somewhere this is definitely it. Towards the end, deservedly given the rigor of Palmer’s journalism, there are touching moments such as the last days of harmonica player Sonny Boy Williamson (with added perspective from none other than The Band’s Robbie Robertson).

If there are any criticisms, there are two: the lack of women (hello, Sister Rosetta Tharpe) profiled, and most oddly the lack of perspective on race. The latter is a head-shaker. Palmer’s matter-of-fact prose seems to make it feel as if Black musicians just decided uniformly to move from the South to the North for economic reasons. Yes, he recounts the injustices Black people faced, but there’s no mention of Jim Crow and no mention of the Great Migration–these are not “woke” concepts but very real and pertinent things that a journalist at the time could have easily made room for a couple of paragraphs to include. Yes, there’s no such thing as The One Book That Will Explain The Thing I Want to Learn…but the lack of perspective on these two points do not help this age well.

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“After Work” by John & Sylvia Embry

Hi folks, I’m back from the break (and a bit of a vacation to boot). Today I was rummaging around She Said Boom on College Street for blues vinyl when I happened to come across the album After Work by John & Sylvia Embry. Something about it caught my attention and I managed to remember their name the next time I was at my laptop*. I did some research and listened to a couple of tracks and was really impressed. I find the Chicago blues scene to be intimidating…and geographically confusing (“Oh, that’s West Side blues” the fuck?), so I’ve been reticent to dive in. But hot damn is this some great stuff.

And yes, I’m buying that album.

* you might ask: why didn’t you take a photo w/ your phone or use your phone why didn’t you use your phone; this is because I hate looking like one of those people who use independently owned stores in order to do research for shit they end up buying on Amazon

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State of Music

At some point early this year I found myself sitting at one of my writing spots in Little Portugal and hearing a really good post-punk band, Ought (note: the album to hear is 2015’s Sun Coming Down). It was everything I liked, reminding me very much of one of my favourite post-punk bands, The Fall.

And I was sick of it.

I’d had enough. I’d heard too much. And so I’ve spent the year focusing intently on other types of music: ambient (which I’ve written about here), classical, Afro-funk, R&B, soul, you name it. Especially coming back from Memphis I rediscovered blues in all its forms (gospel, rockabilly, etc). What I like about blues — and there are many derivations of it so bear with me for the purposes of a blog post; let’s assume I’m talking 1950s John Lee Hooker — is its lack of pretence, its sparseness. There’s nothing wrong with pretence, don’t get me wrong, but what I’m realizing is that part of me has seen the need to get back to basics; a compelling repetitive motif communicated succinctly with next to no frills. I suppose I’d spent my life listening to so many artists inspired by early blues, gospel, soul, funk, and R&B that I needed to (re-)acquaint myself with the original source material.

There is something about the sound of John Lee Hooker pulling and snapping an E-string on a hollow-body guitar that brings music to its essence. That sound is the equivalent of Pete Townshend doing windmills, Karen O screaming with a microphone clasped between her teeth. Simple, primal, pure.

There are so many incredible developments in music production (listen to Kaytranada‘s 99.9%) and yet it’s easy to get lost in all the plug-ins and digital magic. Under no circumstances, unlike a certain Toronto jazz radio station’s tag line, am I suggesting that the lack of analog instruments denotes a lack of soul or legitimacy. As far as I’m concerned, an instrument is an instrument is an instrument. What I’m saying is that at some point I lost sight of the primacy of musical performance.

And lately I’ve realized (ironically while listening to an awesome track by the band Dry Cleaning, reminiscent of Broadcast) that post-punk is, well, dead. For now, at least. It’s spirit will always be alive but all of its chess moves have been laid bare, its finiteness made plain. This is subjective, of course. Anyone who hasn’t heard a lot of post-punk will enjoy years (if not decades) of fulfillment. But I feel that my time is up. And I’m not sure where I’m going next because I know my recent rediscovery of blues in particular can only go so long and so far.

Blues travels well as an art form, but, similar to theatre, it can be stifled in certain environments. Its strength is its fragility, but you can’t inorganically manufacture fragility, which is why most blues recordings don’t do anything for me. Like jazz, hearing blues live is best, but that’s assuming the trio or solo artist you’re seeing is in command of their art (or, say, isn’t just there for a quick paycheque). I guess what I’m saying is that I can see the end of this journey on the horizon (not that I’m not going to enjoy every highlight I can find; I’m currently learning Freddie King’s Hide Away on guitar, which is a great introduction to Texas blues).

I suppose the worst case scenario is that my playlists become even more disparately populated by genre than they currently are. To be fair, if I’ve done any mourning for my relationship with post-punk, I’ve expressed it within my next novel, Radioland, which I’m hoping will find a publisher in 2020. Sometimes writing a novel is a way to process change, and sometimes the novel itself sets me off on a fact- (or feeling-)finding mission to explore that change. Welcome to the artist’s life.

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