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Rory Block
Deep blues
There's only a modest audience today for the white performers
of the 1960s who made pilgrimages to learn the southern black
acoustic guitar music known as the country blues. But several of
them are still around, and, as with many of the original black
practitioners, the music has aged them well. Among the ones
who've developed the initial blues impulse in especially
interesting ways is Aurora "Rory" Block, who grew up in
New York's Little Italy, encountered the roots of American music
in Washington Square Park, and heard the 1964 compilation album
Really the Country Blues "and from that moment on my
life was dedicated to learning how to play blues."
Block delved deep into the music of Robert Johnson and that of
the surviving major country bluesmen Son House (who claimed
to have taught Johnson), the Reverend Gary Davis, Skip James. And
she met many of them. "This time period seemed to last
forever," she writes. "I thought everyone knew these
incredible men, these blues geniuses who wrote the book. I later
realized how fleeting it was, and how even more precious." She
became an interpreter of pure traditional styles but stood outside
them in one fundamental way: she is female. Onstage, a tall, slender
woman with strawberry blond hair turning white, Block conveys a
bluesman's sense of disconnection from the established order
of things; her performances are intense, punctuated by flashes of
dark humor.
She has always had a strong affinity for the music of Robert
Johnson, who came at the end of the country blues tradition and
played an extreme music, with existential lyrics married to a
hair-trigger rhythmic tension and dazzling slide-guitar explorations
of blues pitch instability, that must sometimes have caused even
African American audiences of the 1930s to wonder what he was doing.
Few have mastered Johnson's style, but Block did. As with
Johann Sebastian Bach, it was thought for a long time that Johnson
had no living descendants, but in fact (again as with Bach) they're
all over. Block recently went to Mississippi and sought them out
after recording an album of Johnson classics like "Come On in
My Kitchen," "Crossroad Blues," and "Hellhound
on My Trail." The new album is called The Lady and Mr. Johnson.
"When I hear Rory Block's music, it's as if my grandfather
is here all over again," said Johnson's grandson Greg.
The trip took Block in new directions as she toured with a gospel
choir from the Straightway Ministries Church to which Johnson's
family belongs. Everybody ought to experience the presence of Rory
Block at least once, but now, just as she has penetrated to the
heart of the mystery, is probably an especially good time to do it.
She comes to the Ark on Friday, January 18.
James M. Manheim
[Review published January 2008]
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