Alan Lomax
Winner of a National Book Critics Circle award, a rollicking and
unforgettable memoir by the man who helped bring the music of the blues into
the mainstream
“Without Lomax it’s possible that there would have been no blues
explosion, no R&B movement, no Beatles and no Stones and no Velvet
Underground.” —Brian Eno
A self-described “song-hunter,” the folklorist Alan Lomax traveled
the Mississippi Delta in the 1930s and ’40s, armed with primitive recording
equipment and a keen love of the Delta’s music heritage. Crisscrossing the
towns and hamlets where the blues began, Lomax gave voice to such greats as
Leadbelly, Fred MacDowell, Muddy Waters, and many others, all of whom made their
debut recordings with him.
The Land Where the Blues Began is both a fascinating recollection
of a pivotal time in American music history and an intimate portrait of the
struggles blues musicians faced in the Jim Crow South. The blues were an
organic expression of Black humanity in a place where slavery had been outlawed
but where segregation, violence, and racial inequality were still the law of
the land. Lomax’s role as a liaison to white America, relating the emotion and
musical virtuosity displayed by those musicians, would change American popular
music forever. Through candid conversations with bluesmen and vivid, firsthand
accounts of the landscape where their music was born, Lomax’s “discerning
reconstructions . . . give life to a domain most of us can never know . . . one
that summons us with an oddly familiar sensation of reverence and dread” (The
New York Times Book Review).
Artistic expression has always been a way for oppressed peoples to
speak truth to power, assert their dignity, and simply live in a world rife
with injustice. The Land Where the Blues Began is an enthralling chronicle of
the journey to bring this irrepressible art out of the Delta where it began and
into the ears of every American.
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