Hello John,

I was so pleased to have completed Out & About in a timely manner that I forgot to add this greeting before I sent the email.

As you can see if you read the piece about RJ that he led a rather rowdy life. Maybe that was the beginning of the infamous rock and roll lifestyle. Nevertheless, Johnson is recognized tor an amazing catalog of work. My first listen to one of his songs was Clapton's version of "Crossroads." If you run across Peter Green's album covering RJ's songs pick it up and give it a listen. It's outstanding.

There are a few things going on in and around town. Get out and take in a show or two before the oven is lit.

Have a week!!

Jim Crawford,

Phoenix Blues Society

www.phoenixAZblues.com

LEGACY


Through a variety of accounts, including those by fellow blues artists David “Honeyboy” Edwards and Sonny Boy Williamson, we know that Johnson spent the last weeks of his life playing regularly at a juke joint attached to The Three Forks Store, just outside of Greenwood. In one version of the story, Johnson flirted with a woman at the party (possibly the wife of the store’s owner) and was poisoned by her jealous husband. He became so sick that he had to be taken into Greenwood, where he perished.

In 1968, Mississippi journalist Gayle Dean Wardlow sought to find out the truth about Johnson’s final days. In addition to unearthing his death certificate, Wardlow discovered that the artist may have been born with congenital syphilis. According to a doctor, it is possible that he had an aneurysm caused by syphilis and his love of drinking moonshine. In a more recent account, published in 2006 in the British Medical Journal, Dr. David Connell argues that, based on Johnson’s appearance in photos, the artist may have suffered from Marfan Syndrome. The genetic disorder, which affects the body’s connective tissue, could have contributed to Johnson’s early death.

Johnson’s final resting spot is also just as confusing as his death. Today, three headstones around Greenwood pay tribute to the bluesman. In 1990, Columbia Records erected a monument at the Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church, where the artist was long believed to be buried in an unmarked grave. That same year, an Atlanta band (aptly named The Tombstones) had a smaller marker placed at the Payne Chapel in Quito, Mississippi, where it was also alleged that Johnson was laid to rest. In 2000, an 85-year-old woman named Rosie Eksridge claimed that her husband had helped bury Johnson under a pecan tree at a church north of Greenwood, where a third headstone now sits.

Of all the myths surrounding Johnson’s life, the most famous one is a claim that the artist sold his soul to the Devil in order to become a famous blues artist.

Residents of the Mississippi Delta roll their eyes when blues enthusiasts ask about the crossroads where Johnson supposedly met the Devil. Those in the know do not bother asking; they simply visit the junction of Highway 61 and Highway 49 and take a photo.

But that modern-day spot where the two highways meet is at least half a mile from the one that would have existed in Johnson’s lifetime. So, in fact, there are no actual crossroads.

In “Cross Road Blues,” Johnson sings an age-old tale about a man’s choice between good and evil: “I went to the crossroad, fell down on my knees/Asked the Lord above ‘Have mercy, now save poor Bob, if you please.’

There is a longstanding Delta legend of a bluesman who waited by the side of a deserted crossroads one night for Satan to come and tune his guitar. It’s a story made more relevant when coupled with Johnson’s frequent references to the Devil, including in the song “Me And The Devil Blues,” in which he sings, “Me and the Devil, was walkin’ side by side.” Other songs like “Preachin’ Blues (Up Jumped The Devil)” and “Hell Hound on My Trail” help mythologize the artist’s supposed deal with Satan.

But Johnson certainly was not the only blues artist who sang about the Devil. Skip James, Tampa Red, Lonnie Johnson, Joe Williams, and Peetie Wheatstraw, to name a few, all sang of Satan – the latter artist even nicknamed himself “The Devil’s Son-in-Law” after one of his 1931 recordings.

While Johnson’s incredible improvements on the guitar, as detailed by Son House, were certainly miraculous, a 2008 story in Living Blues Magazine offers a more viable explanation. In that two-year period, when Johnson first travelled the Delta, he met guitarist Ike Zimmerman, who took the young artist under his tutelage. According to blues scholar Bruce Conforth, Johnson spent the better part of a year living with Zimmerman, and studying his craft.

In 1961, Columbia released King of the Delta Blues Singers, a compilation of Johnson’s music. The album made its way into the hands of American folk artists, including Bob Dylan, and soon became an immensely popular title among artists in Britain’s emerging rock scene, inspiring the likes of Fleetwood Mac, The Rolling Stones, and Led Zeppelin. Countless artists (including almost everyone mentioned in this story) have covered Johnson’s songs, while many of rock’s greatest guitarists, including Clapton and Jimi Hendrix, have cited Johnson as an influence. Johnson’s work also helped usher in the electrified, mid-century style of Chicago blues, played by the likes of Muddy WatersWillie Dixon, and Chuck Berry.

Johnson’s legacy and his immense contributions to popular music have been recognized by a broad range of institutions, including the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the US Postal Service, the Library of Congress, and the Recording Academy, which bestowed a posthumous Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award upon Johnson in 2006.

 




Out and About

 05/16 Sugar Thieves, 8 p.m., Rhythm Room, Phoenix


05/15 Hans Olson EVERY THURSDAY, 6 p.m., Handlebar Pub, Apache Junction


05/16, JC& The Juke Rockers, 7p.m., Handlebar Pub, Apache Junction


05/15, Big Daddy D & The Dynamites, 7 p.m., Weatherford, Flagstaff 


05/15, Eric Ramsey, 6 p.m., Old Ellsworth Brewing, Queen Creek


05/16, 6 p.m., Pop Top, Gino’s Pizza at El Museo, Phoenix


05/17 True Flavor Blues, 7 p.m., Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix


05/15, The Black Hole, 7 p.m., Bone Haus Brewery, Fountain Hills

                                                          

05/16, The Black Hole, 7 p.m., Bourbon Jack’s, Chandler

                                                           

05/17, The Black Hole, 7 p.m., Starz American Bar, Mesa


05/17, Chicago Bob & The Blues Squad, 7 p.m., Brown Bag Burger, Prescott                  

Music Makers


Big Pete Pearson

bigpeteblues 

Facebook

 

Cold Shott and The Hurricane Horns

www.coldshott.com

Facebook 

 

The Sugar Thieves

www.sugarthieves.com

Facebook

 

Gary Zak & The Outbacks

Facebook 

 

Hans Olson

www.hansolson.net

 Facebook

 

Rocket 88s

www.rocket88s.net

 Facebook

 

JC& The Juke Rockers

www.thejukerockers.com

 Facebook

 

Carvin Jones

www.carvinjones.com

 Facebook

 

Hoodoo Casters

www.hoodoocasters.com

 Facebook

 

Nina Curri

www.ninacurri.com

 Facebook

 

Mother Road Trio

www.motherroadtrio.com

 Facebook

 

Bluesman Mike & The Blues Review Band

Reverbnationbluesmanmike


Mike Eldred

www.mikeeldredtrio.com

Facebook 

 

Big Daddy D & The Dynamites    

bigdaddyd.com

 Facebook

 

Eric Ramsey

ericramsey.net

 Facebook

 

Leon J

 Facebook

 

Cadillac Assembly Line

Facebook

 website


Innocent Joe and the Hostile Witnesses

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Chuck Hall

Facebook


Dry Heat Band

 Facebook 


Genevieve (Gypsy) Castorena

 Facebook

 

Hooter's Blues

 Facebook

 

Pop Top

Facebook

 

Tommy Grills Band

Facebook

 

Sweet Baby Ray

SweetBabyRaysBlues.com

 Facebook

 

Billy G & The Kids

billgarvin.com

 Facebook 

 

Aaron McCall Band

 Facebook

 

True Flavor Blues

 Facebook

 

Michael Coleman Grodin

 Facebook

 

The Black Hole

 Facebook

theblackholeblues.com

 

Hallelujah Blues Band

Facebook

 

Dennis Herrera

Dennisherrera.com

Facebook

 

The Jokerz

Facebook


The Scott O'Neal Band 

Facebook

thescottonealband@gmail.com


Glenville Slim

 Facebook


West of the Blues

Website 

Facebook


Until The Sun

Facebook

website


Chicago Bob & The Blues Squad

 Facebook

Website


Backstreet Romeo

Website

 Facebook


Copper State Blues Band

 Facebook

Website


Max Tovstyi

Facebook


Want your band listed? Message Jim:  Facebook

 


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