The Blues a brief History of the Blues by Robert M. Baker


Compassionate and Sadistic: Johnson on Women



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Compassionate and Sadistic: Johnson on Women

by: Janet E. Webb


Robert Johnson's music captures intense emotions that contrast profoundly. Two strong and conflicting attitudes toward women illustrate this sharp contrast. These attitudes are reflected in two songs, "When You Got A Good Friend," which portrays a compassionate man with capacities for caring, understanding, and remorse, and "Me And The Devil Blues," which reveals sadistic tendencies of callousness, isolation, and impenitence. The emotions range from an astute understanding of the value of a sound relationship to a shameless and diabolical disregard for a relationship. These are expressed through content, structure, and sound in each song.

The content, structure, and sound of "When You Got A Good Friend," express the importance of strong relationships. The man portrayed in this song advises others to care for a good woman. He says, "Give her all of your spare time / love and treat her right" (32). This man not only expresses his own sense of caring by describing how to maintain a strong relationship, but in giving advice that will benefit other men, he is expanding that sense of caring. He not only values the relationship he had with this woman, but he encourages strong relationships in others, expressing a higher level of cognitive awareness. He is a person who understands that to be connected to others in meaningful ways is crucial to personal fulfillment. This knowledge causes him remorse because he has failed to do what he knows is best. He says, "Everytime I think about it / I just wring my hands and cry" (32). Yet, this man hopes for another chance when he says, "Wonder could I bear apologize / or would she sympathize with me" (32). The content expresses a logical progression of thought process in which the man exhibits good judgment. The song's circular structure, ending where it begins, adds a sense of balance and completeness. The sound of the music lends a sense of warmth and security.

On the contrary, the content, structure, and sound of "Me and the Devil Blues" work aggressively to create a chilling alternative. This man professes an acceptance of an evil relationship. He welcomes the Devil, saying, "Hello, Satan, I believe it's time to go" (46). He accepts himself as an evil man, the devil's equal, saying "Me and the Devil was walkin side by side" (46). These lines that describe the strong bonding of himself with evil accentuate the devaluation of his relationship with his woman. He says, "I'm goin' to beat my woman until I get satisfied" (46). This egocentric statement asserts a conscious dismissal of her feelings in favor of his. It portrays an utter lack of caring. His complete lack of compassion depict the extent of his alienation from relationships with women. He says, "You may bury my body, ooh / down by the high way side / so my old evil spirit / can get a Greyhound bus and ride" (46). He has given up hope of fulfillment and sees himself destined to wander aimlessly forever. This man's thought process moves from acceptance of evil and brutality, to aimless wandering. He has not found fulfillment and has given up hope. He says, "I don't care where you bury my body when I'm dead and gone" (46). The structure of this song adds to the sense of alienation from relationships because there is no closure. It seems to drift off into infinity. The music conveys an eerie coldness that cries in supernatural tones of emptiness and despair.

Johnson had a unique insight into the complexity of human emotion. He was skilled in the ability to use words as tools to build or weapons to destroy. This proficiency matched with his ability to structure a song in a way that accentuates his message and create music that only compliments but further develops the emotions to a complex degree raises him above the level of the average songwriter. It is a true artist who has the imagination to accomplish this. In these two contrasting songs, Johnson imparts a strong message that a life of caring and valuing relationships leads to fulfillment while a life that lacks caring will lead to isolation, aimless wandering, and despair.



Love in Johnson's Kitchen

by: Amanda Allen


We experience the song "Come on in My Kitchen" in different ways as it varies from 'take 1' and 'take 2'. There are apparent changes on several different levels; it changes lyrically, in tone, and in its intended audience. The song as depicted in two forms allows for a more thorough understanding of its content as the listener may experience more sides of the speaker. The elaboration in 'take 2' gives hints about what has been silenced in 'take 1' and expresses the hardship of the speaker more specifically. In the first version of "Come on in My Kitchen," the speaker reveals the issues in a generic, invulnerable fashion that allows for more diversity in the interpretation of its meaning, whereas, the second version exposes the issues as they personally affect the speaker. Through a close examination of the lyrics in each version: the subtle differences in diction, the omission of some lines, and the addition of others, it is possible to interpret the changing definition of love for Robert Johnson.

The most obvious difference between the two versions of "Come on in My Kitchen," is the extra ten lines in 'take 2' that comes in the middle of the song and starts with "Nnn, the woman that I love I crave to see/ She's up the country won't write to me". The insertion of these lines an those that follow, convey the speaker's need and care for this particular woman who has gone away. The first version does not include the same kind of vulnerability; he suggests a woman's need for him but makes no move to admit that he needs a woman emotionally. In 'take 2', the speaker confesses to have the lonesome blues when he describes that "I went to the mountain/ far as eyes could see/ Some other man got my woman/ lonesome blues got me" which is an acknowledgment of half this woman has affected him emotionally and he knows he feels a longing for her return. The difference in theme between the two versions approach to the situation is extended by the use of different pronouns.

When the second version switches its primary pronoun from 'you' to 'she' we experience a movement of the speaker from dealing with the issue generically and less emotionally, towards a realized that there is a particular woman who has hurt him in a particular way and he is longing for her to come back. We realize the influence and importance that the woman bears on the speaker's life, when, at the end of the second version, he exclaims that "My mama dead/ papa well's to be/ Ain't got nobody/ to love and care for me/ SHE better come on in this kitchen...". These are powerful lines in this context because they essentially mean that in order to make it through his life, the speaker needs for this woman to come back to "love and care' for him. This image of a woman, understood in terms of the her strength and influence over a man's well-being, is atypical for Robert Johnson.

What we see, dwelling between the two versions of "Come on in My Kitchen" that force them to bear different tones is the fear and obsession Robert Johnson had for women that caused him to portray such masculine, sexual assertiveness. With his attempt to belittle the identity of the woman, he ironically became more heavily focused upon them, occupying the subject matter of multiple songs. Every once in a while, the listener catches a glimpse of what a woman really means to Robert Johnson. We see that vulnerability in the second version of "Come on in My Kitchen" with words like "Ain't got nobody to love and care for me/ She better come on..." Robert Johnson has never believed in everlasting love, as apparent in the ways he refers to love in this and other songs, which for him, means that he has trouble believing in women. Through his lyrics, he seems to define love as woman.





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