Will The Circle Be Unbroken-The
Music OF The Carter Family (First Generation)
From The Pen Of Bart Webber
You know it took a long time for Sam
Eaton to figure out why he was drawn, seemingly out of nowhere, to the mountain
music most famously brought to public, Northern public, attention by the likes
of the Carter Family, Jimmy Rodgers, Etta Baker, The Seegers and the Lomaxes
back a couple of generations ago. The Carter Family famously arrived via a
record contract in Bristol, Tennessee in the days when radio and record
companies were looking for music, authentic American music to fill the air and
their catalogs. (Jimmy Rodgers, the great Texas yodeler was discovered at that
same time. In fact what the record companies were doing to their profit was to
send out agents to grab whatever they could. That is how guys like Son House
and Skip James got their record debuts, “race record” debut but that is a story
for another time although it will be told so don’t worry). The Seegers and
Lomaxes went out into the sweated dusty fields, out to the Saturday night red
barn dance the winds coming down the Appalachian hollows, I refuse to say
hollas okay, out to the Sunday morning praise Jehovah gathered church brethren
(and many sinners Saturday wine, women and song singers as well as your
ordinary blasphemous bad thought sinners, out to the juke joint(ditto on the
sinning but in high fiddler on Uncle Jack’s freshly “bonded” sour mash come
Saturday absolution for sins is the last thing on the brethren’s minds), down
to the mountain general store to grab whatever was available some of it pretty
remarkable filled with fiddles, banjos and mandolins.
As a kid, as a very conscious
Northern city boy, Sam could not abide that kind of music (and I know because
if I tried to even mention something Johnny Cash who was really them a rock and
roll stud he would turn seven shades of his patented fury) but later on he
figured that was because he was so embroiled in the uprising jail-break music
of his, our generation, rock and roll, that anything else faded, faded badly by
comparison. (And I was with him the first night we heard Bill Haley and the Comets
blasting Rock Around The Clock in the
front end of Blackboard Jungle at the Strand Theater when it was playing
re-runs so you know I lived and died for the new sounds)
Later in high school, Lasalle High,
when Brian Pirot would drive us down to Cambridge and after high school in
college when Sam used to hang around Harvard Square to be around the burgeoning
folk scene that was emerging for what he later would call the folk minute of
the early 1960s he would let something like Gold Watch And Chain
register a bit, registering a bit then meaning that he would find himself
occasionally idly humming such a tune. (The version done by Alice Stuart at the
time gleaned when he had heard her perform at the Club Nana in the Square one
time when he had enough dough for two coffees, a shared pastry and money for
the “basket” for a date, a cheap date. The only Carter Family song that Sam consciously
could claim he knew of theirs was Under the Weeping Willow although he
may have unconsciously known others from seventh grade music class when Mr.
Dasher would bury us with all kind of songs and genre from the American
songbook so we would not get tied down to that heathen “rock and roll” that
drove him crazy when we asked him to play some for us. (“Don’t be a masher,
Mister Dasher,” the implications of which today would get him in plenty of hot
water if anybody in authority heard such talk in an excess of caution but which
simple had been used as one more rhyming scheme when that fad hit the junior
high schools in the 1960s and whose origins probably came from the song Monster Mash not the old-fashioned sense
of a lady-killer) But again more urban, more protest-oriented folk music was
what caught Sam’s attention when the folk minute was at high tide in the early
1960s.
Then one day not all that many years
ago as part of a final reconciliation with his family which Sam had been
estranged from periodically since teenage-hood, going back to his own roots,
making peace with his old growing up neighborhood, he started asking many
questions about how things turned so sour back when he was young. More importantly
asking questions that had stirred in his mind for a long time and formed part
of the reason that he went for reconciliation. To find out what his roots were
while somebody was around to explain the days before he could rightly remember
the early days. And in that process he finally, finally figured out why the
Carter Family and others began to “speak” to him.
The thing was simplicity itself. See
his father hailed from Kentucky, Hazard, Kentucky long noted in song and legend
as hard coal country. When World War II came along he left to join the Marines
to get the hell out of there. During his tour of duty he was stationed for a
short while at the Portsmouth Naval Base and during that stay attended a USO
dance held in Portland where he met Sam’s mother who had grown up in deep
French-Canadian Olde Saco. Needless to say he stayed in the North, for better
or worse, working the mills in Olde Saco until they closed or headed south for
cheaper labor and then worked at whatever jobs he could find. All during Sam’s childhood
though along with that popular music that got many mothers and fathers through
the war mountain music, although he would not have called it that then filtered
in the background on the family living room record player.
But here is the real “discovery,” a
discovery that could only be disclosed by Sam’s parents. Early on in their
marriage they had tried to go back to Hazard to see if they could make a go of
it there. This was after Sam’s older brother Prescott was born and while his mother
was carrying him. Apparently they stayed for several months in Hazard before
they left to go back to Olde Saco before Sam was born since he had been born in
Portland General Hospital. So see that damn mountain was in his DNA, was just
harkening to him when he got the bug. Funny, isn’t
it.
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