The poet Turner Cassity in the April 2000 issue of Modernism/modernity reviewed Workin’ Man Blues: Country Music in California by Gerald W. Haslam, and he takes it seriously, without condescension. Readers shouldn’t be surprised. We already know that anything might show up in Cassity's poems. They have identifiable subjects. They are always about something other than the poet and his precious feelings. Cassity revels in knowing things. In this he reminds me of Guy Davenport, who wrote: “I am not writing for scholars or fellow critics, but for people who like to read, to look at pictures, and to know things.” Cassity shares what he and Haslam know:
“Haslam’s own credentials are flawless. He went to elementary school in Oildale, outside Bakersfield, with Merle Haggard, and he makes the point right away that Nashville’s claim to have been, if not the mother city, then at least the Bayreuth of country is not secure. Atlanta in the 1920s, Chicago in the 1930s, and Hollywood in the 1940s could challenge its primacy. Nashville is a manipulation of the recording companies, whose fickleness the book details.”
Cassity was
born in Mississippi in 1929 and for almost forty years he worked as a librarian
at Emory University in Atlanta, Ga. He was a Southerner. At least by the late
60s, country music had gone mainstream. In 1969 I bought the double album Same Train, A Different Time: Merle Haggard
Sings the Great Songs of Jimmie Rodgers, and albums by Lefty Frizzell, George Jones, and Hank Williams, who died just months
after I was born. And, of course, Gram Parsons. I love the scene in The Last Waltz when Arkansas-born Levon
Helm casually refers to Muddy Waters as “the king of country music.” Cassity
writes:
“Not
surprisingly, the subject matter of the lyrics is pretty much as it has been
parodied. Only in tango is there a higher percentage of God and Mother and betrayal.
However, Haslam supplies enough background and supporting material to soften
the edges of the stereotype, making it clear that there were Okies who had to
put up with things that would have frightened John Steinbeck to death.”
At his death
in 2009, Cassity left two unpublished books of poems: Hitler’s Weather and Poems
for Isobel. Cassity’s literary executor, R.L. Barth, sent me copies of the
manuscripts. In his review of Haslam's book, Cassity refers to “Hank Williams the Elder.”
Williams makes a brief appearance in “Oppie in the Heartland” in Hitler’s
Weather. “Oppie” is J. Robert Oppenheimer:
“End of the World,
for Pentecostal outreach groups
In 1930s
farm states, so preoccupies
Revivals
that not much is heard of cards, strong drink,
And
missionaries. Not that, ordinarily,
The End is
spelled out in detail. The Last Trump sounds;
Imagination
does the rest, and memories
Of
illustrations from the Dore Bible. Meant
As an
apotheosis, Come-To-Jesus seems
Almost a
comedown. But with 1945
And the
atomic bomb, and possibility
The world in
fact may end, the tent revivalists
Fall
strangely quiet. Some, the more sophisticated,
Take on
godless communism; most fall back
To battling
Darwin. Missionaries may have lost
Cachet,
along with China, and as a destroyer
Of worlds J.
Robert Oppenheimer, stringy build
And hair out
of control, have less the look of Shiva
Than of,
say, Hank Williams, Sr.--and be fit
Reminder
that the worlds of gambling and of drink
Go on--yet
change and incongruity cannot
Prevent
re-labeling as ‘Rapture’ what was once
The Day of
Judgment, or to anti-Darwin minds
Point out
that Fundamentalism too evolves.”
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