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The World Don't Owe Me Nothing: The Life and Times of Delta Bluesman Honeyboy Edwards (1997)

par Honeyboy Edwards

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This vivid oral snapshot of an America that planted the blues is fullof rhythmic grace. From the son of a sharecropper to an itinerantbluesman, Honeyboy's stories of good friends Charlie Patton, Big WalterHorton, Little Walter Jacobs, and Robert Johnson are a godsend to bluesfans. History buffs will marvel at his unique perspective and firsthandaccounts of the 1927 Mississippi River flood, vagrancy laws, makeshiftcourts in the back of seed stores, plantation life, and the Depression.… (plus d'informations)
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Blues lovers will eat this book up with a spoon! Honeyboy Edwards, although not a household name like some of the musicians with whom he traveled and played, was everywhere and played with everyone. His memory is amazing as is his ability to tell stories with honesty and the wisdom of his years. He grew up in the Delta, sharecropping cotton, but at a very young age knew that wasn't how he wanted to spend his life. With nothing more than a rudimentary guitar, he rode the rails, hitched all over the Deep South, played and sang in speakeasies, roadhouses, shacks, and bars. Eventually, he came to Chicago along with BB King and many others. This book is fascinating as an oral history of times gone by. ( )
  AnaraGuard | Nov 1, 2020 |
wow
What a life.

David “Honeyboy” Edwards died in 2011 at the age of 96. The World Don’t Owe Me Nothing is his autobiography, which he dictated over the course of a few weeks while drinking beer in the backseat of a Lincoln parked in front of his house in Chicago. Put some music on, and that’s probably the best way to read this, too.

Edwards was born in the Mississippi Delta town of Shaw, heard Charley Patton, Tommy Johnson, Rube Lacey and Kokomo Arnold in their prime, played his first gig, drunk, at age 14, played with Robert Johnson and Big Joe Williams and went to Memphis in the early 1930s, where he hooked up with members of the Memphis Jug Band. Honey seemed to know everyone. He survived the Great Depression as an itinerant guitarist, riding the rails up and down the Delta, sleeping on old newspaper to keep his clothes clean, throwing dice when the money ran low. When things got desperate, he was always able to find a warm bed in the rooms of women who saw him play. He passed a few adventuresome months banging around with Big Walter Horton, played around St. Louis awhile, returned to Mississippi, then landed in Chicago in the late 1940s.

Edwards lived a kind of poetic American life that is gone forever. He knew firsthand the killing floor, Potter’s field, the county farm and the hobo jungle. He could play any song. He felt and saw the best and the worst, and he called it good. ( )
  HectorSwell | Jan 6, 2015 |
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The Delta is a wide, flat country, running from the Mississippi River clean up to the hills in the East. When I was young it was full of people, living and working on the plantations. In the Delta we raised so much cotton and corn and pecans and potatoes. People out of the hills used t come in by the truckloads to pick cotton in the Delta, because the couldn't raise no crop in the hilly land. They come to the flat land and stay all the fall--pick cotton by the hundred all the fall. On Saturday nights, they have balls, country dances, and they dance and drink that white whiskey all night long. When all the cotton's picked, they go back to the hills. They made enough money to get them through the winter.
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This vivid oral snapshot of an America that planted the blues is fullof rhythmic grace. From the son of a sharecropper to an itinerantbluesman, Honeyboy's stories of good friends Charlie Patton, Big WalterHorton, Little Walter Jacobs, and Robert Johnson are a godsend to bluesfans. History buffs will marvel at his unique perspective and firsthandaccounts of the 1927 Mississippi River flood, vagrancy laws, makeshiftcourts in the back of seed stores, plantation life, and the Depression.

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