Charley Patton: Voice of the Mississippi Delta (American Made Music Series)

Charley Patton: Voice of the Mississippi Delta (American Made Music Series)

by WilliamFerris (Foreword), RobertSacre (Editor)

Synopsis


Contributions by Luther Allison, John Broven, Daniel Droixhe, David Evans, William Ferris, Jim O'Neal, Mike Rowe, Robert Sacre, Arnold Shaw, and Dick Shurman
Fifty years after Charley Patton's death in 1934, a team of blues experts gathered five thousand miles from Dockery Farms at the University of Liege in Belgium to honor the life and music of the most influential artist of the Mississippi Delta blues. This volume brings together essays from that international symposium on Charley Patton and Mississippi blues traditions, influences, and comparisons. Originally published by Presses Universitaires de Liege in Belgium, this collection has been revised and updated with a new foreword by William Ferris, new images added, and some essays translated into English for the first time.
Patton's personal life and his recorded music bear witness to how he endured and prevailed in his struggle as a black man during the early twentieth century. Within this volume, that story offers hope and wonder. Organized in two parts-- Origins and Traditions and Comparison with Other Regional Styles and Mutual Influence --the essays create an invaluable resource on the life and music of this early master. Written by a distinguished group of scholars, these pieces secure the legacy of Charley Patton as the fountainhead of Mississippi Delta blues.

$124.18

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 256
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
Published: 30 May 2018

ISBN 10: 1496816137
ISBN 13: 9781496816139

Media Reviews

On the fiftieth anniversary of Charley Patton's death, a distinguished group of blues scholars gathered in Li ge, Belgium, at a conference organized by Robert Sacr , to discuss Patton's life and work and his importance in the history and evolution of the blues. Three years later, the conference papers were published in a no-frills, limited edition of two hundred copies, which quickly became an elusive and much sought-after collector's item. This updated and amended reprint, which is enhanced by the inclusion of unpublished photographs from the archives of David Evans, makes these important essays on Charley Patton generally available for the first time.
--Guido van Rijn, author of Roosevelt's Blues: African-American Blues and Gospel Songs on FDR and Kennedy's Blues: African-American Blues and Gospel Songs on JFK, both published by University Press of Mississippi
Author Bio
Robert Sacre, Liege, Belgium, worked in Africa in the 1960s and '70s, where he took an interest in Western African music and the roots of African American music. Since 1983, he has taught the Story of African American Music & Literature at the University of Liege. He has conducted field trips nearly every year since 1975 to the US, researching blues, R&B, black gospel, and folk styles. He is author of articles in journals of musicology, entries in blues and gospel encyclopedias, and books for many publishers in America and abroad.