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Mothers of invention

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Record: 1Title: Mothers of invention. (cover story)Authors: Hirshey, Gerri Bozza, AnthonySource: Rolling Stone; 11/13/97 Issue 773, p44, 5p, 9bwPersistent link to this record: http://0-search.epnet.com.library.lib.asu.edu:80/direct.asp?an=9711053726&db=aDatabase: Academic Search Elite MOTHERS OF INVENTION Women do talk; perhaps it's the intimacies and isolations of domestic life that have made them queens of the cut-to-the-bone colloquial. And before they dared press it on vinyl and send it to market, women had long told one another the unvarnished truth. If you think about it, the blues was the first serious public consciousness raising -- frank, sexy and mercifully non-PC. Since the first blues recordings were made by and for African-Americans, it wasn't necessary to deeply encode the plain facts. There is no mistaking what Bessie Smith meant when she sang, "I need a little sugar in my bowl." America's very first rush of popular-record buying was ignited in the '20s by the talents of black female blues artists who were telling it like it was, is and damn well ought to be. Folks just had to have it, at home and in dirt-floor juke joints. Call these women the true Mothers of Invention -- blues pioneers whose echoes are still heard in the most avant singer/songwriters and in the primmest Orlon'd girl groups. Like the best of rock, theirs was not a studied sound. Largely recording in the South, in makeshift studios, they were strong women singing hard truths in a 12-bar blues format. That three-line-stanza song form came out of Africa and moved north along the Mississippi Delta; it is the root of all pop, from rhythm and blues to acid rock to reggae to rap. And like the drums that first thrummed it across the Senegalese skies, it was talking music. In the '90s, African-American women can swap truths in spirited, Oprah-inspired reading groups such as Go On Girl. But listen to Ma Rainey warn, "Trust no man," Mae Glover declare, "I ain't givin' nobody none," or Ida Cox sing, "Wild women don't have the blues," and it's clear these women weren't waiting to exhale. They could blow a lyric and a feeling from Augusta to Kansas City under conditions that would make today's divas bolt for cover under the massage table. Stylists? Maybe some crone heating a hair iron in an alley behind those colored-only boardinghouses. Security? A razor laced to the instep of a dainty boot. It stands to reason that on the rough and ready Theater Owners' Booking Association (also known as Toby Time or Tough on Black Asses), a black vaudeville circuit covering most Southern cities, the best rose to the top on vocal firepower and strength of character. Ma Raineywas born to a pair of road-toughened minstrel troupers and at 18 married William "Pa" Rainey, who took her on the road working levee camps, tent shows and cabarets. They were billed as Rainey and Rainey, Assassinators of the Blues. Ma's massacres are now credited as the crucial link between rural Southern blues and the more sophisticated versions later sung by Bessie Smith and Ethel Waters. Ma's delivery was direct, down-home and folksy -- pure country. But she was professional. And her presentation of self prefigured rock's most outrageous impulses for puttin' on the glitz: Starting at the top, with stiff horsehair wigs framing her battered face, Ma accessorized with a brio that would make the Spice Girls gasp. A contemporary described the vision: "Ma was loaded with diamonds -- in her ears, round her neck, in a tiara on her head. Both hands were full of rocks, too. Her hair was wild, and she had gold teeth! What a sight!" By all accounts, her generosity was also multicarat. Debunking old myths that had Rainey "kidnapping" the young Bessie Smith for a traveling show, Chris Albertson's landmark 1972 biography of Smith reveals that the older Rainey was, in fact, "more like a mother to her" when they both toured with the Rabbit Foot Minstrels. Bessie Smith lived just 43 years, from 1894 to 1937. Yet for the next half-century, in legend, plays and liner notes, she would be held up as the archetype of Woman Wronged. Even her death was shrouded in a myth that had her bleeding to death after a car crash when a whites-only hospital refused her admission. After careful scholarship and interviews with Smith's intimates, Albertson set the record straight. Smith was revealed as a woman with plenty of Trouble in Mind: a sizable drinking problem, abusive men and crushing racism. But she was never a passive victim; in her music and her life, Bessie Smith preferred dealing from strength. For much of her career, she could command top rates. Amazingly, blueswomen were initially paid better than men. Smith could earn as much as $200 a side -- nearly 15 times the average fee for a black male singer at the time. This is not to say she wasn't cheated, over and over. But if Smith got wind of it, you'd do well to have your insurance paid up. Having found that her pianist Clarence Williams had appropriated $375 of hers, Smith -- close to 200 pounds of handsome, towering outrage -- cornered Williams, pounded him to the floor and kept whaling at him until he tore up their lopsided contract. Racism was no match for Bessie in a mood. Put on display by a patronizing white grande dame who demanded a kiss in front of her society pals, Smith knocked madame on her astonished derri ffl8Are. On a Southern swing with her traveling show, she was informed that hooded KKK terrorists were at work outside, sabotaging the tent poles. "Some shit!" she snorted, and, according to Albertson's sources, she ran outside and faced them down alone, bellowing, "What the fuck you think you're doin'? I'll get the whole damn tent out here if I have to. You just pick up them sheets and run." And they did. Like some '60s performers now confined to oldies shows, Bessie Smith suffered a dimming of her star when the Depression flattened box offices in the early '30s and restless, sophisticated black audiences cast off the blues as hopelessly old-fashioned. She sold the beloved private railroad car that had spared her some of the discomforts and humiliations of segregated traveland took gigs in the lowest gin mills again. But at the time Smith died in a car accident in 1937, her career had been back on the rise. She had had no reservations about joining the swing era. Producer John Hammond was planning to record her with Count Basie on piano; Lionel Hampton wanted to work with her, and she had a


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