East Texas street evangelist
Washington Phillips recorded 18 tracks in Dallas for
Columbia Records between 1927 and 1929, 16 of which were issued on 78s and have survived into the 21st century. As a body of work, those 16 recordings are as singular as any from the pre-Depression era, featuring
Phillips' personalized
hymns and sermons accompanied by his modified zithers, which give the songs an eerie and delicate brightness. For years it was thought that
Phillips played a dulceola (a zither-like instrument with a small keyboard attached that was invented by piano tuner
David P. Boyd in the 1890s) at these sessions, but it now appears that he actually played two self-modified table zithers (one a phonoharp and the other a celestaphon) simultaneously to get his unique, celestial sound. But
Phillips was more than a zither player with an eccentric playing approach; he was also a fine -- if unassuming -- singer, and his carefully composed musical sermons move like gentle, airy
hymns, not exactly
blues, but not exactly
gospel, either, and all shot through with
Phillips' distinct personality. In this regard he has a definite modern compositional sense, one that is built around his personal view of the world, but accompanied as it is by archaic-sounding instruments, the end result is like nothing before or since. All of his surviving recordings are of a piece, so it is difficult to pick out one or two as key tracks, but
"Paul and Silas in Jail," "What Are They Doing in Heaven Today," and the two-part
"Denomination Blues" are particularly striking.
The Key to the Kingdom essentially replaces
Yazoo's earlier
Phillips release,
I Am Born to Preach the Gospel, with updated (and corrected) liner notes, and four bonus tracks by fellow street musicians
Mamie and
A.C. Forehand that were recorded by
Ralph Peer in Memphis in 1927. These bonus tracks are more than added-on filler, as
A.C. (
Asa C.) is a fine slide guitarist and
Mamie has an engaging, delicate and haunting singing style, particularly on
"Wouldn't Mind Dying if Dying Was All" and
"Honey in the Rock." Mamie supposedly played finger cymbals at these sessions, but the bell-like touches on these songs are mono-tonal and not really percussive, sounding suspiciously like a desk service bell from a hotel. Needless to say, these odd tracks are every bit as unusual as the ones by
Phillips, adding in a more bluesy touch.
Document's
Storefront & Streetcorner Gospel release includes all of the
Phillips tracks found here, plus all four of the cuts from
Mamie and
A.C. Forehand (as well as alternate takes of three of their songs), and two delightful recordings by street preacher and harmonium player
Luther Magby to make what is probably a better buy, although
The Key to the Kingdom might be easier to find. Either way, this is utterly original music. ~ Steve Leggett