“I said I’m sitting here watching matchbox
hole in my clothes.” – Opening verse of Beatles’ “Matchbox”
In 1964 the Beatles took America by storm on
the basis of some catchy original songs and a scattering of ‘50s rock ’n roll retreads
like “Matchbox.” In quick succession they were followed by bands
like the Rolling Stones, the Who, the Animals, Them, the Yardbirds,
Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd. What would become known as the “British
Invasion” changed the face of American – and world – pop music
forever.
What got lost between the lines was that the white British Invasion
was fueled by black American blues.
“Matchbox” is a good case in point because the Fab Four said
they learned it off the 1957 Dance Album by rockabilly pioneer,
Carl Perkins. Carl didn’t say where he picked it up, but he readily
admitted that “I just speeded up some of the slow blues licks” for
his seminal rock guitar style. He is also given writer’s credit
for “Matchbox.”
“Matchbox” was written and recorded by blues legend Blind Lemon
Jefferson in 1927.
The Beatles were not alone in their usurpation
of African American blues. The Rolling Stones took their name
from a song by blues
icon Muddy Waters and patterned their band after the Waters band. Many
of their “original” hits were direct lifts from older blues recordings. “Whole
Lotta Love,” Led Zeppelin’s only Top10 single, was a close copy
of an earlier song by bluesman Willie Dixon. Dixon heard the song
15 years later, sued and won a rare settlement. Many British rock
bands did wholesale appropriations of blues compositions, arrangements,
lyrics, bass lines, and guitar solos, and directly mimicked vocal
styles and intonations much like their white counterparts in the
19th Century minstrel shows.
All of a sudden, the rock world was awash with
English, Scottish and Irish singers who sounded like Ray Charles,
Sonny Boy Williamson
and Elmore James – modern reincarnations of Eddie Cantor without
the blackface makeup. However, it’s a misrepresentation of the
truth to point a disapproving finger overseas. The Brit rockers
were only following a long time American musical tradition of white
musicians and white-owned recording and publishing companies appropriating
African American blues for popular and lucrative use in the white
entertainment world.
The blues can rightfully be called the fountainhead
of 20th Century pop music, out of which flowed jazz, swing, bop,
rock, and – yes – country
and western. It was born in Africa, nourished in the wretchedness
of slavery and raised in the cauldron of segregation. It is a
unique music of an oppressed and unbeaten people, unique because
of its honesty, dignity and defiance, and its ultimate 12 bar truth.
The blues is also unique because none of its
creators reaped any of the incredible financial payoffs it generated. From
the beginning, wads of money flowed not to the community from
which the blues
emerged, but to the looters who ran away with it.
Muddy Waters wrote famously that “blues had a baby and they named
it rock and roll,” but blues also had two older children named
jazz and country music. The extraordinary relationship of blues
and jazz has been the subject of many worthy dissertations. The
fact that American country music has always been one of the most
financially-rewarding arenas for blues-based music is not very
well known.
Jimmie Rodgers is known as the “Father of Country Music,” but
this title is based not only on his incredible impact on generations
of performers but also on his sales of millions of blues-laced
records of the late 1920’s, like “Muleskinner Blues” and “Blue
Yodel #2.” How did the white Rodgers, whose musical tradition
was comprised of modal jigs and reels, morph into a blues lyricist
and singer? Easy: when he was not working on the railroad as a
young man, he worked in blackface and black minstrel shows with
Frank Stokes, a black singer from whom Rodgers is thought to have
acquired much of his song repertoire. However, Stokes’ name does
not appear on any of the multitude of copyrighted songs claimed
by Rodgers, nor did Stokes share in the recording and publishing
windfall.
One of the female pillars of country music
is “Mother” Maybelle
Carter of the Carter Family, the “First Family of Country Music.” Her
guitar style, with its thumb lead and hammer-ons, continues to
influence country and folk musicians today. Maybelle learned that
unique “scratch” guitar style from Lesley Riddle, an African American
guitarist who accompanied her cousin A.P. Carter on his song gathering
expeditions in the mountains. Also, while A.P. wrote down the
lyrics, Riddle hooked the melody. Riddle’s name doesn’t appear
in the credits.
Bluegrass is regarded as Bill Monroe’s creation, but Dennis Deasy,
the late San Francisco musicologist, argued that all Monroe did
was inject the blues scale and 12 bar format into Scots-Irish hoedown
music. He believed that it should more rightfully be called “Blues
grass.” It is also worth noting that the featured instrument in
Bluegrass, the banjo, came from Africa.
Sometimes the thievery is so outrageous that
it boggles the mind. Leon
McAuliffe was the signature steel guitar player of Bob Wills and
the Texas Playboys and his trademark tune was “Steel Guitar Rag.” When
a young Sonny Rhodes – who was helping set up equipment on stage – asked
McAuliffe how he could learn to play the steel, McAuliffe replied
that the steel “was a white man’s instrument, and no n-----r could
ever learn to play it.”
McAuliffe claimed authorship – and, of course, the royalties – for “Steel
Guitar Rag.” The truth is that he stole it from “Guitar Rag,” a
1923 recording by black blues guitarist Sylvester Weaver. In fact,
it has been recently established that playing a stringed instrument
by sliding a piece of steel on it can be traced to Central and
West Africa. Like the banjo, African slaves brought the concept
of playing steel to America.
In the early 1950’s, Sam Phillips, the genius behind genre-bending
Sun Records, reportedly said “if I could only find a white boy
who could sing like a Negro, I could make a million dollars.” Ultimately,
he found that white boy and that white boy began cutting blues
sides written by Big Boy Crudup, Roy Brown, Little Junior Parker,
and Kokomo Arnold. That white boy’s name was Elvis Presley.
These are just a few examples of the extent
of the cultural theft of African American music. The beat goes on with continuing CD
sales, blues festivals, blues documentaries, t-shirts, posters
and even a sizeable internet market of instruction videos like “How
To Play Guitar Like Blind Blake.”
The money made on record sales alone is formidable. The record
company makes money; the publishing company makes money; the recording
artist and the songwriter get royalties. Then there are further
royalties for performances, radio play, and usage in film and television. In
2005, the mechanical royalty for songwriter/publisher is 8.5 cents
a song. A million selling single brings in $85,000. That’s just
the songwriter share. Consider how much money Bill Haley’s 12
bar blues “Rock Around the Clock” made, selling 25 million copies. Or
the blues-drenched Aerosmith, with 18 platinum and 11 multiplatinum
disc sales in the U.S. alone.
These figures are an indication of only the
artist’s share of
the sales. The corporate recording and publishing share of music
income is the lion’s share of a very expensive pie, amounting to
billions of dollars in rock and roll alone. Blues had a very fat
baby, but the African American mother community only received a
pittance – if anything – in return. We’re talking hundreds of
rock/blues songs alone which sold millions and millions of records.
Blind Lemon died on a street in a snow storm
in segregated Chicago. It
was regarded as such an inconsequential event that no death certificate
was issued. Bessie Smith, the “Empress of the Blues,” was buried
in an unmarked grave. Her recording contract had a “no royalties” clause. Many
other blues geniuses died in Jim Crow poverty and illness. Leroy
Carr was barely 30 when he died of alcoholism. As late as 1960
Jesse Belvin, a young Rhythm and Blues artist, was killed in a
suspicious car crash after performing the first integrated concert
in Little Rock, Arkansas. Earlier in the evening, white supremacists
had repeatedly disrupted the show.
This is not to say that white musicians didn’t suffer similar
fates as a result of corporate exploitation, but the exploitation
of the white musicians was not a result of the color of their skin
and the power of the state was not arrayed against them as a race,
thereby stifling any claims for justice before they could arise. The
blues was stolen from the black community simply because the white
musical power structure had the ability to do it. It was not given
away for free and billions of dollars were made on the blues. It
is time for the music industry to pay the bill.
Reparations are just too complicated, according
to some people. In
the case of the Blues, reparations would be easy because the recording
industry has always maintained financial data on sales and royalties. A
national foundation could be established with a board of directors
possibly composed of people like Harry Belafonte, Alice Walker,
Cornel West, and Danny Glover. The mission of the trust would
be to develop strategic, legal and political actions to pursue
the royalties owed the black community. Many white musicians have
honored the origins of the music they play. They should be in
the forefront of the campaign to recover the stolen royalties. It
should also be possible to file class action suits for the descendents
of blues artists whose works were stolen.
Where should these recovered funds be distributed? One
choice could be urban schools where students have no instruments
or music
programs but can flick on a pop station and hear the music their
community created being played by someone else.
Justice demands that this 12 bar debt be paid.
Blind Lemon’s actual hard times lyrics for “Matchbox” were: