{"id":5835,"date":"2011-06-23T09:00:57","date_gmt":"2011-06-23T08:00:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=5835"},"modified":"2011-06-23T09:00:57","modified_gmt":"2011-06-23T08:00:57","slug":"blueswoman-etta-baker","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/06\/23\/blueswoman-etta-baker\/","title":{"rendered":"Blueswoman Etta Baker"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a>There\u2019s a fantastic feminist body of work devoted to recognising
and celebrating the achievements (and even the existence of) women in blues
music, not least the landmark Blues Legacies and Black Feminism<\/strong><\/a> by Angela Davis. Thanks to
the toil of Davis and others, the songs and performances of
Bessie Smith<\/strong><\/a>, Billie Holiday<\/strong><\/a>,
Victoria Spivey<\/strong><\/a> and Ma Rainey<\/strong><\/a> are finally taking their place in the
notoriously masculine and misogynist<\/a> blues canon. So I won\u2019t
reinvent the wheel \u2013 go read about them, learn about them,
listen to them. Instead I thought I\u2019d introduce a less
well-known blueswoman,
Etta Baker<\/strong>.<\/p>\n
I say \u2018less well-known\u2019, what I mean is less familiar
to the general public. Since she was \u2018discovered\u2019 in
the 1950s (she was included on an album of field recordings of
folk music, Instrumental Music from the Southern Appalachians<\/strong>
<\/a>, after a chance meeting with folk singer
Paul Clayton<\/strong>) there have been plenty of tributes
to her musicianship.\u00a0 Bluesman
Taj Mahal<\/strong> said she was the greatest influence
on his guitar playing, and
Bob Dylan<\/strong> went to visit her in 1962. When you
listen to Don’t Think Twice It’s All
Right<\/strong> <\/a>(a rewrite of one of
Clayton’s songs) I reckon you can hear Etta
Baker’s influence quite clearly.<\/p>\n
The album she recorded with her sister
Cora Phillips<\/strong> in 2005, Carolina Breakdown<\/strong><\/a>, is casually
incredible. Her astonishing skill is obvious,
even to a cloth-eared listener like me. But it
all seems very relaxed. I suppose that kind of
confidence is what you get for playing the
guitar for 90-odd years (she started learning
when she was three…)<\/p>\n
Here\u2019s a radio interview<\/a> with
Etta Baker in 2005 and you can listen to some
of her songs, see pictures and read more about
her life on the Music Maker Relief<\/a>
website. Baker has none of the tragic glamour
of Billie Holiday or the stature of Bessie
Smith. When you see pictures of her,
she\u2019s\u2026 well, she\u2019s a little old
lady.\u00a0 She\u2019s usually grinning,
wearing ill-fitting sweaters, and with the
same owl-like glasses that the Queen wears.
The admiration she has won is all down to how
she played, and not how she looked.<\/p>\n
She is not and never was a star. As well as
playing the blues, she raised nine children
and worked for 26 years in a local factory.
Susan Simone of Music Maker Relief <\/a>
puts this in context:<\/p>\n
Listening to Baker\u2019s talent, the first
question that comes to mind is why
didn\u2019t she get onto the stage earlier.
To understand this, you need to understand
how life was in the Carolinas for people who
were living a hardscrabble life of farming
and mill work. Opportunities for music were
local not national. Skilled musicians played
with family, for local dances, at church, or
may be in a nearby town…. \u201cMy
husband could play piano real well,\u201d
Baker reflects. \u201cI believe we could
have made it, but as he did not want to
leave home, there was nothing I could
say.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Performing on stage or to large audiences is
of course no measure of talent, or even of
influence. And in interviews Baker herself
didn’t seem to have any regrets. But
when I hear her and her sister play I
can\u2019t help but wonder about all the
other ordinary extraordinary women
we\u2019ll never know about.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Further reading<\/strong><\/p>\n