William
Christopher Handy will forever be remembered as “The Father of the Blues.” It
was Handy who was most responsible for taking this regional folk music of the
American South and turning it into another form of popular American music.
Handy
was working as a popular minstrel bandleader when he heard blues music for the
first time while stopping over in the Mississippi Delta. Handy would eventually
write the first popular blues songs, “Memphis Blues,” ”St. Louis Blues,” Yellow
Dog Blues,” and “Hesitating Blues.”
Handy
was born in Florence, Alabama, in 1873. His father was pastor of a church in a
nearby town. Handy’s upbringing was strict and his pious father viewed secular
music and anything associated with it as instruments of the devil. It was with
much secrecy then, that young W.C. Handy purchased his first instrument, a
guitar. When his father found the guitar, Handy was instructed to return it.
Handy moved on to organ and eventually acquired a cornet, the instrument with
which he would be forever associated.
Handy
joined a local band as a cornetist during his teens-a fact that he kept hidden
from his parents. During the 1890s Handy traveled around Alabama in various
bands playing the minstrel music that was popular at the time and working odd
jobs to make ends meet. He eventually became the leader of the Mahara’s Colored
Minstrels and toured The South with that band for three years.
From
1900-1902, Handy was recruited as a music teacher at the Alabama Agricultural
and Mechanical College for Negroes. Handy’s frustration with the college’s emphasis
on European classical music and apparent lack of appreciation for American
styles led to his resignation from his post.
Handy
quickly rejoined his old band and set off on the road again. It was while on
tour with the band in the Mississippi Delta that Handy heard the blues, a music
that he described at the time as “the weirdest music I had ever heard.” Handy
studied the blues as played by locals during subsequent visits to the
Mississippi Delta, and by the time Handy and his band had relocated to Memphis,
Tennessee, in 1909, the blues was part of his repertoire. Handy wrote what is
often coined as the first blues song, “Memphis Blues,” as a theme song for a
Memphis mayoral candidate, Edward Crump. The song was originally titled, “Mr.
Crump.”
Handy
wrote subsequent songs with “blues” in the title such as “Beale Street Blues”
and “St. Louis Blues” and became one of the first African-Americans to become
wealthy by publishing songs. Handy moved his publishing business to New York
City, in 1917, and set up offices in Times Square.
In
early 1917, The Original Dixieland Jazz Band had made the first jazz recording
with a side titled, “Livery Stable Blues.” Handy organized a band called Handy’s
Orchestra of Memphis to make his own recordings for Columbia. The resulting
sides contained music that was closer to blues than that which was recorded by
jazz bands. Handy was not enamored with this new music, jazz, and tried to
stick to tradition.
Handy
recorded for various labels from 1917 to 1924 and recorded versions of his own
songs, “Memphis Blues,” “Yellow Dog Blues,” and “St. Louis Blues,” among
others. Handy’s renditions of these classic tunes are not considered as
classics of the era, but they are of tremendous historical rather than
aesthetic interest.
Among
the limited compilation albums that may be found on Handy’s recordings are “Father
of the Blues” (1980) and “Martin Scorsese Presents the Blues: A Musical Journey”
(2003).
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