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Smokestack Lightnin' Home Page' -- The Blues Profile Page
Hokum Blues is a particular song type of American blues music - a
humorous song which uses extended analogies or euphemistic terms
to make sexual innuendos. This trope goes back to early blues
recordings, and is seen from time to time in modern American
blues and blues-rock.
An example of hokum lyrics is this sample from 'Meat Balls', by
Lil Johnson, recorded about 1937,
'Got out late last night, in the rain and sleet
Tryin' to find a butcher that grind my meat
Yes I'm lookin' for a butcher
He must be long and tall
If he want to grind my meat
'Cause I'm wild about my meat balls.'
Technique
In a general sense, hokum was a style of comedic farce, spoken,
sung and spoofed, while masked in both risqué innuendo and
'tomfoolery'. It is one of the many legacies and techniques of
19th century blackface Minstrelsy. Like so many other elements
of the Minstrel Show, stereotypes of racial, ethnic and sexual
fools were the stock in trade of hokum. Hokum was stagecraft,
gags and routines for embracing farce. It was so broad that
there was no mistaking its ludicrousness. Hokum also encompassed
dances like the cakewalk and the buzzard lope in skits that
unfolded through spoken narrative and song. W.C. Handy, himself
a veteran of a minstrel troupe, remarked that, 'Our hokum hooked
'em,' meaning that the low comedy snared an audience that stuck
around to hear the music. In the days before ragtime, jazz or
even hillbilly music or the blues were clearly identified as
specific genres, hokum was a component of 'all around'
performing, entertainment that seamlessly mixed monologues,
dialogues, dances, music, and humor.
Minstrel show origins
Joel Walker Sweeney
The Minstrel Show began in Northern cities, primarily in New
York's Five Points section, in the 1830s. Minstrelsy was a
mélange of Scottish and Irish folk music forms fused with
African rhythms and dance. It is difficult to tease out those
strands, considering the mixed motives of the showmen who
presented the Minstrel Show, and the mixed audience who
patronized it. It is said that T. D. Rice invented the ‘Buck and
Wing’, as well as the ‘Jim Crow’, by imitating the stumbling of
an old lame black man, and added numerous steps and shuffles,
after watching an African American boy improvise a version of an
Irish jig in a back alley. Soon, the confusion became so
complete that almost any minstrel tune played upon the banjo
became known as a jig, regardless of time signatures or lyric
accompaniment. Banjo player Joe Ayers told old time musician and
writer Bob Carlin that “the origins of playing Irish jigs on the
banjo probably go back to minstrel banjoist Joel Walker
Sweeney’s appearances in Dublin in 1844.” Genuine appreciation
among White observers for music and dance so clearly (if not
purely) African in origin existed then and now. Charles Dickens
praised the intricacies of the 'lively hero' (believed to be
Master Juba) who he watched in a New York performance in 1842.
Many songs that originated in Minstrelsy (such as 'Camptown
Races' and 'Carry Me Back to Old Virginny') are now considered
American classics. While it was originally performed by Whites
costumed in either fanciful 'dandy' gear or pauper's rags with
their faces covered in burnt cork or blackface, the minstrels
were joined in the 1850s by Black African American performers.
The dancer, William Henry Lane (better known by his stage name
Master Juba), and the fiddling dwarf Thomas Dilward were also
'corking up' and performing alongside Whites in such touring
ensembles as the Virginia Minstrels, the Ethiopian Serenaders,
and Christy's Minstrels. Minstrel troupes composed entirely by
African Americans appeared in the same decade. After the
American Civil War, traveling productions like Callender's
Georgia Minstrels would rival the White ensembles in fame, while
falling short of them in earnings. The difficulties racism
presented to any African American entrepreneurs during postwar
Reconstruction made touring a dangerous and precarious
livelihood.
Subversion and confrontation
Although mainly Northern in origin, many Minstrel Shows, Black
or White, celebrated 'Dixieland' and presented a loose
concoction of 'Negro Melodies' and 'Plantation Songs' infused
with slapstick, word play, skits, puns, dance, and stock
characters. The hierarchies of the social order were satirized,
but seldom challenged. While hokum mocked the propriety of
'polite' society, the presumptions and pretensions of the
parodists were simultaneous targets of the humor. 'Darkies'
dancing the cakewalk might mimic the elite cotillion dance
styles of wealthy Southern whites, but their exaggerated high
stepping exuberance was judged all the funnier for its
ineptitude. Nonetheless, styles of song and dance that began as
inversions of the social structure were adopted among the upper
echelons of society, often without a trace of self
consciousness.
Social insults were more overt. As the underclass being
ridiculed shifted shapes, the racist lampoons and blackface
burlesques sometimes gave way to other conflations, such as the
stage Irishman Paddy, drunken and belligerent, a cruel
caricature often in blackface himself. Political nativism and
xenophobia encouraged similar mean-spirited responses to the
perceived threats of the time. After 1848, when the first
substantial influx of Chinese immigrants began seeking their
fortunes in the California Gold Rush, 'Chink' characters joined
the minstrel walkaround. Hokum enjoyed the license to be
outrageous, since the clowning was purportedly 'all in fun'.
By the beginning of the twentieth century, the hierarchy of
social mores that sanctioned stereotyping came increasingly
under attack. W. E. B. Du Bois's book the Souls of Black Folk
linked the subjective self appraisal of African Americans to
their struggle with pejorative stereotyping in his essays about
'double consciousness'. This inner conflict was central to the
African American experience, “this sense of always looking at
one’s self through the eyes of others, of measuring one’s soul
by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and
pity”. Anticipating social psychology, DuBois had identified a
whole sphere of comparative attitudes that allowed for the
reinterpretation of the black 'mask'. While black minstrel
performers were once seen as the degraded victims of a racist
spectacle, subsequent commentators could now celebrate these
culture bearers for creating a subversive space for the
advancement of their art and aesthetic. African American
minstrels, Karen Sotiropoulos observed, 'did not just attempt to
hook audiences with hokum; they subverted and manipulated
stereotypes as they struggled to present black identity.' This
critical perspective has the performers looking over the jeering
crowd into the eyes of sympathetic conspirators, and giving them
a wink to signal their mutual confidence.
Artistic dilemma
Race and sex were the pole stars of hokum, with booze and the
law defining loose boundaries. Transgression was a given. How
performers navigated through these waters varied from artist to
artist. High and low culture had yet to converge as mainstream
or popular culture. The convergence of performance styles, from
different races that Minstrelsy and by extension hokum
represented, helped to define a central, ongoing tension in
American culture. The cycle of rejection, accommodation,
appropriation and authentication was set in motion. The
infantilized and grotesque enactments and racist and
misogynistic content caused many better educated observers of
the day to dismiss both the Minstrel Show and hokum as simply
vulgar. Some of the white artists, whose contributions to
minstrelsy are most valued today, struggled to rise above its
cruder forms in their lifetimes. Stephen Foster composed for
years in obscurity, while the minstrel troupe leader Edwin P.
Christy claimed credit for his songs. By 1852, Foster still
wanted the pride of authorship, but wrote to Christy,
“I had the intention of omitting my name on my Ethiopian songs,
owing to the prejudice against them by some, which might injure
my reputation as a writer of another style of music. But I find
that by my efforts, I have done a great deal to build up a taste
for the Ethiopian songs among refined people by making the words
suitable to their taste, instead of the trashy and really
offensive words which belong to some of that order.”
The same contradictions and ambiguities were endured by
African-Americans like the composer James A. Bland, the actor
Sam Lucas, and the bandleader James Reese Europe. The
classically trained African-American composer Will Marion Cook,
who toured throughout the United States and gave a command
performance for King George V in England, struggled to raise his
music to a public perception of distinction and merit, but was
thwarted by marketing that distinguished author and music only
by skin color.
Cook wrote what he called 'real Negro melodies' and what he
envisioned as 'opera.' He sought to market the syncopated sounds
emanating from black expressive culture, but his compositions
would be sold as 'coon songs' suitable for variety stages.
Cook's music fits most comfortably in the genre now known as
'ragtime,' but at the turn of the century, critics used the
terms 'ragtime' and 'coon song' interchangeably. Like
minstrelsy, the 'coon song craze' sold racist stereotypes to
mass audiences. Not unlike African-American minstrel performers,
black songwriters capitulated in varying degrees to white racist
expectation to market their music.
The use of dialect or faux African American (or even Irish)
speech patterns also caused many minstrel compositions to be
lumped into categories with interchangeable 'coon song'
connotations. 'Wake Nicodemus,' published in 1864 by Henry Clay
Work, in Chicago, could neatly fit into the modern definition of
a 'protest song', and his later hits such as 'Marching Through
Georgia' identified his strong abolitionist convictions (his
father was famous as a stalwart supporter of the 'Underground
Railroad'). Yet many of his songs were minstrel show staples.
His compositions were widely performed by the Christy's
Minstrels in particular who appreciated compositions such as
'Kingdom Coming'. This song was 'full of bright, good sense and
comical situations in its 'darkey' dialect', as the publisher
and songwriter George Frederick Root described it in his
autobiography 'The Story of A Musical Life'.
There is no glossing over the fact that most 'coon songs'
reveled in ridicule. The reception of 'coon songs', however, was
by no means uniform. White performers embraced the 'coon song
craze' as it suited them. The North Carolina Piedmont pioneer
Charlie Poole was an acrobatic jokester with a banjo beating out
a 'barbaric twang', but he did not perform the 'coon songs' he
covered in black dialect or in blackface. Poole preferred to
hone his own identity and style. While his comedy marked him as
'hokum', his music was drawn from the 'hillbilly' polyglot of
Tin Pan Alley, marches, blues, Appalachian Scots Irish old time
fiddle tunes, two-steps, early vaudeville, Civil War chestnuts,
event songs, murder ballads and the rest of the mix, with the
minstrel tunes another important source.
Hokum in early blues
After the First World War, the fledgling record industry split
hokum off from its Minstrel Show or vaudeville context to market
it as a musical genre, 'the hokum blues'. Early practitioners
surfaced among the Memphis, Tennessee jug bands heard in Beale
Street's saloons and bordellos. The light-hearted and humorous
jug bands like Will Shade's Memphis Jug Band and Gus Cannon's
Jug Stompers played good time, upbeat music on assorted
instruments, such as spoons, washboards, fiddles, triangles,
harmonicas, and banjos, all anchored by bass notes blown into
the mouth of an empty jug. Their blues was rife with popular
influences of the time, and had none of the grit and plaintive
'purity' of the nearby Delta blues. Cannon's classic composition
'Walk Right In', originally recorded for Victor in 1930,
resurfaced as a Number One hit 33 years later, when the Rooftop
Singers recorded it during the Folk Revival in New York's
Greenwich Village, and a jug band boom ensued once more.
Hokum blues lyrics specifically poked fun at all manner of
sexual practices, preferences, and eroticized domestic
arrangements. Compositions such as 'Banana In Your Fruit
Basket', written by Bo Carter of the Mississippi Sheiks, used
thinly veiled allusions, which typically employed food and
animals as metaphors in a lusty manner worthy of Chaucer. The
hilariously sexy lyric content usually steered clear of
subtlety. 'Bo Carter was a master of the single entendre,'
remarked the Piedmont blues guitar master 'Bowling Green' John
Cephas at Chip Schutte's annual guitar camp. The bottleneck
guitarist Tampa Red was accompanied by Thomas A. Dorsey
(performing as 'Barrelhouse Tom' or 'Georgia Tom') playing piano
when the two recorded 'It's Tight Like That' for the Vocalion
label in 1928. The song went over so well that the two bluesmen
teamed up and became known as The Hokum Boys. Both previously
performed in the band of the Mother of the Blues Ma Rainey, who
had traveled the vaudeville circuits with the Rabbit Foot
Minstrels as a girl, later taking Bessie Smith under her wing.
The Hokum Boys recorded over 60 bawdy blues songs by 1932, most
of them penned by Dorsey, who later picked up his Bible and
became the founding father of black gospel. Dorsey characterized
his hokum legacy as 'deep moanin', low-down blues, that's all I
could say!'
Hokum in early country music
While hokum surfaces in early blues music most frequently, there
was some significant crossover culturally. When the Chattanooga
based 'brother duet' The Allen Brothers recorded a hit version
of 'Salty Dog Blues' refashioned as 'Bow Wow Blues' in 1927 for
Columbia's 15,000 - numbered 'Old Time' series, the label rushed
out several new releases to capitalize on their success, but
mistakenly issued these on the 14,000 series instead.
In fact, the Allen Brothers were so adept at performing white
blues that in 1927, Columbia mistakenly released their 'Laughin'
and Cryin' Blues' in the 'race' series instead of the 'old-time'
series. (Not seeing the humor in it, the Allens sued and
promptly moved to the Victor label.)
Early black string bands like the Dallas String Band with Coley
Jones recorded the tune 'Hokum Blues' on December 8, 1928 in
Dallas, Texas, and featured mandolin instrumentation. They have
been identified both as proto bluesmen and as an early Texas
country band, and were likely selling to both Black and White
audiences. Both Blind Lemon Jefferson and T-Bone Walker played
in the Dallas String Band at various times. Milton Brown and his
Musical Brownies, the seminal white Texas swing band, recorded a
hokum tune with scat lyrics in the early 1930s, 'Garbage Man
Blues', which was originally known by the title the jazz
composer Luis Russell gave it, 'The Call of the Freaks'. Bob
Wills, who had performed in blackface as a young man, liberally
used comic asides, whoops, and jive talk when directing his
famous Texas Playboys. The Hoosier Hotshots, Bob Skyles and the
Skyrockets, and other novelty song artists concentrated on the
comedic aspects, but for many up and coming White country
musicians like Emmet Miller, Clayton McMichen and Jimmie
Rodgers, the ribald lyrics were beside the point. Hokum for
these white rounders in the South and Southwest was synonymous
with jazz, and the 'hot' syncopations and blue notes were a
naughty pleasure in themselves. The lap steel guitar player
Cliff Carlisle, who was half of another 'brother duet', is
credited with refining the Blue Yodel song style after Jimmie
Rodgers became the first country music superstar by recording
over a dozen blue yodels. Carlisle wrote and recorded many hokum
tunes and gave them titles such as 'Tom Cat Blues', 'Shanghai
Rooster Yodel' and 'That Nasty Swing'. He marketed himself as a
'Hillbilly', a 'Cowboy', a 'Hawaiian' or a 'Straight' bluesman
(meaning presumably, 'Black') depending on whom he was playing
for and where he played.
The radio 'barn dances' of the 1920s and 1930s interspersed
hokum in their variety show broadcasts. The first blackface
comedians at the WSM Grand Ole Opry were Lee Roy 'Lasses' White
and his partner, Lee Davis 'Honey' Wilds, starring in the Friday
night shows. White was a veteran of several minstrel troupes,
including one organized by William George 'Honeyboy' Evans, and
another led by Al G. Field, who also employed Emmett Miller. By
1920, White was leading his own outfit, the All Star Minstrels.
Lasses and Honey joined the Grand Ole Opry cast in 1932. When
Lasses moved on to Hollywood in 1936 to play the role of a
silver screen cowboy sidekick, Honey Wilds stayed on in
Nashville, corking up and playing blues on his ukulele with his
new partner Jam-Up (first played by Tom Woods, and subsequently
by Bunny Biggs). Wilds organized the first Grand Ole
Opry-endorsed tent show in 1940. For the next decade, he ran the
touring show, with Jam-Up and Honey as the headliners. Pulling a
forty foot trailer behind a four door Pontiac, and followed by
eight to ten trucks, Wilds took the tent show from town to town,
hurrying back to Nashville on Saturdays to do his Opry radio
appearances. Many country musicians, like Uncle Dave Macon, Bill
Monroe, Eddy Arnold, Stringbean and Roy Acuff, toured with the
Wilds' tent shows from April through Labor Day. As Honey Wilds'
son David told No Depression magazine's co-editor Grant Alden:
Music was a part of their act, but they were comedians. They
would sing comedic songs, a la Homer and Jethro. They would add
odd lyrics to existing songs, or write songs that were intended
to be comedic. They were out there to come onstage, do five
minutes of jokes, sing a song, do five minutes of jokes, sing
another song and say, 'Thank you, good night,' as their segment
of the Grand Ole Opry. Almost every country band during that
time had some guy who dressed funny, wore a goofy hat, and
typically played slide guitar.
Legacy
Although the sexual content of hokum is generally playful by
modern standards, early recordings were marginalized for both
sexual 'suggestiveness' and 'trashy' appeal, but still
flourished in niche markets outside the mainstream. 'Jim Crow'
segregation was still the norm in much of the United States, and
racial, ethnic and class bias was embedded in the popular
entertainment of the time. Prurience was seen as more antisocial
than prejudice. Record companies were more concerned about
selling records than stigmatizing artists and minority
audiences. Modern audiences might be offended by the packaged
exploitation these stock caricatures offered, but in early 20th
century America, it paid for performers to play the fool.
Audiences were left on their own to interpret whether they
themselves were sharing the joke or were the butts of it. While
'race' musicians traded in 'coon songs' crafted for commercial
consumption by catering to White prejudice, 'hillbilly'
musicians were similarly marketed as 'rubes' and 'hayseeds'.
Class distinctions bolstered these portrayals of gullible rural
folk and witless southerners. Assimilation of African Americans
and cultural appropriation of their artistic and cultural
creations were not yet equated by the emerging entertainment
industry with racism and bigotry.
The eventual success of African American musical productions on
Broadway like Eubie Blake and Noble Sissle's 'Shuffle Along' in
1921, helped to usher in the Swing Jazz era. This was
accompanied by a new sense of sophistication that eventually
disdained hokum as backward, insipid, and perhaps most
damningly, corny. Audiences began to change their perceptions of
authentic 'Negro' artistry. White comedians like Frank Tinney
and singers like Eddie Cantor (nicknamed 'Banjo Eyes') continued
to work successfully in blackface on Broadway. They even
branched out into vaudeville-based sensations like the Ziegfeld
Follies and the emerging film industry, but cross racial comedy
became increasingly out of fashion, especially onstage. On the
other hand, it is impossible to imagine that the success of
comics such as Pigmeat Markham or Damon Wayans, or bandleaders
like Cab Calloway or Louis Jordan does not owe some debt to
hokum. White performers have thoroughly absorbed the lessons of
hokum as well, with the 'top banana' Harry Steppe, singers like
Louis Prima and Leon Redbone or comedian Jeff Foxworthy being
prime examples. Offstage it is by no means extinct either, or
only practiced by members of one race parodying another race.
The Zulu Social Aid and Pleasure Club, a New Orleans Mardi Gras
krewe has marched on Fat Tuesday since 1900 dressed in raggedy
clothes and grass skirts with their faces blackened. Zulu is now
the largest predominantly African American organization marching
in the annual Carnival celebration. While the Minstrel Show,
burlesque, vaudeville, variety, and the medicine show have left
the scene, hokum is still here.
Rural stereotypes continued to be fair game. Consider the
phenomenal success of the syndicated television program 'Hee
Haw', which was produced from 1969 until 1992. Writer Dale
Cockrell has called this a minstrel show in 'rube-face'. It
featured country music stars, curvaceous comediennes, and banjo
playing bumpkins whose pickin' and grinnin' picked on city
slickers and grinned at the buxom All Jugs Band. The rapid fire
one liners, Laugh-In rapid cross cutting, animations of barnyard
animals, hayseed humor and continuous parade of country,
bluegrass, and gospel performers appealed to an untapped
demographic that was older and more rural than the young, urban
'hip' audience broadcasters were routinely cultivating. It is
still in syndication today, and is one of the most successful
syndicated programs ever. Admirers of hokum warmed to its
slyness and the seeming innocence that provided a context for
simplistic shenanigans. In the rural south in particular, hokum
held on. Cast members like Stringbean and Grandpa Jones were
quite familiar with hokum (and blackface as well), and if bands
named the 'Clodhoppers' or the 'Cut Ups' and other country
cousins of this comedic form are fewer in number today, their
presence is still a clue to the country and western, bluegrass,
and string band tradition of mixing stage antics, broad parodies
and sexual allusions with music.
This section was created from www.wikipedia.com