The African American
ballads collected on this intriguing set from
Smithsonian Folkways don't differ in obvious ways from the British
ballad tradition, with the songs in both streams dealing frequently with death, often from romance gone awry, and several of the selections here (
"Mouse on the Hill," "Stewball," "St. James Infirmary," "Gallis Pole") are actually British or Irish in origin. A case could be made that the black
ballad tradition in America has a bit more humor to it, more
improvisation, and that the singer is more likely to drop suddenly into first person in the lyric, thus personalizing the story, but these would be selective observations rather than codified rules of form, and the fact remains that a
ballad's main job, whatever its source, is to tell a story, and if that story should come to a tragic close, all the better for its remembrance. And the stories told here have certainly been remembered, for these songs have been recorded numerous times by black and white singers alike, and tunes like
"John Henry" and
"Casey Jones" will be familiar to even the most casual listener. In the end, whether sung by blacks or whites, these are American
ballads, having absorbed all manner of cultural flotsam, and if some of them are European in origin, they have been thoroughly stretched, altered, and reassembled into essentially new compositions, even if they retain a grain of the original song's intent.
"St. James Infirmary," done wonderfully here by
Snooks Eaglin, is a case in point. The song derives from an old British broadside called
"The Unfortunate Rake," which details the fatal consequences of contracting a sexually transmitted disease, and the American transfiguration of the song retains that consequence, but is a good deal more vague about the events that led up to it, focusing instead on the narrator's preparations for death. It is a beautifully sad and melodic dirge, and remains so in a further variant,
"The Streets of Laredo," which is the song in its next stage as a completely Americanized
ballad.
"Delia's Gone," sung here by
Josh White, Jr., has done even more traveling as a
ballad. The song was based on a real incident that took place on Christmas Eve in 1900, when
Moses Houston shot and killed
Delia Green. Both were only 14-years-old. A version of the
ballad was collected in Georgia in 1906, but the song wasn't widespread at the time. Somehow the song reached the Bahamas, where the
mento banjo player
Blind Blake Higgs recorded it in 1952, and with the mid-'50s
pop calypso boom just starting to pick up,
Blind Blake's version was covered by numerous American singers, including
Josh White,
Pete Seeger, and
Harry Belafonte, thus re-transforming
"Delia's Gone" into an American
ballad again, albeit with an obvious Caribbean lilt.
Leadbelly's version of
"Gallis Pole," featured here in a live radio transcription, is also worth noting, since it is an explosive take on the British child
ballad "The Maid Freed from the Gallows," only with a complete reversal of the plot at the end, changing the song from a statement supporting true love to a cautionary tale about its cruelty. Even at 22 songs,
Classic African American Ballads only scratches the surface of the American
ballad. Here's hoping for a volume two. ~ Steve Leggett