Mozart and Leadbelly

Mozart and Leadbelly by Ernest J. Gaines

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Authors: Ernest J. Gaines
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either.
    Baton Rouge was a dry town on Sundays; so I, along with some of the younger men, would go across the Mississippi River into Port Allen, down to the White Eagle bar. The White Eagle was a rough place, and there were always fights, but I wanted to experience it all. One novel,
Of Love and Dust,
and a short story, “Three Men,” came out of my experience at the White Eagle bar. I knew now why I’d had such difficulty writing my novel in San Francisco: I had lost touch with this world that I wanted to write about. After living in Baton Rouge for six months, traveling across Louisiana, fishing in the river, hunting in the swamps, eating in small cafés, drinking in bars, writing five hours a day, five days a week, I was ready to go back to San Francisco to finish my novel. By then I had received an education in Louisiana history, geography, sociology, and its people that my books in California never could have given me and my running away to Mexico would not have helped. I started collecting blues records while attending San Francisco State College in the mid-fifties and inviting friends to my room to listen to the music. Most of the whites would listen to the records out of curiosity; this was before the Rolling Stones of England had made white America aware of the art and value of black blues singers. The white boys and girls of San Francisco wanted to listen because it was “exciting.” However, very few of my African American friends from the college wanted to listen to it at all because they wanted to forget what those ignorant Negroes were singing about. They had come to California to forget about those days and those ways.
    A lady friend of mine in Washington, D.C., once told me that she knew a young African American male who would always get in an elevator whistling a tune of Mozart. I, too, like Mozart; I like Haydn, Bach, Brahms, Schubert, Chopin. I like
Pictures at an Exhibition
by Mussorgsky,
A Lark Ascending
by Ralph Vaughan Williams—I like them all. And though Mozart and Haydn soothe my brain while I write, neither can tell me about the Great Flood of ’27 as Bessie Smith or Big Bill Broonzy can. And neither can describe Louisiana State Prison at Angola as Leadbelly can. And neither can tell me what it means to be bonded out of jail and be put on a plantation to work out your time as Lightnin’ Hopkins can. William Faulkner writes over one hundred pages describing the Great Flood of ’27 in his story “Old Man.” Bessie Smith gives us as true a picture in twelve lines. I am not putting Faulkner down; Faulkner is one of my favorite writers, and what Southern writer has not been influenced by him in the past fifty years? What I am saying to that young man who found it desirable to whistle Mozart in the elevator is that there is some value in whistling Bessie Smith or Leadbelly.
    After publishing
Catherine Carmier,
my first novel, I tried publishing my
Bloodline
stories.
Bloodline
in the title means the common experience of all the male characters from the youngest to the oldest; they were all part of the same experience in the South at that time, between the 1940s and the 1960s. I thought that the stories were good enough and long enough to make a book. My editor, Bill Decker at Dial Press, felt the same way, but he told me that I needed another novel out there before he would publish the stories
. Catherine Carmier
had not sold more than fifteen hundred copies, which meant that hardly anyone had heard of the book. “Write a novel,” the publisher told me, “and we will publish both the novel and the stories.” “But those stories are good,” I said; “they will make my name.” “We know that,” they said, “but no one knows your name now and we need a novel first.”
    On the plantation where I grew up in the forties were some tough people and mean people and hardworking people; they could load more cane, plow a better row, control their women—most of them would brag about having more

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