Saturday, April 12, 2014

The Ballad of Geeshie and Elvie

A rare recording of “Motherless Child Blues,” owned by the collector Richard Nevins.


In the world of early-20th-century African-American music and people obsessed by it, who can appear from one angle like a clique of pale and misanthropic scholar-gatherers and from another like a sizable chunk of the human population, there exist no ghosts more vexing than a couple of women identified on three ultrarare records made in 1930 and ’31 as Elvie Thomas and Geeshie Wiley. There are musicians as obscure as Wiley and Thomas, and musicians as great, but in none does the Venn diagram of greatness and lostness reveal such vast and bewildering co-extent. In the spring of 1930, in a damp and dimly lit studio, in a small Wisconsin village on the western shore of Lake Michigan, the duo recorded a batch of songs that for more than half a century have been numbered among the masterpieces of prewar American music, in particular two, Elvie’s “Motherless Child Blues” and Geeshie’s “Last Kind Words Blues,” twin Alps of their tiny oeuvre, inspiring essays and novels and films and cover versions, a classical arrangement.
So begins an article by John Jeremiah Sullivan that held me from beginning to end. Over the years ethnomusicologists had uncovered little about these two women. Sullivan set out to see what he could find and his journey is a fascinating one.

Much more at  NYTimes.com

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