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How rock ā€™nā€™ roll pioneers helped to bring down Jim Crow
Union Leader ^ | August 27 2002 | Deroy Murdock

Posted on 08/27/2002 3:18:36 AM PDT by 2Trievers

IF YOUR TRAVELS take you where Tennessee meets the Mississippi River, visit this city’s Rock ’n’ Soul Museum. It’s more than a tourist attraction. The electric guitars on view don’t just cheer up chicken wings, a la the Hard Rock Cafe. Just south of world-famous Beale Street, the museum houses “Rock ’n’ Soul: Social Crossroads,” the Smithsonian Institution’s largest permanent exhibition outside Washington, D.C.

In joyous tones, this museum makes a serious and overlooked point: Rock ’n’ roll, and later soul music, peacefully fused what white and black Americans could offer each other. More importantly, the wild popularity of these art forms among young blacks and whites in the 1950s and 1960s sped the demise of Jim Crow.

Obviously, Rosa Parks, the Freedom Riders and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (assassinated in 1968 just four blocks from where the museum sits) led the struggle for civil rights. But Ike Turner, B.B. King and Elvis Presley played their parts, too.

Why Memphis? This city is the hub of a wheel whose spokes stretch into eastern Tennessee and nearby Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. As such, it attracted many of the 7.6 million southerners who traded the countryside for cities between 1935 and 1960.

Blacks by the thousands came here from the Mississippi Delta after the tractor and other advancements eliminated old-fashioned, labor-intensive, mule-pulled plow farming. They also were robbed by New Deal agricultural programs that allowed large landlords to collect crop support payments meant for poor sharecroppers, then simply not deliver them. On audio tour headsets, museum guests can hear a Carson Robinson song on Champion Electrograph Records that laments these dire straits: “‘Leven Cent Cotton, Forty Cent Meat.”

While the museum displays an actual pair of screen doors labeled “White Only” and “Colored Only,” Memphis’ race relations were less tense than elsewhere in the South. An 1878 yellow fever epidemic killed some 5,000 of the city’s 7,500 residents and vacated it for 14 years. The blacks and whites who later rebuilt a dead city were “urban pioneers” whose civic spirit lacked the venom of many of the places they left.

Blacks brought gospel and blues from deeper in the South. In fact, the route from the Mississippi Delta to Memphis is called the “Blues Highway.” The museum sits on Route 61, immortalized by Bob Dylan’s album “Highway 61 Revisited.” Meanwhile, whites who left farms during the Depression, World War II and its aftermath brought country and bluegrass music to Memphis.

In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Memphis’ somewhat more relaxed racial policies increasingly allowed white and black musicians and audiences to mingle in nightclubs. Local white-owned radio stations like WDIA let black DJs like Rufus Thomas and a young ex-tractor driver named B.B. King jointly showcase white and black music. These musical tributaries soon formed a mighty river called rock ’n’ roll. It flowed lightly at first through folks like Ike Turner (whose 1951 “Rocket 88” many consider the first rock tune), then rushed along with the release of Elvis Presley’s “That’s All Right Mama” in 1954. Soul music eventually cascaded out of Memphis, too, carrying Al Green, Otis Redding and the Staple Singers to American listeners.

As black and white teens began to listen and dance publicly to the same black and white performers, racism’s levees broke — slowly at first, then all of a sudden in the 1960s.

The museum’s treasures include the bulky, gray console on which Sun Records impresario Sam Phillips captured the work of Presley, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash and others. The first Gibson hollow-body guitar B.B. King dubbed Lucille is here, complete with wood grains peeking through cracked red varnish. Look for the battered upright piano on which Pinetop Perkins taught Ike Turner to play. Its stained keys are worse for the wear, and more crooked than a poor man’s teeth.

The Smithsonian has taken heat in recent years for presenting politically correct shows that portray America as the chief tormentor of a variety of multi-cultural victim groups. But with the Rock ’n’ Soul Museum, it deserves credit for explaining how artists and entrepreneurs in search of beauty and profits helped bridge black and white Americans — and set the whole thing to music.

New York commentator Deroy Murdock is a columnist with the Scripps Howard News Service and a Senior Fellow with the Atlas Economic Research Foundation in Fairfax, Va.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 08/27/2002 3:18:36 AM PDT by 2Trievers
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To: 2Trievers
If I knowd it was gonna turn out like this.....
I'da picked my own cotton....
2 posted on 08/27/2002 4:29:00 AM PDT by joesnuffy
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To: joesnuffy
WOW!! The museum has two screen doors!! I've gotta go see
that! Is this a slow news day or what???
3 posted on 08/27/2002 4:45:31 AM PDT by Russ
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To: 2Trievers
Not true.

Rock, big band swing, dixieland jazz, ragtime. American popular music has been black-driven for a very long time.
4 posted on 08/27/2002 4:50:13 AM PDT by Tokhtamish
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To: 2Trievers
How rock ’n’ roll pioneers helped to bring down Jim Crow

Title should read:

How rock ’n’ roll pioneers helped to bring down the USA

5 posted on 08/27/2002 4:56:56 AM PDT by CWRWinger
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To: CWRWinger
How rock ’n’ roll pioneers helped to bring down the USA

There was no real collaboration, rock 'n'roll merely provided the necessary beat, and the beat goes on. To truly bring down a nation one must embrace Wagner!

6 posted on 08/27/2002 5:14:43 AM PDT by TightSqueeze
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To: TightSqueeze
There was no real collaboration,

Rock 'n Roll and Playboy type magazines were the two main media used by the communist party to undermine the moral fabric of the USA. The communists could go no further in the USA until they captured the youth of America. In retrospect, it worked quite well for them. Thanks to rock, we now have two generations of rebellion against traditional moral values. Thanks to playboy, we have two generations of effeminate men.

You do have a point about the beat, most people do not listen to rock for the words.

7 posted on 08/27/2002 5:34:23 AM PDT by CWRWinger
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To: CWRWinger
I'm no fan of Playboy, but how the heck did it make men effeminate? V's wife.
8 posted on 08/27/2002 5:41:42 AM PDT by ventana
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Comment #9 Removed by Moderator

Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: ventana
Many burned out immoral heterosexuals turn to sodomy for the the next 'high' (actually, low). Sodomites are effeminate, with the emphasis on 'feelings'.
11 posted on 08/27/2002 6:37:13 AM PDT by CWRWinger
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To: Russ
Is this a slow news day or what???

It has been a slow news month. Unfortunately last August was as well. Hopefully when the news picks back up this time it will be Iraqi blood being spilled rather than ours. I feel the same impending doom feeling as I did last year about this time. I was across the hall in an unfinished part of our office building last September 10th. I looked out over the city and wondered to myself what was about to happen....it seemd too quiet for some reason. I found it very ironic the next day.
12 posted on 08/27/2002 7:23:26 AM PDT by AdA$tra
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To: 2Trievers
The owner of one of the most perfect singing voices God ever gave mankind:


13 posted on 08/27/2002 7:32:22 AM PDT by Hemingway's Ghost
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To: CWRWinger
Sodomites are effeminate, with the emphasis on 'feelings'.

Exactly what the hell are you talking about?

14 posted on 08/27/2002 7:33:03 AM PDT by Hemingway's Ghost
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To: TonyRo76
I'm still at a loss, however, to explain how we got from great blues, gospel, country and rock to the current musical monstrosity known as rap.

At its best, rap is like bebop jazz (try A Tribe Called Quest). At its worst, rap is the musical monstrosity you've observed.

15 posted on 08/27/2002 7:34:57 AM PDT by Hemingway's Ghost
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To: 2Trievers

The Harmonicats nearly destroyed civilization as we know it.
16 posted on 08/27/2002 7:40:33 AM PDT by Consort
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