Month: January 2020

  • A TASTE OF THE BLUES (PART ONE)

    The global phenomenon that is music takes many forms. The origins stem from multiple cultures across the planet. Their evolution is never-ending with new variations limited only by imagination, which never seems exhausted. The genres remain, though, their boundaries mostly honored by those composers and musicians who love the tradition in which they have trained.

    A few of these musical styles have come into existence in America. Jazz is a prime example, but before jazz the blues were created, bursting out of the hearts and souls of men and women who were giving expression to their distress in a way never known before on earth.

    From Seeds of Discontent

    In Sheila Davis’ book, The Craft of Lyric Writing, she states, “The blues began as an Afro-American work song which originated with the newly freed Southern slaves, largely unskilled laborers. The lyrics concerned the singer’s miseries–economic, sexual, and political. Unlike spirituals, which are choral in nature, the blues are a one-man (or one-woman) affair.

    ” ‘Sorrow-songs’ were often sung out-of-doors, the improvised complaints of exploited workers in cotton fields and ‘the sunless depths’ of mines. These melancholy moanings were also the ‘trial and tribulation music,’ as Mahalia Jackson put it (in Time magazine), ‘of the men on the railroad track layin’ crossties; everytime they hit the hammer, it was with a sad feelin’, but with a beat. Or it was the sound made by the men sellin’ watermelons and vegetables on a wagon drawn by a mule, hollerin’ ‘watermellllon!’ with a cry in their voices.’ Other lyrics told of double-crossing women, deserting men, whiskey, morphine, and chain gangs.”

    Early Tunes

    Ms. Davis goes on to tell us about “Joe Turner,” the main character of an early composition. While the first “sorrow-songs” were created as much as 50 years earlier, she says this one was prototype of all blues when published as Joe Turner Blues by W.C. Handy, who became known as “The Father of the Blues.” Handy wrote his song in 1915, but said he based it on a folk song he first heard in 1895.

    Handy at 19 years old

    This makes total sense, since the old Joe Turner song came about because of a man actually named Joe Turney, brother of Tennessee governor Pete Turney, who held that office from 1892 to 1896. Perhaps because of his connection to the governor, he gained a fearsome reputation for gathering up groups of convicts in Memphis, putting them in long chains, and leading them to the Nashville penitentiary. It was during those years that the song developed into a folk song with the basic blues shape Handy used. The name Turney had been mistakenly altered in the likely verbal passing along of the lyrics, but there’s no doubt the story is the same about this “bad” sheriff who transported great numbers of convicts in chains.

    The tune for Joe Turner Blues was carried over to numerous sets of lyrics that fit the mold of blues lamentations. It was widely used across the region by singers with fresh emotional wounds who loved the blues structure made popular by Handy.

    Before that iconic tune was composed, the guitar had gained popularity with black musicians. That change occurred in the 1890s, so by the time Joe Turner Blues came along, there was a lot of blues style music merging with the sounds of the guitar.

    The first blues song ever published, though, was called I Got the Blues, in 1908. It wasn’t in the pure structure of the prototype, but a man by the name of Anthony Maggio wrote it as a ragtime blues tune. In 1912, the blues gained momentum in the publishing world. Dallas Blues by Hart Wand, Baby Seals Blues by Baby F. Seals, and Memphis Blues by Mr. Handy were all released within that same year.

    Recordings

    Handy’s Memphis Blues was first known as Mr. Crump, named for a Memphis mayoral candidate running for office. The song was hugely popular and became the first blues recording, done by a band known as the Victor Military Band. Within a month, Prince’s Band and a vaudeville singer named Morton Harvey recorded new versions. So, Handy’s hit accounted for the first three recordings of the blues!

    Another milestone was the recording by Mamie Smith of Crazy Blues, written by Perry Bradford. This was the first record of a vocal blues song by a black woman. It sold a million copies in its first six months.

    Blues Forever

    The blues were here to stay. The American public was hooked and record companies were on the bandwagon. But things were just getting started. Be sure to check with me next time for another taste of those sweet blues.

  • ACUPUNCTURE–ART OR SCIENCE?

    Since it was introduced in the United States in 1971, the ancient healing practice of acupuncture has enjoyed a surge in popularity with Americans. It is primarily considered an alternative form of treatment, but its widening acceptance seems to be lending it more and more credibility.

    Is acupuncture a healing art or legitimate science? Many have weighed in on this question and between critiques as well as testimonials, opinions run deep. Emotions run high.

    Voices of Dismissal

    Following is an excerpt from a contributor to Wikipedia. “Acupuncture is a form of alternative medicine and a key component of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) in which thin needles are inserted into the body.  Acupuncture is a pseudoscience because the theories and practices of TCM are not based on scientific knowledge, and it has been characterized as quackery.”

    On the website sciencebasedmedicine.org, their article “Acupuncture” comes out strong on the subject. It states that acupuncture was developed before the scientific method was created and before much was known about biology, the functions of the human body or diseases. The field of medicine was based on philosophies, making treatments according to what people thought or theorized rather than on hard facts.

    Acupuncture was the answer to the Eastern philosophy of chi, the life force or vital energy that animates all living creatures, and the idea that chi can become blocked in the body. Placing the needles along the channels where this energy flows would, according to the theory, open the way for the neural energy movement. This article contends there is no real mechanism proven to demonstrate how this process actually works.

    Ongoing Debate

    In 1997, an article was written by Jane E. Brody in which she posed the question, “Acupuncture: An Expensive Placebo or a Legitimate Alternative?” She wrote that although it doesn’t cure anything, it at least provides management of certain maladies such as chronic pain that is as effective or more effective than mainstream medicine options like drugs or invasive surgery without the side effects and the physical damage. Still, the medical community in the West had been unwilling to take it seriously, again due to lack of scientific evidence of its practical value in the field of medicine.

    At that time, though, Ms. Brody reported that experts on the subject were summoned to respond to questions from the consensus development program of the National Institutes of Health about what acupuncture treatment can accomplish. There was enough actual data communicated that an independent panel concluded acupuncture could alleviate acute and chronic pain as well as control nausea caused by pregnancy, anesthesia or chemotherapy.

    Ms. Brody’s article went on to say that much more research needed to be done to determine whether acupuncture is a truly medical technique of value to a large segment of the population. She at least was able to report that many researchers and practitioners at the above-referenced conference stated it should for the time being be considered a complementary treatment to standard medical practice.

    Fast Forward

    The National Institutes of Health’s National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NIH), has been working on acupuncture research…slowly, it seems. Their website has an entry about “Acupuncture: In Depth,” last updated in 2016. Much of the same ground is being covered as in 1997, but it’s of no small significance that they acknowledge the likelihood acupuncture can help manage certain pain issues.

    The Mayo Clinic is one of the most respected medical organizations in the world. They now have a team of specialists in integrative practices–aka complementary and alternative medicine–who perform approximately 1000 acupuncture treatments per year. The Clinic also is a leader in research of acupuncture, using evidence-based testing for effectiveness and safety of its procedures.

    In 2017, Healthcare Medicine Institute wrote about the University of Minnesota’s research involving the use of acupuncture in treating cardiac arrhythmia. It was found in eight separate studies that the success rate ranged from 87% to 100% for converting patients to a “normal sinus rhythm after acupuncture.” The practice out-performed drug therapy significantly in conversion rate and in speed of results. There can be a recurrence of the condition, according to their 12-month follow-ups, but this is true for drug and surgical options as well. It’s suggested that occasional maintenance visits can prevent recurrences after acupuncture..

    So…Art or Science

    Much more research needs to be done to place acupuncture in one category or the other. However, that there are enough cases of proven results to warrant the use of this practice as a viable alternative to conventional medical treatment. If there’s a chance that strategic insertion of some fine needles will produce a comparable result to that provided by drug therapy or surgery of any kind, I’ll give the needles a shot. (You see what I did there, right?) Modern medicine is remarkable and mostly reliable, but don’t discard the ancient Chinese wisdom before it’s fully understood.