And They All Sang: Adventures of an Eclectic Disc Jockey Hardcover – September 6, 2005 by Studs Terkel (Author)
A half-century of previously unpublished interviews with legendary
musicians, in a brand-new book from America's foremost oral historian
"I'm
one of these people that thinks that everybody has certain gifts, you
know, when they're born…I used to play the guitar when I was ten, you
know. So I figured maybe my thing is playing the guitar, maybe that's my
little gift."—Bob Dylan, interviewed in 1963, from And They All Sang
Throughout
the second half of the twentieth century, Pulitzer Prize-winning oral
historian Studs Terkel hosted a legendary daily radio program on WFMT in
Chicago, presenting listeners with his inimitable take on a wide range
of music from classical opera to jazz, blues, gospel, folk, and rock.
His latest work of oral history shows us this completely different side
of Studs Terkel—that of a brilliant and far-ranging musicologist.
And They All Sang
features over forty conversations with some of the greatest musical
luminaries of the past century: rock icons Bob Dylan and Janis Joplin,
influential folk singer Pete Seeger, jazz geniuses Louis Armstrong and
Dizzy Gillespie, composers Aaron Copland and Leonard Bernstein,
classical musicians Andres Segovia and Ravi Shankar, legendary opera
divas Rosa Raisa and Edith Mason, and gospel giants Thomas A. Dorsey and
Mahalia Jackson.
Transcending genres and generations, Studs Terkel goes behind the music and doesn't miss a beat.
Musicians
featured include: Marian Anderson, Louis Armstrong, Leonard Bernstein,
Aaron Copland, Bob Dylan, Dizzy Gillespie, Woody Guthrie, Mahalia
Jackson, Janis Joplin, Keith Jarrett, Alan Lomax, Catherine Malfitano,
Jean Ritchie, Pete Seeger, Ravi Shankar, Richard Tucker.
In the fall of 1945, a month after WWII ended, the great author, historian, and broadcasting pioneer Studs Terkel (May 16, 1912–October 31, 2008) began hosting an hourlong weekly radio program called The Wax Museum.
Well before the phrase “disc jockey” entered the vernacular, he became
one. Over the months that followed, his initially tiny audience not only
grew but, to Terkel’s own surprise, transcended the usual boundary of
public radio listeners — he soon began receiving fan mail from
steelworkers and truck drivers and waitresses, people touched by his
sincere love of music and the generosity with which he shared it. For
forty-five years, Terkel filled the airwaves with an uncommon and
enchanting mix of oral histories celebrating these ordinary people and
interviews with some of the greatest musicians of the twentieth century.
Terkel’s previously unpublished interviews are collected in And They All Sang: Adventures of an Eclectic Disc Jockey (public library)
— a trove of lively and insightful conversations with such legendary
musicians as Louis Armstrong, Bob Dylan, Leonard Bernstein, and Woody
Guthrie. Among them is a 1968 interview with 25-year-old Janis Joplin,
who had made her debut only a year earlier and had already established
herself as, in Terkel’s words, “the most popular of all the young white
blues singers of the late sixties.” Janis Joplin in 1969
Terkel recounts:
At the time we spoke, I had slight reservations about her
as a singer of blues, but nonetheless, seeing her on the stage, the
powerful animal quality that she had obviously registered with the young
came through.
The conversation begins with Joplin’s influences, among whom were the
gospel legends Mahalia Jackson and Big Mama Thornton. But no one shaped
her sensibility more palpably than Bessie Smith. Joplin tells Terkel:
I just fell in love with her. You know how kids listen to
radio and all. I never listened to radio, I didn’t never get into that
rock-and-roll trip. I just listened to blues. It seemed real. The other
stuff seemed so tacky, teenagey. It didn’t seem to have any truth in it
or something. From the first moment I ever heard it that was my music.
When Terkel probes about legendary musician and civil rights activist
Josh White’s incendiary assertion that no white person can sing the
blues, Joplin pushes back against the limiting notion that any art form
can stake its integrity on a premise of exclusion:
Even a housewife in Nebraska can sing the blues. Anybody
can sing the blues. Well, I don’t know whether they can sing them or
not, but they can feel them. All you gotta do is have a throat, the
throat’s the difference. Everybody’s got feelings inside of them. It’s
just the faculty of being able to transform it into music. I mean,
everybody’s got ’em. [Shouts] Everybody’s got ’em, Mama got
’em, Papa got ’em, everybody’s got ’em! Everybody’s got those things,
they’ve just got to know what to do with it. You either repress it or
you use it. Sort of. I feel better after singing, yeah.
In reflecting on her parents’ response to her art, Joplin exposes the
seemingly small lacerations of the soul that add up to profound
personal tragedy. She tells Terkel:
[My father] said he likes Bach. He said he couldn’t get
into [my music]. He said, “I’m sure that you’re doing something up there
that’s good, Janis. The kids all seem to like it, but I couldn’t really
get behind it.” Which is fine, that’s generous. He could say it was
bad. My mother says, “Why do you have to sing so loud?” She says, “You
have such a pretty voice, Janis.” She doesn’t understand.
Here, Terkel’s own genius as an explorer of the human experience shines through. “Prettiness,” he sighs. “For years we think of the young girl and pretty songs.”
Joplin, surprised by the insight with which he names something with
which she herself had inarticulably grappled, responds with what is
essentially a summation of her credo and a lamentably timely account of
mainstream pop culture to this day:
No one’s ever brought that up before. I think that’s a
really valid point. Like most chick singers, like any female, they’re
very ladylike in their conduct. That’s why I think they don’t think they
can sing the blues, you know what I mean? I don’t mean to sound trite.
But, I mean, you can’t sing the blues and have your hair bleached
platinum blond and look like a cheerleader. I mean, you gotta have
something else going. You gotta be able to act a little, feel a little,
think a little, guts. And so most chicks don’t do that. I don’t think
American girls want to be any other way than that. Like I got a sister
that’s just exactly like that. And she doesn’t want to be any other way.
Which is fine, it’s fine for her. It’s just not fine for me. I gotta do
my own thing and that’s the way I turned out.
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου