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21 October 2005

I've been reading Flannery O'Connor all week; so this is my post about Elizabeth Cotten. It must be because I've been Goin' Down the Road Feelin' Bad (mp3).
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Cotten, who wrote Freight Train (mp3) when she was only twelve taught herself to play guitar left-handed. This Google html of a long article about Cotten talks about how she taught herself to play, the sources of some of her songs, and the tunings that she used.

When you listen to her playing it's easy to hear other finger pickers. For instance, I hear a lot of similarities between the opening bars of her Wilson Rag (mp3) and Fahey's Desperate Man Blues (mp3), especially the first, brighter recording (mp3) of it. Though in this interview Fahey says he did not learn much from Cotten even though he liked hanging out with her, this site claims that Poor Boy Long Ways from Home (mp3) (and the rerecording (mp3) is based on Cotten's Vestopol (mp3), and it's easy to hear the influence. The same site points out the similarity between the bass line in Sun Gonna Shine In My Back Door Someday Blues (mp3) (and the rerecording (mp3)) and Cotten's Honey Babe Your Papa Cares For You (mp3).

Cotten stopped playing guitar for about 25 years, after she got married at 15 and joined the church. It was only later, when she had moved to DC and was fortuitously working for the Seeger family that she began to play again.

The combination of Cotten's reedy voice and the masterful drone (played with her fingers!) on When I Get Home (mp3) make it my favorite song of hers, although this banjo medley (mp3) is also great.

By the end of her life she'd won two grammy awards and become a hero of American folk musicians. Dylan has recently been playing her songs live.

Discography.
A remembrance
.
An extensive (geocities) site on Cotten.
An All Songs Considered show that features Cotten (In .smil, I'm not sure what that is, but it doesn't seem to want to play on my Mac. It could be the firewall at work.)
Smithsonian Folkways Cotten page, with plenty of streaming songs.
Great post. She's something of a folk legend around here. She's claimed by Carrboro, NC, not Chapel Hill, btw; a lot of folks get that wrong since the two towns are side-by-side.

Her albums were rare for so long; I still remember getting excited the day I first saw a Libba Cotten CD.
posted by mediareport 21 October | 11:22
Good stuff, thanks.
F O'C is one of my all time favorites, ever.
posted by Divine_Wino 21 October | 11:47
F O'C is one of my all time favorites, ever.

She's way up there for me, too.

Intrigued to check out the mp3s when I'm not at work (they frown upon such things as functioning speakers here).
posted by amro 21 October | 11:54
I've only read Wise Blood, but it was good.
posted by sciurus 21 October | 11:58
Wow, omiewise - this is a jewel! Thanks so much.
posted by taz 21 October | 12:27
I'm coming back in to say these are really brilliant and great and thanks again. Desperate Man Blues is a masterpiece.
posted by Divine_Wino 21 October | 12:31
oh omie, let's get married!
posted by Mrs.Pants 21 October | 12:34
oh omie, let's get married!

I've been waiting for that offer.

Of course the link between O'Connor and Cotten is not explicit, and one of tone and subject more than anything else. I've reread The Violent Bear It Away and A Good Man... this week, and hope to get back to Wise Blood this weekend.

I've been all in a tizzy since going back to her, and it was actually an earlier MeCha thread from last week started by Hugh where someone said that they were reading Carson McCullers that got me thinking that the literature that I most like, the novels and stories of Kafka, Appelfeld, Proust, is actually of a piece with Southern Gothic. The rereading bears it out.
posted by omiewise 21 October | 13:02
someone said that they were reading Carson McCullers

That was me, and I've been resisting re-recommending her in this thread... But, since you brought it up... Thematically very similar in many ways to O'Connor.

mrs. pants, what about mr. pants?
posted by amro 21 October | 13:06
(By the way thank you to whoever mentioned Spook in that same earlier thread; I am reading it now and enjoying it immensely.)
posted by amro 21 October | 13:14
Totally random O'Conner side note: All of the soundbites in the Ministry song "Jesus Built My Hotrod" are taken from Wise Blood. I realized that while reading the book and kept finding more and more of them...
posted by klangklangston 21 October | 13:44
But this is a great post (and something totally worthy of the audience on MeFi...)
Too bad the YSI links would die, like, immediately.
posted by klangklangston 21 October | 13:45
Omie have you read the short stories? They make me dizzy. She's my absolute favorite and I am a complete wuss for crying after finishing up her catalogue....for the stories were done and there would be no more! GOOD GOD do I love them.

I'm working on some drawerings and eventually paintings based on her stories. Which is damn difficult because she was so specific and it's always dodgy trying to put a face on characters who probably already have clearly defined features to anyone who has read the stories. But I'm doing it!

and amro there is no mister pants! and which Carson McCullers are you reading? I have to say, she was recommended to me after my friends tired of my constant "Flannery is dead!" bitching and she is great, but she doesn't fill the void.

and omie are we really getting married? If so I gotta drop a few pounds...

ps. the spellcheck wants you to be "Okie", mayhaps from Muskogee?
posted by Mrs.Pants 21 October | 13:55
I second the mrs' recommendadtion of O'Connor's short stories- she was an absolute GENIUS of the form. Better than James Joyce, IMO.

I've been to her house (Andalusia) in Milledgeville, and it made me really wish I could have met her when she was alive. (Even if I had, I would've been a baby, but you know what I mean...)

posted by BoringPostcards 21 October | 14:34
Wow, thanks! Awesome stuff.
posted by Specklet 21 October | 14:35
I do love the short stories. I've read them all, and I'm not usually such a big fan of the form.

(mrs. pants, I love you just the way you are.)
posted by omiewise 21 October | 14:38
mrs. pants, I recently read The Heart is a Lonely Hunter... I'm not sure which of her books I'd go for next (recommendations?), but I sure loved that one.
posted by amro 21 October | 16:17
Ballad of the Sad Cafe
posted by omiewise 21 October | 16:50
It was so great to read this thread; it has been years but I think it’s time for me to check out Hulga again. When I was a teenager in the late seventies my mother (a HUGE O’Connor fan) took me on a wacky road trip to see Flannery’s home in Milledgeville (where, unless I’m manufacturing a memory, we observed peacocks in the yard). I have always thought of O’Connor in terms of my mom’s devotion to her work, and (no doubt as a result of this) I have never quite known what to make of it, so now thanks to you I will try again.
posted by sophieblue 21 October | 18:46
Flannery’s home in Milledgeville (where, unless I’m manufacturing a memory, we observed peacocks in the yard).

No, they were there, though I think the last of her original flock and their descendants died off a few years ago.
posted by BoringPostcards 21 October | 21:12
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