Friday, September 23, 2011

The American Murder Ballad (continued)

The validity of this Lead Belly favorite as a murder ballad can be debatable at times, but investigations into the lyrics hear the singer asking the black girl for an alibi after the discovery of her husband's grisly remains. The song is laced with undertones of abuse and terror, and the woman's only account of her whereabouts -- "in the pines" -- is insufficient to clear her name of the murder and decapitation of her man.

"1st Shot Got Him" by The Washboard Chaz Blues Trio
In the days following Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, Algiers resident Henry Glover was shot in the chest by a rookie policeman. The attack was allegedly unprovoked, and Glover was able to escape despite his injuries. Later, a friend took him for help, and SWAT officers found them and beat them, and Glover died from his wounds. In an effort to conceal the act, police placed Glover's corpse in an abandoned vehicle and set fire to it. In 2010, five officers were found guilty of this crime. Washboard Chaz, a prolific New Orleans musician, tells this story to the beat of his namesake instrument.

Another murderous Willy, this time leading his lover down to the river to propose to her. He is rebuffed and does not take it so well, slicing her throat with a knife and then, as she pleads for mercy, throws her into the river to drown. The next day, he's visited by the Sheriff who asks him to accompany him to the crime scene. Other versions reference the banks of the PeeDee River, which would lend another Carolina location.

Mack the Knife's origins lie in the lyrics of Bertolt Brecht's composition, "Die Moritat von Mackie Messer" for The Threepenny Opera. This tale recounts the bloody exploits of Mack, who unflinchingly amasses quite a body count. The entire last verse is but a list of women who've met their end at Mack's knife.

The story of Naomi "Little Omie" Wise could very well be the historic inspiration for "The Banks of the Ohio." Omie was a girl growing up in Randolph County, North Carolina, and courting a young man, John Lewis. According to local lore, Omie got pregnant and John looked to take care of it in secrecy by luring her out of town. Locals first reported her missing in April 1808, and they found her body in an Asheboro river. Officials apprehended Lewis, but he escaped and later, when he was re-tried, it was for the escape and not for Omie's murder. Scott H Biram, "the dirty one-man band" from Texas offers an honest rendition of this story.

"Lethal Injection" by The Blackstone Valley Sinners
Set to the haunting vocals of BVS, "Lethal Injection" is the story of a man who kills his wife's adulterous lover in a Motel Six and awaits on Death Row. Much in the same vein of Bessie Smith's "'Lectric Chair," the protagonist of this murder ballad is aware that he is beyond redemption and, although he respects the intention of the priest trying to save his soul before his punishment, he knows the efforts are in vain.

Murder ballads are not always restricted to small town crimes. Like "Pretty Boy Floyd" and "Jesse James," the songs can detail characters in the news that are more accessible to larger groups. In the case of Charles Whitman, the song assists to make sense of a tragedy with a dose of humor. Kinky Friedman, singer-comedian and former Texas gubernatorial candidate, details the tragedy at the University of Texas when, in 1966, Whitman climbed to the top of the university's administration tower with a sniper rifle and indiscriminately fired on the busy campus below, killing 16 and injuring 32. Friedman alludes to the speculation about a cancerous tumor causing the instability of an otherwise model citizen as well as the aftermath, but his tongue-in-cheek approach to this particular story was met with protest and anger during live performances in Austin.

The black neighborhood of Savannah, Georgia -- Yamacraw -- provides the setting for the murder of Delia Green by Cooney Houston, both fourteen, in 1900. The story made the usual rounds through the South, changing here and there, before Johnny Cash's anachronistic version. Cash, himself a "murder balladeer," takes his sweet time killing Delia, but in the end is haunted by his actions and her ghost.

In 1996, Roderick Ferrell and a pack of kids from Kentucky dubbed "The Vampire Clan" drove down to Florida to recruit "the Wendorf girl" into their club and decided to kill her parents. First they clubbed her father with a crowbar -- a clawhammer -- then stabbed her mother to death. He left his mark --the letter V -- in the father's head with a cigarette. Colonel JD Wilkes, one of the South's premier ambassadors, relays this story accompanied by Th' Shack Shaker's own WMD's: hypnotic bass, swampy guitars, haunting banjo and a harmonica straight from Hell.

Another version of the murder ballad as love song, and perhaps the best personification of such. The first-person account of a jilted, yet quite codependent lover is chilling. The icy lyrics counterbalance the soft, velvet pitch of Nelson's voice and the hypnotic beat of his trusty guitar. The killer's narration in this song makes it difficult to sympathize with the victim, despite the horror of the subject matter. This version of the song is made all the better due to the reactions from the crowd at the performance.

It is rare in the murder ballad for the voice of the song to belong to the victim, and in Dylan's "Seven Curses," this leads to fogging things up a bit. Old Reilly, a horse thief, is sentenced to hang, and a deal between the judge and Reilly's daughter goes awry, leading to the angry seven curses. The weight of Dylan's brilliant lyricisms are perhaps the only vehicles on the planet with the strength to shoulder the disgust and horror at the true crime in the song, and the fact that the true killers are not the criminals, but the law, make the song even more relevant.

Brutus, reviled by Dante only to see exoneration and exaltation by Shakespeare centuries later,shares a lot in common with Robert Ford. Ford, known throughout the West as "The Coward," shot Jesse James, a modern-day Robin Hood of Missouri, in the back as he straightened a picture frame. Ford lived the rest of his life facing the disgust of the people until a gunman shot him down, allegedly in retaliation for James. His infamy continued after his death, as Woody Guthrie and others sang "Jesse James," the song that chastises the man who "ate of Jesse's bread and slept in Jesse's bed / then laid poor Jesse in his grave." Decades later, Patrick Phelan of Luego takes a different view. "If the papers get it right," everyone should now realize that Ford acted in self-defense, because if "I didn't do it, he'd a-killed me tonight."

The murder ballad's origins can be traced back to Old World Europe. Just as "Mack the Knife" originated in Germany, many songs immigrated across the Atlantic with scores of cultures and traditions in the late nineteenth century. One of these songs is known as "Pretty Polly," originally known as "The Gosport Tragedy" or "The Cruel Ship's Carpenter" overseas. Most versions detail a man luring a woman to the woods as she pleads for mercy before he kills her and deposits her into a shallow grave. Nirvana's "Polly" continues this tradition with a first-person, emotionless account that effectively transports the listener to that horrible scene as we hear her pleas go unheard by her sadistic killer.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

The American Murder Ballad

Seeing as how an entire music collection on murder ballads could revolve around the independent acts that make up the Americana super group Slim Cessna's Auto Club, it is no mystery why this song should launch such a collection.  All of the elements of traditional murder ballads are present: the cold-blooded and senseless murder of another, the aftermath, and the insight into the icy killer's mind.  In the third act of the song, the killer eschews hope of redemption, choosing rather to "straighten out this town with might," altering their tools.  Any exploration into small town murder could be prefaced with the song's haunting refrain because this indeed is how we do things in the country.

A true story based in Wilkes County, North Carolina.  A man named Tom Dula took his pregnant lover, Ms. Laurie Foster, to a mountain under the guise of taking her away to marry.  Her body was discovered the following day, stabbed several times with a large knife.  Dula was apprehended by Colonel Grayson before he could escape to Tennessee, then returned to face his crimes.  He was tried and found guilty in Statesville, NC, and sentenced to hang.  This version of the song popularized the rich story that still resonates in the area today, where descendants of the players in the song still live.

"John Hardy" by Lead Belly
The real John Hardy killed a man in a craps game and hung on January of 1894.  While there exist some Lomax collection versions which detail the craps game, many of the more accessible ballads reference the murder only with Hardy shooting "down a man on the West Virginia line" and then making tracks.  He's caught on a bridge and brought to jail.  Nearly every version, from Doc Watson to the Carter Family, to the thunderous bass of Lead Belly detail Hardy's troubles in the cell, the people he leaves behind, and their reactions.  The murder ballad often tends to act as a "morality play" for many Appalachian communities, and Hardy's tale is a good example.  In  each version, much is made of his people that he leaves to deal with his actions, and how everyone -- his parents, his wife, his children (where applicable) and his lover, dressed in red -- deals with the shock and sorrow of what he has done and what will inevitably happen to him.  It is no doubt that "John Hardy" was sung to steer children away from making the same mistakes.

"Stackolee" by Mississippi John Hurt
Often the murder ballad can serve as a history lesson, and the story of Stackolee is a great case in point.  In St. Louis in 1895, two men -- Sheldon "Stack" Lee and Billy DeLyons -- talk in a bar and, when the discussion turns to politics, things get out of hand.  The St. Louis Post-Dispatch  reports Stack shooting Billy in the chest, taking his Stetson hat, then leaving the bar.  Many facets of the story have changed with each re-telling -- the names, the actions, the motives, the emotions elicited -- but three things remain constant in each version: Stack, Billy, and the Stetson hat.  In Mississippi John Hurt's definitive version, society is telling the tale and bemoans how the policemen "can arrest everybody but cruel Stackolee."

 Jackson's first-person telling portrays a crazy, bad motherfucker for the film Black Snake Moan. Stack is unabashed and unflinching, and not only kills Billy Lyons, but also the bartender, for giving him "a dirty look and a dirty glass."  The unrepentant killer is a recurring archetype in the murder ballad, and most all versions of Stack-O-Lee embody this characterization.

A new variation offers a drug-crazed Stack who "loved his gun and his sweet cocaine," but seeks redemption by song's end, which is unusual in the tale of Sheldon "Stack" Lee.

"Little Sadie" is most likely a fictitious account of a murder and pursuit of a North Carolina killer.  The two towns in song reference the Carolinas: Thomasville from NC and Jericho from SC.  This song is believed to be the precursor to both Johnny Cash's "Cocaine Blues" and Jimi Hendrix's "Hey Joe."    
        

"Cocaine Blues" by Johnny Cash
By the time the first stanza is sung, the murder has been committed by a cocaine-fueled Willy Lee. The remainder of the song details the apprehension, trial, and sentencing of Willy.  There is no trace of regret for killing "that bad bitch" until the final lines, where Willy, facing "99 years in the Folsom pen" sees the error of his ways and pleads with the audience to"lay off that whiskey and let that cocaine be."


One common interpretation of the murder ballad is a twisted extension of the love song, and "Frankie and Johnny" exemplifies this very well, as the song tells of a woman killing her lover for stepping out on her with another woman named Nellie Bly.  Whether there lies historical truth to this song is the subject of many arguments, with some believing the real crime happened in St.Louis and others placing it in North Carolina.  However many versions, including Broonzy's, place the blame on Johnny, the murder victim, because "he done her wrong."


Bessie Smith's haunting tale of a woman who kills "a triflin' Jane" offers a different perspective on the murder ballad.  Rather than seek redemption or mercy from the judge, she begs for the death penalty.  She doesn't want bail, she doesn't want 99 years, she wants to be burned in the chair and sent to Hell for what she's done, and details it all to a catchy beat.