© 1998 by Joseph L. Monzo
with
JustMusic analysis of Drunken Hearted Man © 1998 by Joseph L. Monzo
Background
Biography
Robert Johnson's music
Microtones in Johnson's music
Rational analysis of vocal from Drunken-Hearted Man
Appendix: Observation on the "Blue 3rd"
References
BACKGROUND
The blues style known as Delta Blues originated in the "juke joints" and parties on the country plantations and in the towns in the areas of Arkansas and Mississippi on either side of the Mississippi River south of Memphis, Tenessee, in the early years of the 20th century.
Its origins are ackowledged to have developed mostly in the playing and
singing of Charley Patton around 1912 or so. The generation following
Patton saw the emergence of the man generally considered to be both the
greatest of all Delta Blues musicians and truly a musical genius who
ranks with the greatest of composers and performers, regardless of
which style: Robert Johnson.
There is still not a lot of detail known about Johnson's life. He
was born in 1911 in Hazlehurst, in southern Mississippi, to Julia
Dodds and Noah Johnson, with whom Dodds had taken up after her husband,
Charles Dodds, escaped from a lynch mob to Memphis and assumed the name
Spencer. Young Robert Dodds ended up with his stepfather in Memphis for
a few years, adopted the name Spencer, then spent his adolesence during
the 1920s in
Robinsonville, Mississippi, with his mother and her new husband Dusty
Willis. He learned of his real father and changed his name again, to
Johnson.
By this time he had learned Jew's Harp and harmonica, and had just started
on guitar. The great Delta Blues singer and guitarist Son House moved
to Robinsonville, and Johnson was greatly impressed and influenced by
him. He would follow House and Willie Brown at the gigs they did
together and beg them to let him play. They would give in, and
then snatch the guitar away from him because he was so bad.
He married at 18, but his wife and child died in childbirth. After
this, he went back to Hazlehurst and married an older woman who took
care of him while he studied with Ike Zinnerman (who never recorded).
A year later, the couple moved to Robinsonville, and everyone was amazed
at the incredible advance in Johnson's technique in such a short time.
Rumor had it that he had sold his soul to the Devil to obtain his
extraordinary ability, and Johnson's lyrics claiming partnership with
Satan did nothing to contradict the stories.
He soon deserted his second wife and based himself in Helena, Arkansas,
but during the 1930s he
was constantly hitching rides or hopping freight trains,
wandering all over the Delta and the South,
and later as far as Detroit, Toronto and
New York. It was the Depression, and he played anywhere he could make
some money, including the street.
Johnson had women everywhere he went, and would frequently get into
trouble by paying too much attention to an attached woman. This happened
at his last gig, in 1938, and after drinking from an opened bottle of
whiskey containing poison, and surviving, he contracted pneumonia in his
weakened condition and died at the age of 27.
Mack McCormack has researched Johnson's life and written what must be
the most detailed biography possible, but it has yet to be published.
Johnson recorded 29 songs, most with two existing takes, in two
sessions, both in Texas: November 1936 in San Antonio and June 1937
in Dallas. He performed alone on every cut, singing, and playing
steel-stringed acoustic guitar with a bottleneck slide on one finger
of his left hand.
His first 78 rpm release, Terraplane Blues, became quite popular,
but none of his subsequent releases would equal it in sales. Also,
Johnson had died just a year before he would have had the opportunity
to appear in John Hammond's "Spirituals to Swing" concert in New York's
Carnegie Hall (Benny Goodman's appearance there made him the "King of Swing"). Without
knowlege of Johnson's passing, Hammond had been seeking him.
He became somewhat forgotten, until in 1961 an LP of Johnson songs called
King of the Delta Blues Singers was released. This exposed him to a
new audience of blues fans who already knew Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf,
and other electric blues performers who had migrated to Chicago
from the Delta; particularly
a large number of white American and especially British listeners.
As evidenced by the title of the album, Johnson posthumously received the
recognition he deserved, and Eric Clapton (Cream's version of Crossroads)
and the Rolling Stones (a handful of covers, most notably Love in Vain),
among others, paid him homage as a musical ancestor of rock'n'roll.
His sound can be heard to some degree in almost all of the popular
music created in America since his time.
Recently, the 2-CD set of his entire recorded output has been digitally
remastered and released, with a comprehensive booklet and complete lyrics
enclosed.
Johnson stands out from other Delta musicians in that he learned not
only personally from his local influences but also from an extraordinarily
wide variety of styles on 78-rpm recordings, possibly including even Duke
Ellington. As a result, his guitar playing exhibits a sophistication
which made him capable of changing meters, riffing styles and tempos
smoothly (many of his songs) or abruptly (Malted Milk Blues), as
required by the moment, making his guitar almost like an orchestral
commentary on the vocals.
His guitar parts have an astonishingly propulsive rhythmic drive,
and in most of his songs they evoke to me the rhythms of the train.
Eric Clapton said:
Johnson plays with such a heavy beat that it sounds like the train
rolling across the tracks (at various tempos) while he sings the blues
to himself or to his travelling buddy. And those vocals are every bit
as complex as the early singing and playing of Louis Armostrong,
maybe even more so [on Armstrong, see Sims 1987]. (There's also
an interesting parallel here with
Harry Partch,
who was also riding
freight trains and composing pieces about it, at about this same time.)
With completely independent bass line, two-part chording or
high-string riffing, and expert vocals, it often seems as though there
are two (or even three) performers on the records. Keith Richards wrote:
On gigs, he played anything his audience would pay for, and this variety
is reflected in his own recordings. Much of his subject-matter was
also a variety of standard repertoire among his colleagues, such things
as being broke, his woman leaving him, evil spirits, and rambling,
and the majority of the songs contain sexual double entendre, which
was very common -- two great
examples are Terraplane, using a car as a metaphor for his woman,
and Phonograph Blues, invoking a record-player in a similar manner.
But Johnson also wrote and sang about much more
personal material, such as impotence (in at least three songs, Dead
Shrimp Blues, Milcow's Calf Blues,
and the great Stones in My Passway).
The consensus about Johnson's recordings is that the best songs evoke
emotions so powerful as to rarely be attained in musical performance.
In particular, when he sang the common macho blues boast about being in
league with the Devil, he made it sound so convincing that it's scary --
his masterpiece Hellhound On My Trail is the best of all, and
If I Had Possession Over Judgment Day, Me And The Devil Blues,
and Preaching Blues (Up Jumped The Devil) are almost as chilling.
In his book Deep Blues, Robert Palmer notes several times that a major
characteristic of Delta Blues is the functional use of microtonal
subtleties in the slide guitar parts and especially the vocals, and that
mainly through Muddy Waters this art was transmitted to the electric
Chicago Blues of the 1940s and 1950s.
To a great extent, the powerful emotional mood in Johnson's songs is
a result of his masterful manipulation of microtonal intervals in his
singing, and in Hellhound, in much of the guitar part. His voice
could sound like a moan, whisper, yell, or trombone solo, with
seemingly effortless ease -- unless he constricted his throat for an
even stronger effect -- and the slide guitar parts could evoke the same.
In a couple of songs, he sings about the wind howling, then the driving guitar
rhythm suddenly stops for a moment, while Johnson slides up to a single
note that can raise the hair on the back of your neck.
Drunken-Hearted Man is not one of Johnson's most notable songs. It's
good, but not as great as the songs mentioned above. Peter Guralnick
[Searching For Robert Johnson] says that it is clearly derivative of
Lonnie Johnson, who was another very strong influence on Robert Johnson,
and that it exhibits not much originality. I chose it because Johnson's
singing of "it would mean" in the first line of take 1 jumped out at me
as being so noticeably microtonal in what originally sounded like a
12-equal context in the rest of the vocal (and which turned out to be
very microtonal after all). Johnson's greatest songs are permeated with
even more striking microtonal inflection.
I have analyzed this first verse below. The other verses are somewhat
different, but not much, and what I give here acts as a template or theme,
upon which the other verses are variations, differing in their degree of
similarity, mainly as a result of reflecting the meaning of the words.
This is Johnson's standard procedure in all his songs.
It should be noted that in this song there is not much pitch-bending in
the guitar part -- in fact, the slide is used mainly just to slide across
a few frets, giving a 12-equal glissando. Thus, the guitar provides a
strongly 12-equal-tempered background behind the largely just-intonation
vocal part.
Here is my interpretation, accurate to the best of my ability (susceptible
to further correction), of the rational values sung by Johnson in the
first verse of take 1:
(listen to my MIDI sequence)
(+ and - values above the staff give deviation, in cents, from 12-Eq)
Here are the rational pitches of Johnson's vocal portrayed on a
tonal lattice diagram:
I've added to this lattice a number of vectors that
go to missing pitches, so that the planes representing
the various primes can be sketched in greater detail.
I thinks this helps the eye to grasp the placement
of all the elements within the complete set (i.e.,
all of the individual notes in the context of the
entire verse).
I invite alternate interpretations of these pitches,
either new ratios for my measured cents-values, or
altogether new measurements of the pitches off the CD.
Also, I'd be interested in any alternate methods of
measuring this tuning, instead of rational; i.e., equal,
meantone, etc. I want to get as accurate a representation as possible
of the tuning of Johnson's actual vocal (and guitar playing).
And here is a graph of the pitches presented as a scale,
with their cents values,
where 0 to 1200 represent the central 'octave' of the melody (d to d'):
This was figured out first by ear on a guitar which has frets for the notes
which have the proportions 16:20:21:22:23:24:25:27:28:30
starting from D n0 [= 1/1 = 0.00 semitones]. It
does not have frets for the proportion 22.5 (= 45), or for any
other odd-numbered ratios above 23,
nor for any of the notes rising as harmonic ratios above G 3-1
[= 4/3 = (G 2(5/12) - 2 cents) = 4.98 semitones] (except for those
which coincide with the harmonics of D n0), thus it lacks
the following notes:
I then sequenced the 1st verse of the song (guitar and vocal parts -
listen to my MIDI sequence), and played
the CD along with it to check my pitch-bend values. Doing this by
ear, even this way, is still quite difficult, and some of these ratios
may be slightly off, but it is quite close to what Johnson actually
sang. (I was, however, able to make the subtle tempo changes
very accurate.)
Because of this uncertainty, I tried to use the simplest and
smallest-number ratios to represent the pitches I heard. I stayed
mostly within the 13-Limit, except for what sounded clearly like
Ab 231 [=23/16 =(Ab 2(6/12) + 28 cents) = 6.28 semitones],
which he uses three times. It is
quite possible that Johnson actually used much
higher-prime ratios than some of the ones I have chosen. Some of these
possibilities will be explored.
In the first line, when Johnson sings , he begins on the
usual just "major 3rd" of
The notes I labelled B 3-1 51 [= 5/3 = (B 2(9/12) - 16 cents) = 8.84 semitones]
were the most problematical. They occur in only one place in each verse,
as a pair, and are quite short and difficult to hear clearly. Johnson
has just played a banjo-like riff on the D n0 chord on the guitar, then
starts a walk-down riff on F# 2(4/12), and sings
these two notes over the guitar's F 2(3/12) (which
goes to E 2(2/12), functioning as the 3-identity
of the "dominant chord" on A 2(7/12), as his vocals
become more clearly consonant with the guitar). It
didn't seem likely to me that
it would be a high-prime harmonic such as
3-1 411 [= 9.27 semitones], so there may be
another ratio, possibly of utonal derivation, that would describe it
better. This pair of notes I have described as B 3-1 51
may even be two different pitches.
Most notable in Johnson's vocals are the sections I have labelled:
in the first line,
And in the last line,
and
These are all very small intervals.
The glissando on sounds like it could arise as a result of
Johnson singing the "just major 3rd" of 51 [= 5/4 =(F# 2(4/12) - 14 cents) = 3.86 semitones] then
sharpening it to compensate for the sharper pitch of the F# 2(4/12)
[= 4.00 semitones] which would appear on the guitar,
but he is playing only the C 2(10/12) : D n0 dyad
on the guitar (in other words, no F# 2(4/12)) at this point in the verse, and the vocal goes more
than a comma higher than even the 12-eq F# 2(4/12).
The C 3-2 [= 16/9 = (C 2(10/12) - 4 cents) = 9.96 semitones]
on is less than 1½ cents lower than 2(7/12) 191
[= 9.98 semitones], the 19th harmonic of the dominant chord
built on A 2(7/12) [= 7.00 semitones]
which Johnson is playing on the guitar. Indeed, he may actually be
singing 2(7/12) 191, as I have argued that 191 is a ratio used in
the blues and rock (see the program notes to Hendrix Chord).
The most obviously microtonal moment in the whole song is the third example,
the ratios he sings on "i-t'would mean". This was the first time
I really noticed microtonality in Johnson's singing, and is the reason
why I chose to analyze this song over some of his better ones.
What is striking is that the microtonal, rational relationships are
integral to the template, which is used as a basis for the variations
in the succeeding verses. Johnson's songs can be said to fit into a
rather small number of groups or families, within which the individual
songs have important but very subtle variations between each other,
which is what differentiates them as different songs, but overall
they are quite similar within any given family.
To a degree, all of Johnson's songs sound vaguely alike if one does
not pay close attention to the microtones in the bottleneck guitar
parts and especially in the vocals. Only by listening carefully to
these pitches do the differences reveal themselves.
A lot of musicians who have described the intonation of the blues have
said that the "blue 3rd" lies approximately halfway between the minor
and major thirds, which would normally be interpreted in the usual
5-limit just-intonation as 6/5 [= (2(3/12) + 16 cents) = 3.16 semitones]
and 5/4 [= (2(4/12) - 14 cents) = 3.86 semitones], respectively.
I've always thought the situation was a little more complicated than
this. When I've analyzed "blue 3rds" myself, I've found
them to be closer to 7/6 [= (2(3/12) - 33 cents) = 2.67 semitones]
or 19/16 [= (2(3/12) - 2 cents) = 2.98 semitones].
After analyzing this song, I believe I have found a possible reason
for hearing the "halfway between" 3rd. Johnson sings a common blues
figure in
in the second half of the first two lines. It gives an interval of
11/10 [= (2(2/12) - 35 cents) = 1.65 semitones]
between G+ 111 [= 5.51 semitones] and
F# 51 [= 3.86 semitones]. If
G+ 111 is interpreted casually as the 12-equal G 2(5/12),
it makes the F# 51 sound like it could be either F 2(3/12) or
F# 2(4/12), or somewhere between.
BIOGRAPHY
ROBERT JOHNSON'S MUSIC
"it really shook me up because...he didn't seem concerned with
appeal at all...it didn't obey the rules of time or harmony or anything --
he was just playing for himself."
"...I was hearing two guitars, and it took a long time to actually
realize he was doing it all by himself."
MICROTONES IN JOHNSON'S MUSIC
RATIONAL ANALYSIS OF VOCAL FROM DRUNKEN-HEARTED MAN
(I know the numbers are illegible - I'll eventually fix it...
but at least the layout of the pitches can be easily seen.)
Nor does it have frets for notes which would be harmonics of
any other 12-Eq note, unless the entire guitar were retuned.
F# 34 81/64
G 3-1 4/3
G# 32 51 45/32
B 3-1 51 5/3
C+ 3-1 111 11/6
51 [= 5/4 = (F# 2(4/12) - 14 cents) = 3.86 semitones],
then slides upward
to approximately 4.25 semitones. Although
5-2 [= 32/25 = (F# 2(4/12) + 27 cents) = 4.27 semitones] is a low-prime
utonal ratio which is very close to this,
the sustained sung note may actually be a higher-prime harmonic of the "D" chord which he is playing
on the guitar, in this case F# 411 [= 41/32 = (F# 2(4/12) + 29 cents) = 4.29 semitones].
APPENDIX: OBSERVATION ON THE "BLUE 3rd"
REFERENCES
Peter Guralnick, 1989. Searching for Robert Johnson. E. P. Dutton, New York.
Robert Palmer, 1981. Deep Blues. Viking Press, New York.
Stephen C. La Vere, biography and musical commentary, and A Note on the Transcriptions, both in CD-set booklet.
Keith Richards, Well, This is It, in CD-set booklet.
Eric Clapton, Discovering Robert Johnson, in CD-set booklet.
Ezra Sims, Yet Another 72-Noter, in Computer Music Journal 12, no. 4 [winter], p 28 - 45.
Joseph Monzo, JustMusic: A New Harmony (forthcoming)
Woody Mann, 1991. The Complete Robert Johnson
(Guitar Tablature Edition).
Oak Publications, New York.
Updated:
More info on Robert Johnson
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