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Review of The Lost Recordings of Banjo Bill Cornett
by Art Rosenbaum
FRC304
Reprinted here by permission of the Old Time Herald
Magazine (April-May 2006 issue)
The Field Recorders’ Collective FRC304 CD is a self-recorded legacy of
Banjo Bill Cornett, giving us what is arguably the finest very early-style mountain
singing to banjo ever recorded. Cornett did play for others and in public—he
played his “Old-Age Pension Blues” on the floor of the Kentucky
Legislature, and according to John Cohen, “died while entertaining at
a restaurant in Frankfort,” but he emerges as being an introverted solitary
artist.
Banjo Bill Cornett (1890-1960) was a Knott County,
Kentucky, banjo picker and singer and politician—he served in the
Kentucky legislature—whose music was first released to the public
on John Cohen’s pioneering Folkways LP, Mountain
Music of Kentucky, the issue that for many of us was a memorable
introduction to the intense “high lonesome sound” of Roscoe
Holcomb, singing to a driving two-finger banjo accompaniment. Banjo Bill’s
offerings on the disc, like the traditional song “Sweet Willie”
and his activist political composition, “Old-Age Pension Blues,”
showed him to be a master of rippling frailing banjo style and ornamented
vocal line typical of his region, but seemed less powerful than Holcomb’s
cuts. In his notes to Smithsonian Folkways expanded reissue of Mountain
Music of Kentucky, Cohen recalls that Cornett seemed apprehensive
about an outsider recording his songs during their 1959 recording session—at
once confident about his music and “gruff and abrupt” about
it with regard to his visitor. Cohen concludes, “In a tantalizing
way, [Cornett] announced that he had tape recordings of his best songs
in the house.” In 2002, 42 years after they were made, Banjo Bill
Cornett’s son Brode Cornett made those tapes available for release.
In these tapes nothing is held back, not in verve and inventiveness of
banjo picking, not in power and variation in the vocal line, not in the
total engagement of Cornett with his craft and his deepest feelings.
The artist introduces his recordings, on a track, “Banjo Bill Talks.”
“Now this is Banjo Bill Cornett, I’m at home today, 13th day of
February, 19 and 58, here by myself…that’s when I usually play the
banjo, sing, whatever. My children grew up, they fell for this rock and roll
music, honky-tonk music, whatever you call it. I don’t like that. When
I catch them all gone, wife gone, then I carry on to suit my own self.”
He added that he intended to leave the tapes as a legacy for anyone who wanted
to hear his “carrying on” (in two senses of the expression, I think.)
George Gibson, a singer, banjo picker, and banjo researcher from Knott County,
had heard Banjo Bill play and sing. He told me that the banjo had been a dance
and courting and song accompanying instrument mainly enjoyed by young people,
but by the post-World War II years it was seldom played in public. Perhaps those
who continued to play for themselves either maintained or intensified their
artistry as their youthful courting and dancing years became poignantly more
distant, and their sense of mortality more immediate. Several of the elder banjo
players I have encountered who never laid the banjo by, considered it a friend,
a companion, an answering voice: Georgian Mabel Cawthorn, living alone, said
her banjo kept “me company,” and another north Georgia singer and
banjo picker, Lawrence Eller, said that when he’d “kindly get the
blues” he’d “shear down on that thing. The man never played
it that loved it more than I.” And Kentuckian Shorty Ralph Reynolds, whom
I recorded in the 1970s, like Cornett undertook to self-record his repertoire
(he played and sang in his car, which produced an echo effect which he liked.)
If Uncle Dave Macon can be considered the greatest “outer-directed”
banjo player-singer, with a performance style geared to entertain the public,
then Banjo Bill Cornett may be the greatest “inner-directed” singer-to-banjo.
Cornett’s repertoire, while including some dance pieces, is richest in
tragic British ballads, sad mountain love lyrics, and black-derived “rounder”
songs of the rough-and-rowdy moonshiners, gamblers, and railroad workers.
Writers have too often either romanticized or caricatured Appalachian life and
culture, but James Sill, a writer from the Kentucky mountains, hits the mark
in his poem about his friend, titled “Banjo Bill Cornett”:
Singing he goes, wrapped in a garment of ballads,
And his songs are his own, and his banjo shaped
By his own skilled hands. This is his own true love
He grieves…
The banjo is a part of him, his waking and his
sleeping;
It is his bread and meat. Here his heart’s peace lies.
It is his tongue for joy; it is his eyes for weeping.
If this seems lovely but extravagant, listen to Cornett’s “Barbara
Allen,” which he sings to an old pentatonic minor melody, with the swoops,
hesitations and grace notes or the old rubato mountain singing style, yet gently
pushed toward a rhythmic forward movement by single string two-finger banjo
work, sometimes doubling, sometimes answering the vocal lines. Or the other
Child ballad in this collection, “Love Henry,” sung with a vocal
astringency akin to Roscoe Holcomb’s, to a frailing banjo rich in pulled
notes and runs between the phrases of the song. (Oddly this cut begins in the
middle of the story, where Henry’s jilted lover lures him into the house
where she stabs him—was this due to some technical flaw in the tape?—as
Cornett’s texts are typically complete.)
“Singing he goes,” signals the paramount importance of the song
in the work of an artist like Cornett (thanks again to George Gibson for the
reference to Sill’s poem.) Everything is sung here, even the frolic tunes
“Cumberland Gap” and “Cripple Creek,” but the concentration
on the use of the banjo to respond to and intensify the sung text and tune,
is the key to Cornett’s brilliance. Many of the fine mountain singers-to-banjo
set up a regular pattern on their instrument, “noting” or doubling
the melody on the banjo (or, more recently, using a chording accompaniment),
at times playing repetitive phrases between lines and/or breaks between verses—think
of Clarence Ashley, B. F. Shelton, or even Dock Boggs. Cornett ratchets up the
inventiveness of his performance by setting up complex interplaying of voice
and banjo. The listener is pulled into the performer’s poetic and emotional
engagement with the song’s narrative or lyric, moment by moment. This
is not the false over-dramatization of the concert singer’s approach to
folk song, nor is it the poker-faced, regularized if powerful delivery of many
mountain banjoist-singers. My belief is that Cornett’s emotional intensity
in interweaving voice and banjo stems in large part from the African-descended
chordophone-griot singer roots of the banjo and its early repertoire. George
Gibson’s research has revealed that there were black banjo player and
singers in east Kentucky (as there were elsewhere in the Appalachians) long
before the Civil War or the influence of minstrelsy. These players mingled with
neighboring white musicians and shared not only banjo techniques but repertoire
and approaches to performance. Alan Lomax has written that in the Appalachians
the five-string banjo provided the first viable instrumental accompaniment in
centuries to the old British ballads—and it would follow that African
singing modes would move along with the instrumental styles into the mix. This
melding of African and European sounds worked so well partly due to gapped scales
common to both traditions. I recorded African American Primitive Baptist Deacon
Tommy Tookes of south Georgia singing riffs that sound very close to Cornett’s
rendition of “Hustling Gambler” in syncopation and variation, in
a lined-out hymn—the hymn being of British origin. Most readers of the
OTH will know Dock Boggs’ great performance of “Hustling Gamblers”
which was released as “Country Blues”—Boggs (himself influenced
by black banjo players) set up a constant steady vocal and instrumental rhythm,
while Cornett’s singing was so improvisatory that he played the banjo
only between the verses, in a single-note recap of the vocal line—allowing
the voice to carry the verses alone.
Banjo Bill Cornett’s repertoire, and least as presented here, came from
the old stratum of Appalachian tradition, almost entirely uninfluenced by popular
and electronic media: Child ballads (“Love Henry” and “Barbara
Allen”) and broadside ballads from the British tradition (“The Rambling
Boy”), mournful lyric mountain love songs like the splendid performances
of “Fair and Tender ladies” and “My Dearist Dear.” These
are the kinds of songs which the British collector Cecil Sharp sought and found
in abundance in remote mountain districts some 90 years ago. Sharp was less
interested in, but did encounter, frolic songs and what he called “street
songs,” his example of the latter being “Wild Bill Jones,”
here sung with breathtakingly dramatic vocal leaps by Cornett.
Cohen comments on Cornett’s “driving east Kentucky banjo [including]
frailing, up-picking, and thumb lead coupled with an arsenal of tunings.”
The tunings work with the various melodies and moods, “atmospheres,”
as Wade Ward famously had it. The picking can be full and tumbling, or very
sparse, as the song and setting demand: the frailing replete with left-hand
pulls sets off the drawn-out singing of “The Rambling Boy,” while
a sparse two-finger with stretched and choked “bluesy” notes accompany
the wrenchingly mournful “Look Up and Down that Lonesome Road.”
Cornett plays an extraordinary “Cumberland Gap,” where almost every
melody note is syncopated—not very danceable, but a very arresting treatment
of a familiar melody.
The likes of Banjo Bill Cornett will not be heard again.
He was a highly creative musician personally rooted in the richest soils
of 19th century Appalachian folk song— tragic ballads, poetic love-lyrics,
and rough “rounder” laments—set to a fusion of African
and white American musical forms on the 5-string banjo. Sill’s fine
poem could be part of his memorial, or else perhaps the last line of “Hustling
Gamblers”: “I don’t want no bawling and squalling, round
my grave carry on/ Just lay me down in the cold, cold ground, saying ‘Another
good rounder gone.’ ” Not that Cornett was a rounder type—by
all reports he was a socially conscious and upright man—but he was
able through his singing and playing to put himself, into the zones of
sadness, strife, and lost love that are embedded in the human condition
These no longer lost recordings are his intended gift to those of us who
want to hear.
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