***Yes, You Better Boot That Thing-
Early Women Blues Singers From The 1920s Be-Bop Night-Take Two
A YouTube's film clip of Victoria
Spivey performing "TB Blues". Wow.
Yes, you had better boot that thing
was a great line from a blues number back in the 1920s or so. And if I have to
tell you that expression has a sexual significance, was a double entendre then maybe you best move on. The songs of
this period, blues songs anyway are filled with lyrics that contain those
elusive double meanings. And if you wanted to hold your audience you had better
be as suggestive as hell, or as the law would allow. One of the interesting facts about the
development of the blues is that in the early days the recorded music and the
bulk of the live performances were done by women. At least they were the most
popular exponents of the genre filling up the concert halls, gin joints, and
theaters down South (segregated Mister James Crow down south which would last
until well after the heyday of women blues singers supremacy) and in the Jazz
Age for the lucky ones following the northern star to the Cotton Clubs of the
cities.
I have tried elsewhere in this space
to redress that grievance by reviewing the works of the likes of Memphis
Minnie, Ida Cox and Ivy Anderson, among others. I also have scheduled a
separate appreciation of one of the four women featured on this CD, Alberta
Hunter. This CD format thus falls rather nicely in line with my overall
intention to continue to highlight some of these lesser known women artists.
Moreover, as fate would have it, this compilation included the work of Victoria
Spivey, a singer that I have mentioned elsewhere and have wanted to discuss
further. Finally, the conception of the producers here is enhanced by breaking
up the CD into two parts-the urban blues part represented by Hunter and Spivey
and the country blues part represented by Bessie Tucker and Ida May Mack. While
both this trends have always shared some common roots and musicality they also
represent two distinct trends in blues music as reflected in the increasing
urbanization of the American black population in the 20th century.
Let’s use the urban/country divide
as a frame of reference. The smoother style of Hunter and Spivey obviously
reflected the need to entertain a more sophisticated audience that was looking
for music that was different from that country stuff down home. And that laid
back country style was seemingly passé in the hectic urban world. Tucker and
Mack reflect that old time country hard work on the farm, hard scrabble for
daily existence found, as well, in the songs of their country blues male counterparts.
What unites the two strands is the personal nature of the subject matter- you
know, mistreating’ men, cheatin’ guys, two-timing fellas, money taking cads,
squeakin’ man-stealing women friends, the dusty road out of town, and just
below the surface violence and mayhem, threatened or completed. And that is
just an average day’s misery.
So what is good here? I won’t spend
much time on Alberta because I have looked at her work elsewhere but please
give a listen to “My Daddy’s Got A Brand New Way To Love,” the title tells
everything you need to know about this song and is classic Alberta. Of course
for Bessie Tucker you need, and I mean need, to hear the title track “Better
Boot That Thing” and then you will agree that you, man or woman, best stay home
and take care of business. As for Ida Mack I flipped when I heard her saga of a
fallen woman as she moans out on “Elm Street Blues” and her lament on “Wrong
Doin’ Daddy”. However, what you really want to do is skip to the final track
and listen to “Good-bye Rider” which for the nth time concerns the subject of
that previously mentioned advice about “not advertising your man.” to your
friends.
Victoria is just too much on
“Telephoning The Blues,” again on that two- timing man, wronged woman theme.
“Blood Hound Blues” demonstrates that she was not afraid to tackle some thorny
issues, including a reverse twist here about a woman driven to kill her
hard-hearted physically abusive man, was jailed, escaped and is on the lam as
she sings this song. The song that knocked me out on this more
socially-oriented theme is her “Dirty Tee Bee Blues” about the tragic suffering
of a gal who went the wrong way looking for love and adventure and now must pay
the price. Powerful stuff.
A special note on Victoria Spivey. I
have mentioned, in a review of some film documentaries (four altogether)
entitled “American Folk Blues Festival, 1962-1966” that were retrieved a few
years ago by German Cinema and featured many of the great blues artist still
alive at that time on tour in Europe, that Victoria Spivey had a special place
in the blues scene not only as a performer and writer (of songs and goings-on
in the music business) but that she was a record producer as well (Spivey
Records).
Back in the days when music was on vinyl (you remember them,
right?) I used to rummage through a second hand- record store in Cambridge
(talk about ancient history). One of my treasured finds there was a Spivey
Records platter featuring Victoria, the legendary Otis Spann (of Muddy Waters’
band), Luther “Guitar” Johnson, and a host of other blues luminaries. She, like
her black male counterpart impresario Willie Dixon (who she occasionally
performed with), was a pioneer in this business end of the blues business, a
business that left more than its fair share of horror stories about the
financial shenanigans done to “rob” blues performers of their just desserts.
That, however, is a tale for another day.
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