Cross Road Blues

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"Cross Road Blues"
Song by Robert Johnson
Recorded 1936/1937
Genre Blues

"Cross Road Blues" is one of Delta Blues singer Robert Johnson's most famous songs. The lyrics plainly have the narrator attempting to hitch a ride from an intersection as darkness falls. But in close association with the mythic legend of Johnson's short life and death, it has come to represent the tale of a blues man going to a metaphorical crossroads to meet the devil to sell his soul in exchange for becoming a famous blues player.

An episode of Supernatural is titled "Crossroad Blues", as a nod to the song.

Contents

[edit] Legend and Interpretation

While the legend of the Johnson selling his soul to the Devil is fascinating and evocative, the song itself plainly describes the very real, harrowing situation feared by Johnson and other African Americans in the Deep South in the early 20th century. Historian Leon Litwack has suggested that the song refers to the common fear felt by blacks who were discovered out alone after dark. As late as 1930s in parts of the South, the well-known expression, "N____, don't let the sun go down on you here," was, according to Litwack, "understood and vigorously enforced." In an era when lynchings were still common, Johnson was likely singing about the desperation of finding his way home from an unfamiliar place as quickly as possible because, as the song says, "the sun goin' down, boy/ dark gon' catch me here." This interpretation also makes sense of the closing line "You can run/ tell my friend poor Willie Brown/ that I'm standing at the crossroads" as Johnson's appeal for help from a real-life fellow musician."[1]

The legend of Johnson selling his soul to learn to play guitar is said to have taken place in Rosedale, Mississippi, at the intersection of Highway 8 and Highway 1. Another, less common, belief is that the crossroad is at the intersection of Highway 49 and Highway 61 in Clarksdale, Mississippi.[1]

[edit] Covers

Cross Road blues has been covered by many different artists. One of the most famous is the version by Cream, recreated simply as "Crossroads" for their 1968 album Wheels of Fire. Other cover versions range from Elmore James, Lynyrd Skynyrd (live), Homesick James and Rush.

[edit] Sample

Crossroad Blues performed by Robert Johnson
First 47 seconds of "Crossroad Blues"


[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Litwack, Leon F (1998). Trouble in Mind: Black Southerners in the Age of Jim Crow. New York: Vintage Books, 410-411. 
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