Atlantica - 01.02.2006, Blaðsíða 48

Atlantica - 01.02.2006, Blaðsíða 48
WITNESSEDa after the flood,” and how history has repeated itself with the current crop of New Orleans musicians who have made their home in Oxford. “You feel pretty guilty about hav- ing these amazing guitarists from New Orleans, but you also feel happy to have them here,” he tells me under his breath. At Square Books, one of the great independent bookstores in America, I browse the ever-popular William Faulkner section in preparation for a visit to Rowan Oaks, but am drawn to more contemporary writings by the likes of Lewis Nordan and Larry Brown about Mississippi blues and the culture of the Delta, an area just next door to Oxford. The music and folk art of the Delta has become an obsession in Oxford, driving one local college student to drop out and use his loans to start the Fat Possum record label which publishes the works of under-appre- ciated blues musicians. Previously obscure bluesmen like T-Model Ford and RL Burnside are now household names at Oxford. A name check proves that more locals know these bluesmen than Lucas Beauchamp or Emily Greirson, two of my favorite Faulkner characters that draw blank stares when I attempt to reference them. In fact, while Faulkner is heav- ily recommended reading in town, a number of people admit they’re more fanatical about Barry Hannah, a contemporary writer in the flour- ishing local fiction community. I wander out to Rowan Oak all the same, speaking with the univer- sity students who man the museum as part of a work-study program. One is a literature student, but she claims she prefers English Gothic literature to Faulkner, and the other is a polite but indifferent student of graphic design. Polite indifference suits Rowan Oak well. As aggressive as Faulkner’s genius was, his daily life, as indicated by his perfectly preserved home, was more functional than obsessed read- ers might expect. Viewing Faulkner’s study, complete with the outline for his last Hollywood screenplay still penciled into the wall in his scrawled print, makes the notion of art – even the highest and most complicated examples – accessible. In fact, one can’t help thinking, look- ing at Faulkner’s casual lifestyle, that he had fewer materials and less assis- tance than most. SWEET HOME From Oxford, I am told repeatedly there is only one natural destination for any visitor to the south under the age of 50: Memphis. For Oxford and New Orleans, I am not only visiting after a disaster, I am visiting in the off-season. Memphis, on the other hand, never has a down time. Whereas Oxford is a town obsessed with the diversity of Southern cul- ture, Memphis is more segmented, perhaps because of its size. Sun Studios, the place Ike Turner, Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis all did their initial recordings, is a find – the half hour guided tour there is probably one of the best services to the history of rock and roll in existence. Outside the Sun Studios tour, the music scene in Memphis, compelling as it is, focuses so much on labeling and separation of styles or market groups that fans of the diversity of rock music may be disappointed. When I ask music fans and record store employees to recommend con- certs, each type of music was usu- ally evaluated first and foremost by the crowd that would attend the concert. Presented with ten good concerts on a Friday night, I am told that for the crowd that dressed like me (a blue shirt and corduroys), I would be expected to hear a woman sing while playing a cello to a heavy electronic drum beat. Against all local advice, I go to Beale Street to hear local blues. Regarded as a tourist trap by most of Memphis, it would be hard to put down a street so dedicated to both the blues and to neon even if it were packed. But in December, Beale Street is not crowded, and so we find great blues musicians like Dr. Feelgood Potts playing to empty clubs. During Dr. Feelgood Potts’s set break, I ask the band about the repercussions of New Orleans – if Katrina was the reason I saw so few visitors. 46 AT L A N T I CA “You’re going to see New Orleans musicians everywhere in the US. Maybe it’s a good thing to come out of this.” 042-047 New Orleans.indd 46 21.2.2006 12:59:55
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Atlantica

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