The Blues Muse – A unique novel that tracks the course of Rock Music – Chapter 1

I wrote this book in 2015. I think it is quite unique. What do you think?

This is Chapter 1

Tutwiler Mississippi

It was a desultory day at the railway station at Tutwiler. The Mississippi August sun was unrelenting and the air thick with moisture. No matter how used I became to the sultry heat, it was draining. The sweat beaded on my skin and refused to evaporate into the over-laden air. My overalls were already sodden and my shirt, with all its many holes, was clinging to my body. My red bandana, tied loosely round my neck, soaked up some of the moisture and stopped the sweat running down my back. It was still early morning and sure to get worse before noon. I was grateful not to be labouring in those fields. My guitar was my passport to an easier life. I wanted free of those plantations and that gruelling work but there were only two ways out that I knew and I had no urge to go into the church.

I set myself down on the bench by the brick wall in the shade of a big tree festooned with Spanish moss. It afforded me some shade and a good view over the station. This was a good spot. When there were enough people gathered I would put on my show. I knew that I would be able to have two shots at it because when the train finally arrived I had a second ready-made audience.

My attention was drawn to the only other person on the station; a gentleman was sitting on the other bench nearer the track. He looked to be around thirty years of age but obviously quite affluent. He too was shaded from the sun but I could see that he was greatly troubled by the heat from the way that he kept mopping his brow with his handkerchief. His over-heated condition was not at all assisted by his attire. He wore a starched shirt and tie with a three-piece suit. Although he had discarded his hat, which rested on the seat beside him, he had kept his long dark frock jacket on despite how uncomfortable that must have been. He was desperate to create an impression. He was here on business.

It did not take much working out that although this man was black-skinned, like me, he was none-the-less a man of some importance and a musician to boot. I could see that from the trumpet case he had laid beside his valise. That was highly unusual for the year of 1903. Most dark-skinned men and women were bought and sold. This one was, from all appearances, a free man. He might be a potential mark. It was worth a try. A man had to make a living.

I took up my guitar, took my knife out of my pocket, and began to practice my repertoire. I watched the man. I could see from the name on his suitcase that he was called W C Handy. He looked like he was a young man of means. I plucked the guitar and as soon as my knife connected with the strings I could see from the way his body stilled that I had his attention.

I worked up slowly; setting up the rhythm and making those strings give up their shrill urgency as I applied the blade of my knife, before coming in with the vocal. Some said that it was a voice that was deep and emotive beyond my years. I liked that and strained for every anguished emotion I could summon up from the depths of my short but experienced life. I gave him everything I could. I poured the pain of that heat, the despair of those long days of hoeing, picking and weeding down those endless furrows under that blazing sun, the dust, the scant pleasures and the life in those shacks. The whole of life was in those plaintive songs; not just my life but the life of my people. But I also made sure that I captured the joy and spirit too. Those songs were all my own with their three chord progression, verse and repeated refrain. I had distilled them out of my African roots.

I could see I had his full concentration. He turned towards me and watched intently to see what I was doing, how I had constructed the song, the way I repeated the refrain. I could see he had a trained eye and was taking it all in.

This was my music. I had pulled it up out of the memories of my heritage, from the songs my family had passed on to me and from the white man’s music that I’d heard coming from the mansion in the evening. The local master encouraged us to play western instruments. He would often take a group of us into the house to entertain his guests. We had learnt his melodies.

I blended them into something of my own that sang of my world and experience.

A few more people drifted in to the station and stood around while I played. I put on my full act and by the time the train arrived I had accumulated some copper in my hat. The smart business man was the last to board. He came over to me, dropped silver in on top of the other coins, smiled and nodded his approval. He did not say a word but I could see that he had appreciated my performance from the way he had studied it so intently.

I turned my attention to the people descending from the train. It was time to do it over again.

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If you would like to purchase The Blues Muse, or any of my other books please follow the links:

In the UK:

In the US:

For all other countries please check out your local Amazon outlet.

The Blues Muse – A book on Rock Music like no other – The introduction.

I think this is the most imaginative book I’ve ever written yet it tells the story of Rock Music from its roots in the early twentieth century right up to today. It is a novel.

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Introduction

This is a novel. It is the often repeated story of Blues and Rock Music but like it has never been told before. My character is the man with no name; the muse, the witness, the time traveller. He was there through it all. We see everything through his eyes. My character is fictional and I’ve taken liberties with some of the events, and a few of the timings, but the spirit is as real as the day is long. It’s more real than when it happened.

This is Blues and Rock. I have taken the main characters, the important scenes and stepping stones and brought them to life by painting the picture around them, filling in the background, and embellishing the stories. What we have is not real, not history, not just dry facts. This is more of an impressionist painting than a photograph. But perhaps you can see more reality from an impression than a stark record.

Each scene is a vignette that is self-contained. The timing is by necessity approximate. While my man is a spirit he cannot physically be in two places at once. All I ask is that you suspend your disbelief and give full rein to your imagination. If you do that I will take you there and show you what was really going down. There was a social context, an establishment response, a rebellion and new youth culture that accompanied that rhythm. It meant a huge amount to the people who lived through it. I was one of them. It gave us hope. It gave us a new way of looking, raised our awareness and gave us sight of a different future. Through the excitement there was a fraternity that crossed race, national boundaries and creed.

That music was new and it was ours.

Music is elemental. It was created right back in the dawn of time; it is in the DNA of man. When that first percussion created the initial beat, that first voice found its range, something was released that has never died.

Africa was our home and where that beat was first invented. Maybe as a backdrop to provide substance to a religious ceremony? Maybe as a unifying force to raise the courage for war? But maybe, I like to think, as a celebration, for dancing to, losing yourself in and becoming as free as the wind.

That beat is centred in our body and our mind, built on our heart-beat, generating emotion and excitement, liberating and elevating.

Who knows when the first instruments were invented, the first harmonies, choruses? Certainly a long time ago. Music is in our blood and has permeated our lives.

Back in the early twentieth century music was revitalised and reinvented. The black slaves in America reached back to their roots, pulled out that rhythm and created the Blues, Gospel, Jazz and Soul. They married it to the white country jigs, reels and barn-dance, to the Cajun and Creole, to electricity, and came up with Rock ‘n’ Roll.

The winds of the Blues blew straight out of Africa, straight from our ancestors, to talk to us through our genes. They stir our spirits, our passions and raise up our minds. The young recognise its power and are moved by it.

The world has felt its power and the establishment has been shaken by the hurricanes it releases.

This was first mentioned by W C Handy in his memoirs. He claims he was sitting on the station in Tutwiler Mississippi, where a black man was playing the Blues using a penknife to create the sound on the guitar strings and singing a plaintive refrain. He said it was the weirdest sound he had ever heard but it stirred his imagination and caused him to change from playing Sousa to performing and popularising the Blues.

Tutwiler is where our story starts.

The wind from the Blues is a spirit that blows through us, in us and out from us into the world. It is transformational.

This is the story of that spirit. It’s a spirit that lives in all of us. This is the story of Blues and Rock told through the eyes of that spirit, that essence. It is there in all of us and was there throughout, witnessing, inspiring and creating energy, change and emotion. It has the power to move mountains and bring down nations.

This is the muse of the Blues, the story of Rock.

It hasn’t stopped blowing yet!

Opher 1.10.2015

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If you would like to purchase The Blues Muse, or any of my other books please follow the links:

In the UK:

In the US:

For all other countries please check out your local Amazon outlet.

The Blues Muse – Now available in kindle version – the blurb.

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The Blurb

I was in conversation with a good friend who, like me, is a Rock Music fanatic. We have both been everywhere, seen everyone and have had our lives hugely affected by music. However it is not who you have seen but what you failed to catch that you dwell on.
I said to him that it would be brilliant if we had a time machine and were able to go back and see all the major events in Rock history; Robert Johnson play in the tavern in Greenwood, Elmore James in Chicago, Elvis Presley in the small theatres, The Beatles in Hamburg, Stones in Richmond, Doors in the Whiskey, Roy Harper at St Pancras Town Hall…………….. and a thousand more.
Then I realised that I could. I knew it all, had seen much of it first hand, and had the imagination to fill in the gaps. All I needed was a character who worked his way through it, was witness to it, part of it and lived it; someone to tell the story and paint the picture.
I invented my ‘man with no name’ and made a novel out of the History of Rock Music.
This is that novel. It starts in Tutwiler Mississippi in 1903 and finishes in Kingston upon Hull in 1980. On this journey you will breathe the air, taste the sweat and join all the major performers as they create the music that rocked the world and changed history.

Now available in Kindle version:

New Book – Blues Muse – All corrections and editing complete!

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The Blues Muse is ready to go!

Thanks to Chris Moody and Liz Goodwin I have completed the editing of the book.

Extracts of the book now reside with Helter Skelter Publishers. I wait to see if they are interested in looking at the whole thing.

Fingers crossed. I think it’s great. Everyone who has read it thinks it is my best work so far. Let’s hope the publisher agrees.

I’ve got a feeling that 2016 is going to be a big year for Opher Goodwin!

Blues Muse now edited. Thanks to Chris Moody.

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My latest book – The Blues Muse – has now been edited.

I have to go back with some corrections and rewrite a few sections. That should keep me busy.

A big thank you to Chris Moody. He doesn’t miss a thing and is very motivating with his praise but astute with his suggestions for improvement – just what I need. It will result in a great improvement.

Blues Muse – my latest book – meeting with editor.

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I have a meeting planned with my editor regarding my latest book – The Blues Muse. We are going to discuss the development of the final third.

I am extremely happy with the way that the book has turned out though I am concerned that it doesn’t maintain the same momentum and reader interest in the final third. I’m hoping he will have some ideas on how I can address this.

I love the concept and enjoyed writing it. We’ll see where it goes from here.

Big thank you to Peter Fincham who is currently looking at a few chapters. I’ll be interested to hear his views.

Blues Muse blurb – What do you think? Suggestions welcome!

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Well this is a late night first attempt. It seems too wordy to me.

Any suggestions on what I should chop/add/alter?

Blues Muse blurb

I was in conversation with a good friend who, like me, is a Rock Music fanatic. We both have been everywhere, seen everyone and have had our lives hugely affected by music. As with everything it is not who you have seen but what you failed to catch that you focus on.

I said to him that wouldn’t it be brilliant if we had a time machine and were able to go back to see all the major events in Rock history; to see Robert Johnson play in the tavern in Greenwood, catch Elmore James in Chicago, Elvis Presley in the small theatres, The Beatles in Hamburg, Stones in Richmond, Doors in the Whiskey, Roy Harper at St Pancras Town Hall…………….. and a thousand more.

Then I realised that I could. I knew it all, had seen a lot of it first hand, and had the imagination to fill in the gaps. All I needed was a character who worked his way through it, was witness to it, part of it and lived it; someone to tell the story and paint the picture.

I invented my ‘man with no name’ and made a novel out of the History of Rock Music.

This is that novel. It starts in Tutwiler Mississippi in 1903 and comes to a finish in 1980 in Hull. On this journey you will breathe the air, taste the sweat and join all the major performers as they create the music that rocked the world and changed history.

Latest book – The Blues Muse rewrite

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I have just completed the editing and rewrite for The Blues Muse. Though I am still very unsure about the title! I’m still thinking about that.

I love it. I think I feel better about this one than any I’ve written up until now.

I’m sure that will wear off.

I now have to think what to do with it. I might publish it on Amazon or hawk it round to publishers.

What do you think I should do?

The Blues Muse – my new book on Rock and Blues – The blurb – I need your views.

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I need some help.

I am presently working my way through editing this book. I’m still finding it fun even though I find editing extremely difficult. I really have to focus and work at it. It does not come naturally.

Fortunately I have help from my friend Chris and my wife Liz. They are brilliant. I am processing their suggestions.

Last night I woke up with an idea for the blurb for the back. I’ve written it out below. The original blurb follows. The question is do I go with the new one (first) or old one (second) or amalgamate the two?

I’d welcome your views.

Blurb

I was in conversation with my friend Mike Green discussing how good it would be to have a time machine to go back to all the wonderful moments in Blues and Rock history; to be there when it happened. To see Tommy Johnson busking and Robert Johnson in that tavern, to catch Elvis in small theatres and The Beatles in Hamburg, Howlin’ Wolf in Chicago and Hendrix at the Speakeasy.

It was then that I realised I did have a time machine. My knowledge, experience and imagination enabled me to be everywhere in time and space. All I had to do was create a witness and set him free.

My ‘man with no name’ takes you on that journey. He was there. He saw it all, was part of it all and loved it all.

This is a novel of the History of Blues and Rock through the eyes of a man who breathed the air, tasted the food, slept in the beds and lived the music.

 

Or

 

Blurb

 

This is the real story of Blues and Rock told through the eyes of the man with no name, the muse, the witness. You’ll be there with Charley Patton in Mississippi, with Son House teaching Robert Johnson to play, then with Robert at the crossroads, with Elvis recording in Sun Studio, Little Richard battling it out with Jerry Lee Lewis, Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf and Elmore James in Chicago, Bob Dylan in Greenwich Village, The Beatles in Hamburg and the Cavern and a thousand more.

This paints the main events in full colour with background and social context, not as a set of dry facts but as a novel through a series of self-contained vignettes. A few liberties have been taken but the spirit is true.

The Blues Muse – an update and index.

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Thought you might be interested in an update. I have now rewritten/edited up to page 73. I have had the benefit of three readers who have all been mega enthusiastic (so that is encouraging).

I have thought of another chapter will I will write an insert.

The book is 218 pages long and is looking good.

This is the index. I thought it might give you an idea of where it is going. (sorry about the pages numbers coming out wobbly – that’s WordPress). As you can see there are a lot of short vignettes similar to the chapter I put up on here a couple of days ago.

What do you think?

Index

Dedication                                                      2

About the Author                                           3

Index                                                               4

Introduction                                                    7

Tutwiler Mississippi                                        9

Crystal Springs                                                12

Lula                                                                 15

Rolling Fork                                                    18

Yazoo                                                              19

The Crossroads                                               20

Clarkesdale                                                     22

Baton Rouge to New Orleans                         25

All at sea with Guthrie                                    29

New York                                                       31

Riding the blinds to California                       32

Briefly Mississippi                                          34

Nashville                                                         36

Mississippi Reprise and on to Chicago           39

McComb                                                         40

Tupelo                                                             42

Chicago                                                           44

White Station Mississippi                               48

Memphis                                                         53

New Orleans and Specialty                            58

Georgia and the South                                                60

Screamin’ and Flamin’ in the South               63

Back to Chicago                                             65

Lubbock Texas                                                71

Memphis again and Nashville again               75

Graceland                                                        78

Up in Canada                                                  80

New York                                                       81

New York Blues                                             84

Louisiana                                                         85

England                                                           87

Detroit                                                             90

New York again                                              92

England                                                           93

Liverpool                                                         94

The Cavern                                                      96

Hamburg Germany                                         98

London                                                           100

Richmond Surrey and the Thames Delta        102

Swinging London                                           109

New York yet again                                        112

Greenwich Village                                          115

The Gaslight                                                    120

Greystone Park State Hospital                        123

Newport                                                          124

Washington                                                     125

The Gaslight again                                          128

British Invasion                                               129

Newport two                                                   132

Manchester                                                      135

Soho                                                                138

More Soho                                                      141

TV Breaks                                                       143

Psychedelic London                                       144

Hyde Park                                                       148

Dylan’s accident                                             150

San Francisco                                                  151

Los Angeles                                                    154

Memphis and Monterey                                  156

London                                                           159

Tolworth                                                         162

Eel Pie Island                                                  165

Hammersmith                                                  167

Windsor                                                          169

New York                                                       172

Hyde Park                                                       175

Woodstock                                                      177

Electric Ladyland                                           180

Altamont                                                         182

The Isle of Wight                                            184

Country Rock                                                 186

Hammersmith                                                  187

Kilburn and Ascot                                          189

Laurel Canyon                                                            191

CBGBs and the Chelsea Hotel                       192

Jamaica                                                            191

Plymouth                                                         196

Sheffield                                                         198

Rome and Chicago                                         200

Islington                                                          202

West London                                                  205

Belfast                                                             207

Barking                                                           209

Asbury Park                                                    210

Brixton                                                            211

New York                                                       213

Central Park                                                    215

Hull                                                                 217

 

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