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was named after Jimmie Rodgers
isn't known, but there would be many to follow; and everyone had
a personal story to tell about him what Jimmie had said the time he played
Wetumpka or Conroe, how he'd given his guitar to a blind newsboy in McAlester,
the way he sang his way out of jail after killing his girlfriend, the
time he invented the yodel, ran off with the mayor's wife, threw beer
bottles off the hotel balcony, shot up the city square, or paid off the
mortgage for a destitute widow. Most of the stories were pure fabrication,
a few had some basis in fact, but all were derived from the simple, eloquent
circumstance that I Jimmie Rodgers was a genuine hero to those who needed
one most-the plain, ordinary people across the land."
This account, taken from Nolan Porterfield's masterful
biography, Jimmie Rodgers; The Life and Times of America's Blue Yodeler
(University of Illinois Press), depicts the far-flung effects of Jimmie
Rodgers' short recording and performing career. The long-term effects
are played out on a daily basis over country radio stations, in recording
studios, in live performances, and on front porches nearly 60 years after
Jimmie Rodgers committed to wax his last "Blue Yodel."
Born James Charles Rodgers on September 8, 1897, in the
east Mississippi town of Pine Springs, Jimmie was the youngest of three boys
born to Eliza and Aaron Rodgers. Aaron was a section foreman on the Mobile
and Chic) Railroad and his work kept him away from home much of the time
Eliza was a frail woman for much of her life, and died during childbirth
when Jimmie was five years old.
As a result, Jimmie Rodgers was brought up in a series
of foster homes throughout Mississippi and Alabama, occasionally tagging
along with his dad on railroad runs. His education was sporadic, mostly
taken from the streets and rail yards where he and his buddies located
and hustled their time away. Living by his wits and almost constantly
on the move, Jimmie's "rough and rowdy ways" were established
early. He grew to be a clever, self-reliant individualist, happy-go-lucky
and carefree on the One hand, lonely and disaffected on the other.
Jimmie Rodgers' musical upbringing was as checkered as
his home life. He had a granddad and a preacher uncle who both fiddled,
an aunt who was trained in "serious" music, and an early personal
fascination with medicine shows and cylinder recording. Naturally drawn
to the fun, excitement, and cash potential of show business, Jimmie organized
neighborhood shows, entered talent contests, and even ran away with a
traveling troupe. Among other useful arts, he learned black-face comedy,
various singing styles, and how to play the banjo, mandolin, and guitar.
Whatever his musical ambitions might have been at that
time, he kept coming back to Meridian and to railroading, like his father
and older brother. Jimmie enjoyed hopping on board, pulling the whistle,
and entertaining the work crews with songs on his guitar. More important,
as he traveled the miles and spent long hours "waiting for a train,"
he learned how, the yardmen, switchers, and hoboes amused and impressed
themselves with gandy dancing, lullabies, and the blues. Mississippi in
the 1920s was a haven for black blues artists. Jimmie Rodgers had extensive
contact with these musicians and singers through his work and travel on
the railroad. The simplicity, directness, and depth of feeling inherent
in the blues also became essential elements in Rodgers' music, and his
interpretation of the black blues tradition played a huge part in his
role as the "Father of Country Music."
In 1920 Jimmie Rodgers courted and married Carrie Williamson,
the daughter of a local Methodist minister, and in 1921 had a baby daughter,
Anita. His young family was a source of tremendous pride and inspiration,
possibly his first experience with domestic stability. They would eventually
stay with him through some unbelievable highs and lows during the next
12 years. Jimmie's early efforts to provide for them were a combination
of occasional railroading and sputtering forays into show business. Scratching
together pick-up bands and signing on with traveling tent shows alternated
with hanging around the rail office to see if his name would appear on
the call board.
This slow, simmering pattern might have continued indefinitely
except for an ominous act of fate. In 1924 Jimmie was diagnosed with tuberculosis.
He was hospitalized and nearly died. At that time, T. B. was incurable
and a leading cause of death in America. Despite the awesome burden it
put on Jimmie's spirits and his family's prospects, the disease served
to challenge and drive him, forcing him to pursue his dream of music since
the rigors of railroading were no longer an option.
On the doctor's recommendation, Jimmie and his family
soon relocated to the altitude, beauty, and clean air of Asheville in
the mountains of western North Carolina. There he plied his many talents
wherever he could, eventually appearing on WWNC radio, and performing
locally with a stringband, the Tenneva Ramblers, a.k.a. The Jimmie Rodgers
Entertainers. Together, they made a sincere effort to become full time
performers, playing concerts, square dances, radio shows, and anything
else the local mountain communities would support. Their repertoire consisted
of traditional string band material, popular songs, blues, and original
numbers that Jimmie put together.
This was the act that made its way across the Blue Ridge
in a borrowed car to audition in Bristol, Tennessee, for the Victor Talking
Machine Company in early August 1927.
Ralph Peer, on behalf of Victor, conducted auditions and
recording sessions in an empty warehouse in downtown Bristol over a two-week
period that changed the future of country music. Searching for indigenous
folk talent from Appalachia, he also discovered some of the most creative
and commercially viable artists ever recorded. Among them were the Carter
Family, the Stoneman Family, and Jimmie Rodgers. (Many of these recordings,
and a wonderful account of these sessions written by Charles Wolfe, are
available on the Country Music Foundation re-issue, The Bristol Sessions
CMF-01 1, reviewed in OTH vol. 1 no. 3.)
Accounts vary concerning the reason why The Jimmie Rodgers
Entertainers, who arrived in Bristol as a unit, recorded separately. The
Tenneva Ramblers (Jack and Claude Grant and Jack Pierce) were well received
by Ralph Peer, and recorded some fine sides of traditional mountain music.
Jimmie Rodgers, alone with his guitar, recorded two songs, "Sleep,
Baby Sleep," and "The Soldier's Sweetheart," beginning
a legacy of over 100 recordings which, 60 years later, continue to inspire
listeners and other musicians. The combination of ease and intensity in
his voice and guitar work, his natural phrasing and articulation, and
that strange and beautiful yodel are all present and fully developed in
Jimmie's earliest recordings. Ralph Peer must have seen these things because,
even though Rodgers' Bristol sessions did not yield any big hits, Peer
was quick to arrange a follow-up session a few months later in Camden,
New Jersey.
This time they got one. "T For Texas (Blue Yodel
#1)" was a national phenomenon and generated an excitement and record-buying
frenzy that no one could have predicted. The song was a Jimmie Rodgers
original composition which drew heavily on traditional blues while showcasing
his strong, unique guitar style, aggressive vocals, and a crystal-clear,
bone chilling yodel which became his trademark. The lyrics made an obvious
connection to the southern states, talked about hard times with women
and work, and had a macho, slightly dangerous undertone. Not only were
these to be recurring themes in subsequent Jimmie Rodgers songs, (he re-worked
these ideas for a total of 13 "Blue Yodels") but they continue
as themes in country songwriting to this day.
By 1928, Jimmie Rodgers had experienced a meteoric rise
from obscurity to stardom similar in many ways to the later experiences
of Hank Williams and Elvis Presley. His years of hard living and grassroots
entertaining served him well as he scurried to meet the demands for live
appearances and recording sessions. He continued to feature traditional
songs like "Frankie and Johnny," sentimental favorites like
"Mother Was a Lady," railroad songs, and his calling card Blue
Yodels. He also discovered a gold mine in the songwriting talents of his
sister-in-law, Elsie McWilliams. Carrie's piano-playing sister had been
in a three-piece dance band with Jimmie in the early Meridian days, and
she composed and collaborated extensively with him during the critical
early phases of his recording career.
Like any successful recording star, Jimmie soon had songwriters
and publishers pitching him material from every direction, augmenting
his own prolific output. Happily free from the fetters of precedent and
stereotyping-after all he was the first nationally successful country
singer-Jimmie and producer Ralph Peer recorded a staggering variety of
music. From "Everybody Does It In Hawaii" with real Hawaiian
back-up, to "My Blue-Eyed Jane" with full jazz band, Jimmie
embodied the music of his time. In various combinations, he recorded with
mandolin, jug, steel guitar, ukulele, banjo, tuba, harmony whistling,
and musical saw. He shared the studio with such musical icons as Louis
Armstrong, Earl "Fatha" Hines, and Skillet Licker Clayton McMichen
(who also wrote "Peach Pickin' Time Down in Georgia").
Through all this, Jimmie somehow maintained an undeniable
identity. No matter how eclectic the setting, his distinctive voice and
yodel made each performance a reaffirmation of his own unique style and
indomitable spirit. In addition, nearly half of all his recordings featured
the pure, honest sound that lie started with-voice and guitar.
During the glory years, 1928-1933, Jimmie, Carrie, and
Anita Rodgers lived a hectic and exhilarating life of travel and wealth
which made them the envy of depression-era Americans. But always lurking
just out of view was the specter of impending doom in the form of a fatal
disease. As Jimmie wrote in a song: "Ain't no one ever whipped the
T. B. Blues." He, his family, and audience knew this all along, and
his struggle with it made him an even more heroic figure. He finally succumbed
on May 26, 1933, while on a recording trip to New York City.
In death, as in life, Jimmie Rodgers captured the imaginations
and emotions of millions. Volumes of tribute songs were written, and a
veritable yodeling army of Jimmie imitators took to the road and to the
recording studios. Some of these singers went on to become marvelous talents
on their own once they developed their personal styles. Among them were
Gene Autry, Jimmie Davis, Hank Snow, and Ernest Tubb, pioneers of the
next generation of country musicians.
Since then, such diverse interpreters as Crystal Gayle
and Lynard Skynard have recorded his songs. Through his influence on Bill
Monroe, Tommy Duncan, Bob Wills, Hank Williams, and Lefty Frizzell, Rodgers
deeply affected the eventual formation of Bluegrass, Western Swing, and
Honky Tonk Music.
Norm Cohen, in his introduction to The Recordings Of Jimmie
Rodgers: An Annotated Discography by Johnny Bond (JEMF Special Series,
No. 11), suggests the following as Rodgers' major contributions to country
music:
a) Increased reliance on new compositions by contemporary
writers and composers;
b) Increased reliance on studio musicians
c) Popularization of yodeling
d) Popularization of "white blues"-a hillbilly
offshoot of the classic 12-bar blues popular with both white and black
audiences in the mid- 1920s
e) Creation of a stable of lasting country music repertoire,
still actively in use
f) Creation of a singing /guitar style emulated by many
major artists during his lifetime and afterward
As much as Jimmie Rodgers represented a break with past
traditions in country music, typified in his parting of the ways with
the Tenneva Ramblers, he also must be viewed as a point of common ground
for devotees of many disparate musical idioms, including blues, old-time
western, Hawaiian, jug band, and jazz. In blending these elements together
with the strong personal style of a sincere, self taught, southern artist,
he provided us with a rallying point for all those who truly love American
music.
--John Lilly is an old-time musician and songwriter, currently
living in Charleston, West Virginia. He is the editor of the book, Mountains
of Music: West Virginia Traditional Music From Goldenseal, published by
the University of Illinois Press, and since 1997 has served as editor
of Goldenseal magazine, a quarterly folklife journal published by the
West Virginia Division of Culture and History.
John Lilly
PO Box 5402
Charleston, WV 25361
john@johnlillymusic.com
www.johnlillymusic.com
Discography
1927 Blue Yodel
1927 The Soldier's Sweetheart
1927 Ben Dewberrry's Final Run (Andy Jenkins)
1927 Sleep, Baby, Sleep (Public Domain)
1927 Mother Was a Lady (Edward B. Marks & Joseph Stern)
1927 Away Out on the Mountain (Kelly Harrell)
1928 Dear Old Sunny South by the Sea (Jimmie Rodgers & E.T. Cozzens)
1928 Treasures Untold (Jimmie Rodgers & E.T. Cozzens)
1928 Blue Yodel No. II
1928 The Sailor's Plea (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1928 In the Jailhouse Now
1928 Memphis Yodel
1928 The Brakeman's Blues
1928 Blue Yodel No. 3
1928 My Little Lady (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1928 Blue Yodel No. 4
1928 Daddy and Home (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1928 Lullaby Yodel (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1928 You and My Old Guitar (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1928 Never No Mo' Blues (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1928 Mississippi Moon
1928 My Carolina Sunshine Girl
1928 I'm Lonely and Blue (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1928 Waiting for a Train
1928 My Old Pal (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1928 My Little Old Home Down in New Orleans
1929 Blue Yodel No. 5
1929 Desert Blues
1929 Any Old Time
1929 High Powered Momma
1929 Tuck Away My Lonesome Blues (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1929 Frankie and Johnny
1929 I'm Sorry We Met
1929 Train Whitle Blues
1929 Everybody Does It in Hawaii (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1929 Jimmmie's Texas Blues
1929 Home Call (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1929 Blue Yodel No. 6
1929 Yodeling Cowboy (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1929 My Rough and Rowdy Ways (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1929 The Land of My Boyhood Dreams
1929 Whisper Your Mother's Name
1929 I've Ranged, I've Roamed, I've Traveled (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1929 Hobo Bill's Last Ride (Waldo O'Neal)
1929 Anniversary Blue Yodel (Blue Yodel No. 7) (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1929 That's Why I'm Blue (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1929 Mississippi River Blues
1929 She Was Happy Till She Met You (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1929 Blue Yodel Number Eleven
1929 A Drunkard's Child (Andrew Jenkins & Jimmie Rodgers)
1929 Nobody Knows But Me (Elsie McWilliams & Jimmie Rodgers)
1929 Why Did You Give Me Your Love?
1930 Moonnlight and Skies (Jimmie Rodgers & Raymond E. Hall)
1930 Pistol Packin' Papa (Jimmie Rodgers & Waldo O'Neal)
1930 Why Should I Be Lonely (Jimmie Rodgers & Estelle Lovell)
1930 Take Me Back Again (Jimmie Rodgers & Raymond E. Hall)
1930 Blue Yodel No. 8 (Mule Skinner Blues)
1930 Jimmie's Mean Momma Blues (Waldo O'Neal & Bob Sawyer)
1930 I'm Lonesome Too
1930 The Mystery of Number Five
1930 The One Rose (Lani McIntire)
1930 In the Jailhouse Now - No. 2
1930 For the Sake of Days Gone By (Jimmie Rodgers & Jack White)
1930 Blue Yodel No. 9
1931 T. B. Blues (Jimmie Rodgers & Raymond E. Hall)
1931 Travellin' Blues (Jimmie Rodgers & Shelly Lee Alley)
1931 Why There's A Tear in My Eye (A.P. Carter)
1931 Jimmie the Kid (Jimmie Rodgers & Jack Neville)
1931 The Wonderful City (Jimmie Rodgers & Elsie McWilliams)
1931 Let Me Be Your Side Track
1931 Looking for a New Momma
1931 When the Cactus in Bloom
1931 Jimmie Rodgers Visits the Carter Family
1931 The Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers in Texas
1931 Gambling Polka Dot Blues (Jimmie Rodgers & Raymond E. Hall)
1931 My Good Gal's Gone Blues
1931 Southern Cannon-Ball (Jimmie Rodgers & Raymond E. Hall)
1931 What's it? (Jimmie Rodgers & Jack Neville)
1932 Roll Along, Kentucky Moon (Bill Halley)
1932 My Time Ain't Long (Jimmie Rodgers & Waldo O'Neal)
1932 Hobo's Meditation
1932 Ninety-Nine Years Blues (Jimmie Rodgers & Raymond E. Hall)
1932 Mississippi Moon (Jimmie Rodgers & Elsie McWilliams)
1932 Down the Old Road to Home (Jimmie Rodgers & Carey D. Harvey)
1932 T for Texas (Blue Yodel No. 10)
1932 Whippin' That Old T.B.
1932 Rock All Our Babies to Sleep
1932 Home Call (Jimmie Rodgers & Elsie McWilliams)
1932 Mother, The Queen of My Heart (Hoyt Bryant & Jimmie Rodgers)
1932 No Hard Times
1932 Peach Pickin' Time Down in Georgia (Jimmie Rodgers & C McMichen)
1932 Long Tall Mama Blues
1932 Gambling Bar Room Blues (Jimmie Rodgers & Shelly Lee Alley)
1932 I've Only Loved Three Women (Jimmie Rodgers & Carey D.Harvey)
1932 In the Hills of Tennessee (Sam M. Lewis & Ira Schuster)
1932 Prairie Lullaby (Jimmie Rodgers, George Brown & Billy Hill)
1932 Miss the Mississippi and You (Billey Halley)
1932 Sweet Mama Hurry Home (Jack Neville)
1933 Blue Yodel No. 12
1933 Dreaming with Tears in My Eyes (Waldo O'Neal & Jimmie Rodgers)
1933 The Cowhand's Last Ride (Jimmie Rodgers & Arza Hitt)
1933 I'm Free (from the Chain Gang Now) (Lou Herscher & Saul Klein)
1933 Yodeling My Way Back Home
1933 Last Blue Yodel (Women Make a Fool Out of Me)
1933 The Yodeling Ranger (Jimmie Rodgers & Raymond E. Hall)
1933 Old Pal of My Heart (Jimmie Rodgers & John B. Mason)
1933 Years Ago (Jimmie Rodgers, Lou Herscher & Barry Richards)
1933 Somewhere Down Below the Dixon Line (Jimmie Rodgers & Walter Ryan)
1933 Old Love Letters (Jimmie Rodgers, Lou Herscher & Dwight Butcher)
1933 Mississippi Delta Blues (Jimmie Rodgers & Jack Neville)
1933 Country Legacy • Pair
1955 Never No Mo' Blues: Memorial Album • RCA Victor
1957 Train Whistle Blues • Koch
1960 My Rough and Rowdy Ways • Longhorn
1961 Jimmie the Kid • RCA Victor
1962 Country Music Hall of Fame • RCA Victor
1963 The Short But Brilliant Life • RCA Victor
1964 My Time Ain't Long • RCA Victor
1965 Twelve Immortal Hits • Hamilton
1974 The Legendary Jimmie Rodgers, Vol. 1 • RCA Victor
1975 Memorial Album, Vol. 3 • RCA Victor
1975 My Rough and Rowdy Ways • RCA Victor
1980 Memorial Album, Vol. 2 • RCA Victor
1983 This Is Jimmie Rodgers • RCA Victor
1983 Unissued, Vol. 1 • ACM
1989 You and My Old Guitar • Request (UK)
1989 My Old Pal • ASV/Living Era
1991 First Sessions • Rounder Records
1991 Vol. 5: America's Blue Yodeler 1930-31 • Rounder Records
1991 Vol. 6: Down the Old Road 1931-32 • Rounder Records
1991 No Hard Times, 1932 • Rounder Records
1991 The Early Years 1928-1929 • Rounder Records
1991 On the Way Up 1929 • Rounder Records
1991 Riding High 1929-1930 • Rounder Records
1991 Last Sessions, 1933 • Rounder Records
1992 The Singing Brakeman • Bear Family
1994 Train Whistle Blues • ASV/Living Era
1996 American Legends No. 16: Jimmie Rodgers • LaserLight
1996 The Blues • Fremeaux
1997 Memorial Album • Collectables
1997 The Essential Jimmie Rodgers • RCA
1997 Father of Country Music • Pearl
1998 Yodeling Ranger • Empress
1999 Ultimate Collection • Prims Leisure
2000 The Singing Brakeman • Country Stars
2000 Country Music Hall of Fame • King
2001 Jimmie Rodgers • St. Clair
2001 Brakeman's Blues • Catfish
2001 Yodelin' Cowboy • Roots Of Country
2001 Blue Yodel: The Recorded Legacy • Arpeggio
2002 Standing on the Corner (Blue Yodel No. 9)
2002 RCA Country Legends • RCA
2002 Recordings 1927-1933 • JSP
2002 Classic Sides 1927-1933 • JSP
2003 Country & Folk Roots • Castle
2003 Blue Yodels • Fabulous
Related links:
Official Website
My Husband Jimmie Rodgers by Carrie Rodgers
Jimmie Rodgers: The Life and Times of America's Blue Yodeler by Nolan Porterfield, (University of Illinois Press, 1979)
Johnson City, Tennessee and Jimmie Rodgers
Ralph Peer Remembers Jimmie Rodgers
The Country Music Hall of Fame
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
All Music Guide
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