Deep Blues-Human Soundscapes For The Archetypal Journey
Deep Blues-Human Soundscapes For The Archetypal Journey
Deep Blues-Human Soundscapes For The Archetypal Journey
Deep Blues
Mark D. Winborn
Deep Blues
Human Soundscapes for the Archetypal Journey
Copyright 2011 by Mark D. Winborn
First Edition
ISBN 978-1-926715-52-0 Paperback
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Many thanks to all who have directly or indirectly provided permission to reprint
their work, including Stanley Crouch (for the postlude), Tom Smith (photos),
and Kevin Chopper Peshkepia (cover art). Every effort has been made to trace
all copyright holders; however, if any have been overlooked, the author will be
pleased to make the necessary arrangements at the first opportunity.
Contents
Acknowledgements
vii
Prelude
ix
1 Introduction
25
35
44
67
103
8 Conclusion
107
Postlude
110
112
References
114
Index
118
vii
Acknowledgements
The blues has provided great satisfaction, comfort, and joy in my life.
However, the opportunity to write about the blues would not have been
possible without the support of a number of individuals, especially my
parents, my wife Lisa, and my sons Benjamin and Aaron.
I would also like to thank: Stan Perlman who provided early
encouragement about this project; Adam Gussow, professional bluesman
turned professor of English and Southern Studies at the University of
Mississippi, for generously sharing resources; and Mel Marshak (1926
2010), whom I gratefully count as my mentor and the greatest influence
in my development as a psychoanalyst.
There is deep appreciation for the bluesmen and blueswomen of
Memphis, Tennessee, who keep the blues alive, and especially for those
musicians who invited me to play with them at Blues Hall on Beale
Street: Blue Blake, Mark Ross, and Eric Hughes.
Finally, I would like to express a special thanks to the artists associated
with the imagery of Deep Blues. Tom Smith of Winthrop Harbor, Illinois
graciously provided permission to use his exquisite black and white
photographs, taken between 1976 and 2006 (all photographs Tom
Smith 2006), which capture the gritty essence of the Maxwell Street
Market area of Chicago. All of the photographs in Deep Blues are the
work of Tom Smith. More of his photographic artwork can be seen at
www.maxwellblues.com. The cover art for Deep Blues is the creation
of Kevin Chopper Peshkepia. Choppers evocative artwork can be
viewed at www.peshkepia.com.
ix
Prelude
Is There Harm in Singing the Blues?
Sermon by the Reverend Emmett Dickinson:
Paramount Records, 1930
(Spoken)
Im speaking to you from this subject
Its no harm to sing the blues
Theres so-called preachers all over this land
Are talking about the man or woman who sings the blues
You dont know the meaning of the blues
The blues is only an outward voice to that inward feeling
And way back yonder
When Adam and Eve was put out of the Garden of Eden
To till the earth
He began to sing a song
I dont know what he sang
But I imagine he sang
(Sung)
I didnt know my burden was so hard
Oh I didnt know my burden was so hard
Oh I done made up my mind
Oh how I had some preachin kind
I didnt know my burden was so hard
(Chanted)
Way back yonder
Uh when Israel crossed the Red Sea
On dry land
And landed on the other side
Im told that they sang a new song
x
I dont know what they sang
But I call that the Israelite blues
I imagine they sang
I just made my escape
And got over yonder
And way back down When Paul and Silas
Was in the Philippian jail
Paul said, Silas
Uh do you feel like singing
Silas says I never felt as much like singing before
In all my life
I call that the jailhouse blues
They tell me that Silas sing
Or prayed
The old jail reeled and rocked like a drunken man
The chains fell from their hands
The shackles fell from their feet
The old jail doors sprang open
Uh but they done kept on singing those
Jailhouse blues
Way early in the morning
The jailer came
And saw the jail was standing ajar
And he just drew back his sword
To take his own life
Uh but Paul said Just stay your hand
For we are all here
I imagine they continued to sing
The jailhouse blues
Way down yonder
Uh when our foreparents was in slavery
They sang George Washington offer his song
The sang Abraham Lincoln on his song
I call that the slave time blues
xi
1
Introduction
In the beginning was noise. And noise begat rhythm. And
rhythm begat everything else.
Mickey Hart
Deep Blues
needs no interpretation: it portrays its own meaning.2 Words and concepts cannot avoid being a reduction of the blues. Author Charles Keil
characterized writing about the blues in this way: There are really no
blues critics - the very title seems either self-contradictory or altogether
empty of meaning.3 Paul Garon echoes these sentiments by asserting
that we are unable to describe in secondary process terms the nature of
our primary process response to the blues.4 However, while acknowledging these limitations, I will highlight certain aspects of the music
which are salient and relevant to my own experience of the blues.
Jungian analyst Paul Kugler hypothesizes that there exist acoustic
images as well as visual images. If his hypothesis is correct, one could
say that the blues operates within a particular set of archetypally based
acoustic images.5 Archetypes are inherent universal potentials to experience aspects of life in a particular manner. Therefore, the archetypally
based acoustic images that make up the blues need no interpretation,
only an experience of them to potentially constellate a response in the
listener. The blues is like a Talmudic statement about dreams: The
dream needs no interpretation, it is its own interpretation. The blues,
like the dream, only need a vessel to resonate in. The blues speaks for
itself.
Throughout this book Ill be drawing on ideas from the field of Analytical Psychology, the school of psychoanalytic theory and practice
created by C.G. Jung, to facilitate the exploration of the blues. Very
little has been written about the blues from the perspective of Analytical Psychology: only two works written from a Jungian perspective
have been published to date. An essay by Bill Willeford gives a general
introduction to the blues and then explores the intimate relationship
between the blues and feeling or emotion, both as experience and process.6 He illustrates this relationship through the examination of archetypally based emotional themes such as abandonment, wish, and
hope. Willeford utilizes the attachment and separation processes of the
mother-infant relationship to interpret some of the emotional activity
portrayed in blues performances.
2 C.G. Jung, On the Nature of the Psyche, The Structure and Dynamics of the
Psyche, CW8, par. 402. NOTE: CW refers throughout to The Collected Works
of C.G. Jung.
3 Urban Blues, p. 163.
4 Blues and the Poetic Spirit.
5 The Alchemy of Discourse.
6 Abandonment, Wish, and Hope in the Blues.
Introduction
Another article, by Stephen Diggs, approaches the subject from a significantly different perspective.7 Diggs frames his observations within
the conceptual framework of Archetypal Psychology8 and he explores
the phenomenon of the blues primarily from a collective or cultural
perspective. He envisions an alchemy of race existing in contemporary America in which the dominant conscious attitude is the white
mind which is still largely entrenched in the European tradition. Diggs
argues that the blues, emerging out of the experience of black AfricanAmericans, is doing therapy on the soul of Western consciousness by
bringing it into relationship with depression, passion, and Dionysian
energies. Unfortunately, Diggs does not explore how Western consciousness has influenced African consciousness; missing an opportunity to
examine the possible reciprocal nature of this influence.
There are a few books within Analytical Psychology that deal with
more general aspects of music. Books of particular interest are Music and
the Mind, by Anthony Storr, Sounding the Soul, by Mary Lynn Kittelson,
and more recently Music and Psyche by Paul Ashton and Stephen Bloch
(Eds.). Storrs work, the most general of the three, examines the origins
and functions of music, the patterns of music, the effect of music on
the brain and soma, and the inner experience of the composer and
listener. Storr focuses most of his attention on classical music, hence
deeply rooted in the Western tradition which, while illuminating, limits the applicability of some of his observations to the topic at hand in
our discussion.
Kittelsons work focuses on the broad experience of sound, hearing,
listening, and silence, especially as it takes place within the frame of the
analytic encounter. She uses the image of the acoustic vessel to draw
attention to the unique form of temenos9 created by listening at deeper
levels to the acoustic patterns transpiring within a therapy hour. Kittelson also explores the role of sound in music, poetry, and other healing
arts. Her understanding of the general aspects of sound sheds light on
various aspects of musical experience.
Music and Psyche by Ashton and Bloch is an exploration of the interface between music and psyche as mediated through analytic understanding. It is a collection of essays covering a range of topics related
7 Alchemy of the Blues. Spring, vol. 61, pp. 16ff.
8 Archetypal Psychology, developed originally by James Hillman, is a subset of
Analytical Psychology.
9 Temenos A Greek word meaning a sacred, protected space; psychologically,
descriptive of both a personal container and the sense of privacy that surrounds an analytical relationship. (Sharp, Jung Lexicon)
Deep Blues
to the interaction of music and psyche, from individual psychological transformation to recent findings from neuroscience and the healing powers of musics spiritual dimensions. Music and Psyche explores
the nature of musics impact and resonance in the psyche, and with
psyches self-expression through music.
While I am sure that there are other works that I have overlooked,
the limited number of books and articles discussed illustrates how little
work has been done from a Jungian perspective on the interpretation
of music, especially the blues. Naturally, there are a number of authors
from other disciplines that have written on the psychological, historical, sociological, and anthropological aspects of music as well as works
specific to the blues.
Blues and the Poetic Spirit, by Paul Garon is one of my favorite books.
Garon examines the blues from the perspective that the blues is poetry
and then likens the bluesman to poets such as Robert Frost, T.S. Eliot,
and Allan Ginsberg. He also utilizes surrealist philosophy and psychoanalytic theory to explore the various themes present in the blues, such
as Eros, aggression, humor, work, or male supremacy. Garon is one of
the few authors who make an attempt to understand the blues from a
psychological perspective, even though some of his arguments sound
dated and rather fixed in the cultural revolution of the 1960s.
The first book on the blues by an African-American author was Blues
People, by LeRoi Jones. Working sociologically, Jones traces the development of the blues from its origins in slavery through to its influence
on the contemporary jazz idiom. Jones pays particular attention to the
values within African-American culture which gave birth to the blues
and the shift in those values which caused an eventual decline of the
blues within the African-American culture. He also traces the influence
of the blues on white America.
Charles Keil, in Urban Blues, makes an important contribution to
blues scholarship by identifying the close parallels between the role of
the bluesman in the African-American community and the role of the
African-American preacher. He provides insight into the importance of
psychological commitment on the part of the audience and how that
relates to the capacity of the music to affect an emotional shift in the
audience. Building on this insight, Keil proposes that the role of the
bluesman is more of a belief role rather than a creative role and
more priestly than artistic.
Blues and Evil, by John Michael Spencer, is a rather intriguing book
written from a more Afro-centric perspective. Spencers position is that
Introduction
other blues scholars have all accepted the stereotype of the blues being
seen as inherently secular music, both in terms of form and function.
He disagrees with this perspective and presents arguments for the existence, within the blues, of underlying mythologies, theologies, and
theodicies (i.e., explanations for the existence of evil in the world created by God). Spencer is the only author I came across, outside of Analytical Psychology, who utilizes some of Jungs theories, especially Jungs
perspectives on evil, in laying out his positions.
Nothing but the Blues, edited by Lawrence Cohn, is primarily a historical and biographical account of the blues. It is an enjoyable and scholarly introduction to the personalities and styles associated with the blues.
The book traces the developments in the blues from its most primitive
origins, through country blues, classic blues, vaudeville, gospel, urban
blues, white country blues, East Coast Piedmont blues, and jump blues,
as well as the blues revivals of the 1960s and later. Most of the chapters
are written by ethnomusicologists and are primarily descriptive rather
than interpretive. One of the added pleasures of the book is an excellent discography covering a wide variety of blues styles.
Jeff Titon explores the blues from the perspective of a musicologist
in his book, Early Downhome Blues. His work provides an extensive examination of the musical structure, form, and content of early country
blues. He also explores the cultural context in which country blues developed. Titon provides an extensive catalogue of song lyrics to support
his analysis of the music.
Finally, I will mention Blues Fell This Morning, by Paul Oliver. The
subtitle of the book, Meaning in the Blues, is somewhat misleading
because Oliver never explores this topic from a depth perspective. Instead, Olivers work, originally published in 1960, focuses primarily on
identifying and categorizing the various content themes found in blues
recordings. Each chapter brings together a large number of blues songs
with a common theme such as travel, love, or work. After reading the
book one is left with a greater awareness of the vast area covered by the
blues, but without a greater appreciation of the depth and vitality of
the music. Oliver has difficulty moving from the position of an outsider
in his observations on the blues and African-American culture, lending
a somewhat stereotypic tone to his comments.
Deep Blues
Introduction
2
The Genesis of the Blues
Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind,
flight to the imagination, and life to everything.
Plato
Origins
The blues has been around a long time. The blues existed before there
was ever something called the blues. Perhaps the blues began when
mankind first developed sufficient consciousness to be aware of subjective feelings. It was certainly present in the time of the ancient Greeks;
after all, they developed the dramatic form commonly referred to as
Greek tragedy. According to Joseph Campbell, The sufferings revealed
through the episodes of a [Greek] tragedy are not accidental or occasional, but grave and constant, archetypal of human life.13 Campbells description of the Greek tragedy could well be used to describe the
typical content of the blues.
Perhaps Orpheus was the first bluesman. In ancient Greece, Orpheus
was the greatest musician among the mortals. He was married to Eurydice but immediately after the wedding she was killed by a viper.
Orpheus grief and love was so great that he vowed to go to the underworld and try to bring Eurydice back. His grief, expressed through his
songs, was so great that even the dreaded goddesses, the Furies, were
wet with tears. He sang the following song to Hades, lord of the underworld, and his queen, Persephone:
O Gods who rule the dark and silent world,
To you all born of a woman needs must come.
All lovely things at least go down to you.
You are the debtor who is always paid.
A little while we tarry on earth.
Then we are yours forever and forever.
13 The Inner Reaches of Outer Space, p. 135.
10
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The blues sound is generally raw and primitive. It has some basic but
fluid forms. It is culled up out of the prima materia17 and has never lost
touch with the base elements of life. The origins of the blues reflect its
humble beginnings with early blues performers relying only on guitar,
harmonica, and vocals to communicate their message. The overarching themes are emotional and spiritual, not rational. The word blues
originally had nothing to do with sadness, but seems to have meant a
state of mind more akin to boredom. By the early 1800s, however, the
term blue devils came to signify contrary spirits that hung around
and caused sadness.18
The early influences of the blues originate in West Africa, transported to America by African slaves. African-American blues historian John
Reese eloquently states the deep connection between the music and the
history of the people:
Blues was such a strong part of our history and how we
got here. There is an urgency to this music. When black
people were brought here, they didnt have time to pack
their bags. It was chaos, but out of that chaos came all this
beautiful music. We had to find some way to get a handle
on this. The field hollers, the chants, if not for that music,
nobody would have survived. Thats the closest one will
have to the presence of God, when blues and jazz are performed. A lot of people dont want to stare that power in
the eyes. But that power goes from the source to the performer to the audience. To express ourselves in a strange
land in strange conditions, we had to take whatever ability
we had and make the best of it. Or there wouldnt be any
blues or jazz.19
11
made of gourd as late as the 1840s. This instrument was brought to the
Americas and as it evolved it became the most common instrument of
the plantation South as well as providing the first instrumental accompaniment for the blues singer.20
The first generation of African slaves sang African songs and chants.
By the second generation those songs were replaced by work songs with
the conditions of their American environment as the focus. White slave
owners repressed traditional African drumming and worship of African
deities for fear that those influences could incite revolts. Westerners
also considered African music primitive because it emphasized rhythm
rather than harmony and melody.21 Perhaps this reaction occurred because rhythmically based music appeals more directly to the body and
encourages movement. Thus the blues might be considered the shadow22 or anti-thesis of Western musical forms.
West African music typically has a layering of rhythm, a complex
weave of beats, and an avoidance of a single stressed rhythm; it is polyrhythmic as opposed to the typical mono-rhythm of Western music.
In the blues this is maintained with a, floating accent, associated with
the vocal line despite the regularity of the accompanying rhythm, often anticipating the chord change rather than accenting on the chord
change.23,24 This polyrhythm may also take the form of the vocal
rhythm falling into a two-beat (double) rhythm while the accompaniment is being played in a triplet rhythm, or it may take the form of an
alternation between double and triple rhythms throughout the song.
West African music also has an antiphonal emphasis, a call and response - theme and comment pattern, which is a characteristic that has
also carried over into African-American blues and gospel. The call and
response pattern and the repetition of certain phrases, as found in African music, can also be heard instrumentally in the repetition of certain
patterns of notes that form a riff in jazz and blues.25
A particularly good example of these African influences can be heard
in the sacred blues of Blind Willie Johnson who is considered the fore20 Charters, Workin on the Building. In L. Cohn (Ed.). Nothing but the
Blues.
21 Jones, Blues People.
22 Shadow Hidden or unconscious aspects of oneself, both good and bad,
which the ego has either repressed or never recognized. - (Sharp, Jung Lexicon)
23 Charters, Workin on the Building.
24 This characteristic can be heard in the Muddy Waters song - Still A Fool.
25 Jones, Blues People.
12
Deep Blues
most example of the mixing of the blues style of music with a sacred
theme.26 His performances were emotional onslaughts that were powered by howls, growls, cries, and vibrato that were intended to constellate the religious fervor of the listener, to excite the believer and convert
the non-believer. Johnson typically sang in a gravelly, false bass voice.
These features suggest a lineage with certain African sacred rituals. In
these African rituals, the masked singer adopts a shift in voice tone that
accompanies the change in appearance associated with the donning of
the mask. Deep chest growls, false bass tones, and strangulated shrieks
were all part of the masked singers repertoire of vocal effects.27
Despite the similarities between West African music and the blues,
there also exist some significant differences. In West African music the
concept of the solo performer, i.e., playing and singing by oneself, is
relatively nonexistent. Also, the themes of West African music are largely about the tribe itself: their gods, work, nature, and the conditions of
mans life.28 Hence, West African music is largely about the collective and
collective themes. In the blues, the emphasis is predominantly placed
on individual experience even though the themes may be universal.
Diggs asserts that the emergence of the solo performer of the blues and
his focus on individual experiences was a result of the introjection of
the I, or ego of the West by the rural, unskilled African-American.29
Hence, the blues reflected a movement from collective community to
individual consciousness. The importance of individual experience and
expression in the blues is further emphasized by Diggs:
Blues was a music that arose from the needs of a group,
although it was assumed that each man had his own blues
and that he would sing them . . . As such, the music was
private and personal . . . it was assumed that anybody could
sing the blues. If someone had lived in this world into manhood, it was taken for granted that he had been given the
content of his verses . . . Given the deeply personal quality
of blues-singing, there could be no particular method for
learning the blues.30
13
Blues went back for its impetus and emotional meaning to the individual, to his completely, personal life and death. Because of this,
blues could remain for a long time a very fresh and singular form of
expression. Though certain techniques and verses came to be standardized among blues singers, the singing itself remained as arbitrary and
personal as the shout. Each man sang a different blues . . . The music remained that personal because it began with the performers themselves,
and not with formalized notions of how it was to be performed.31
14
Deep Blues
35
36
37
38
39
15
16
Deep Blues
The oppression that served as the gestation for the blues remained even
as the blues evolved. Until recently few blues singers were given copyrights to their songs and they typically only received travel expenses to
the recording sessions and a one-time payment for recording the songs
that day. It was extremely rare for an early blues singer to receive royalty payments for the records which were sold.
As Keil points out, the blues has always been a migratory music.46
At first it was carried by men moving from town to town in search
of work and then later it became associated with traveling medicine
shows, circuses, and later touring troupes or musical revues. In this way,
it parallels some of the migratory patterns north of the Mason-Dixon
Line by emancipated slaves and later of African-Americans leaving the
agricultural economy and Jim Crow laws of the South. In fact, over one
million blacks moved northward from Southern states between 1915
and 1930.47 During this massive migration the blues evolved. The role
of the solo bluesman diminished and blues bands became prominent
as the blues moved into louder urban settings, eventually leading to the
electronic amplification of the instruments and a greater emphasis on
dance oriented rhythms. However, Richard Wright does not feel that
the blues lost its importance or vitality as the blues moved off of the
plantation and into the cities: On the plantation our songs carried a
strain of otherworldly yearning which people called spiritual; but now
our blues . . . are our spirituals of the city pavements, our longing for
freedom and opportunity, an expression of our bewilderment and despair in a world whose meaning eludes us.48
45 Often throughout this book only selected stanzas or lines of songs will be
presented, rather than the complete lyrics.
46 Keil, Urban Blues.
47 Spencer, Blues and Evil.
48 Quoted in Spencer, Blues and Evil, p. 122.
17
18
Deep Blues
mood. It was all of these, and more: it was an essential part of the black
experience of living.49
When a blues musician refers to himself as a bluesman he is not
only referring to the type of music he plays but also the type of life he
has led and the attitude he has about life. It is in this last sense that the
blues begins to comment upon or amplify the anima mundi, or world
soul. An awareness of the anima mundi can be detected in many blues
songs, e.g., T-Bone Walkers - Mean Old World, This is a mean old world
to live in by yourself, or Elmore James - The Sky is Crying:
The sky is crying, look at the tears roll down the street
Im waiting in tears for my baby, and I wonder where can she be?
I saw my baby one morning, and she was walking down the street
Make me feel so good until my poor heart would skip a beat
I got a bad feeling, my baby, my baby dont love me no more
Now the sky been crying, the tears rolling down my door
The blues philosophy implicit in the blues includes the idea that the
blues is something to be accepted; not something to be gotten rid of or
fixed:
Going Down Slow - Mance Lipscomb
Dont send no doctor, he cant do me no good.
Its all my fault, mama, I didnt do the things I should.
Willeford describes the blues philosophy in this way, In the imaginative world-view of the blues, joy is born of pain; pain is not to be
denied. Joy is not simply the denial of pain but represents an order
of value of its own right. Irony [in the blues] assures that pain is not
denied, is taken into account, as the value of joy is affirmed . . . One
must remain open to the reality of human misery.50 This stance of acceptance is reflected in Junior Kimbroughs lyrics most things havent
worked out and I done got old. In listening to Kimbroughs music one
has the sense that Kimbrough is making an observation, not a complaint. Within this philosophy of acceptance the blues is seen as something ubiquitous and pervasive, penetrating into all areas of life:
112
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113
114
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118
Deep Blues
index
C
call and response 11, 90
Cammerloher, M.C. 48, 62, 63,
114
Campbell, Joseph 8, 27, 48, 73,
114
Cannon, Gus 78
Carr, Leroy 39, 55, 88
Carter, Bo 76
Caston, Leonard 68
catharsis 44, 48, 69, 73
Cephas, John 89
chain gang 13, 95
chants 10, 11, 67
chaos 10
Charles, Ray 74
Charters, Sam 11, 13, 89, 114
Chatman, Sam 94
Chicago 55, 108, 112, 116
child-archetype 39
Chiron 1, 35, 44, 116, 117
Christ 25
co-creation 90
Cohn, Lawrence 5, 11, 12, 14, 22,
48, 114, 115, 117
collective 3, 12, 15, 25, 36, 50,
52, 53, 59, 68, 71, 74, 75,
76, 77, 91, 107
complex 11, 15, 21, 26, 33, 35,
36, 37, 42, 59, 68, 81, 82, 89
Cone, James 31
119
D
Davis, Francis 101
Davis, Rev. Gary 65, 88, 112
death 13, 20, 35, 55, 56, 64, 73,
87, 88, 94
Demeter 9
depression 3, 15, 17, 35
detachment 70
diatonic scale 13
Diggs, Stephen 3, 12, 14, 35, 47,
48, 52, 77, 101, 114
Dionysian 3, 108
Dionysus 9, 35, 52, 70
Dirty Red 99
Dixon, Willie 20, 22, 51, 59, 95
drumming 11, 67
E
Eckart, Meister 70
ego 11, 12, 15, 26, 32, 33, 37, 40,
50, 70, 71, 90
ego-Self axis 90
eigenschaft 70
Eliade, Mircea 31, 58, 61, 64, 65,
71, 114
Eliot, T.S. 4, 71
entendre 78, 96, 100
entrainment 44
eros 4, 27, 63, 73
Eshu 85
ethnomusicology 5
Eurydice 8, 9
extraneous consciousness 26
120
Deep Blues
F
Faust 64
field hollers 10, 13
field knowledge 26, 48
Finn, Julio 57, 59, 73, 92, 114
Ford, T-Model 50
Forman, R. 71, 115
Frede, Ari 76
Frost, Robert 4
Furies 8
G
Garon, Paul 15, 22, 37, 39, 40,
49, 52, 55, 60, 61, 68, 69,
75, 76, 85, 86, 88, 90, 96,
98, 100, 115
generative empathy 68
Gentry, J. 10, 115
Geremia, Paul 58, 117
Gibson, Clifford 74
Gillum, Jazz 40, 51
Ginsberg, Allan 4
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von 64
Goines, Leonard 72
Gordon, Jimmy 38
grandiose infantile self 41
Great Round 20
Greek tragedy 8
grief 8, 9, 15, 17, 75, 87
griot 10
Guided Affective Imagery with
Music (GIM) 82
guitar 9, 10, 50, 53, 56, 64, 98
Guralnick, Peter 9, 115
Gussow, Adam 33, 115
Guy, Buddy 112
H
Hades 8, 9, 35
halam 10
Hamilton, Edith 9, 115
harmonica 10, 27, 33, 55, 98
harmony 11, 27, 80, 110
Harpo, Slim 101
I
identification 50, 55, 60, 68, 69
illud tempus 71
individuation 15, 50
initiation 56, 58, 64
internalization 69
intersubjectivity 26
introjection 12, 69
J
Jackson, Bessie 82
Jackson, LeDell 64
Jackson, Lil Son 74
Jackson, Tommy 64
Jacob 62, 85
Jacobs, Little Walter 36, 55, 113
James, Elmore 18, 29
James, Skip 104, 112
K
Kawai, H. 15, 116
Keil, Charles 2, 4, 16, 22, 44, 49,
50, 51, 60, 61, 73, 74, 90,
92, 108, 116
Kimbrough, Junior 18, 62, 112
King, B.B. 21, 32, 43, 65, 74, 112
Kittelson, Mary Lynn 3, 51, 67,
91, 98, 116
Klein, Melanie 40, 116
Kohut, Heinz 40, 41, 60, 116
Kris, Ernst 69
Kugler, Paul 2, 98, 116
L
Laius 57
Lane, James 83
Laplanche, J. 60, 116
lassen 70
121
Legba 57, 85
Lenoir, J.B. 59
Levi-Strauss, Claude 59, 60, 61,
65, 73, 92, 116
libido 71, 72
Lipscomb, Mance 18, 36, 38
Logan, John 67
logos 63, 73
loneliness 15
Long, Worth 100
love 5, 8, 9, 15, 16, 18, 20, 22, 29,
30, 31, 32, 35, 58, 65, 74,
78, 83, 88, 94, 98
Lucas, Jane 79
M
Maenads 9
male supremacy 4
Mason-Dixon Line 16
McClennan, Tommy 85
McCoy, Joe 76
McTell, Blind Willie 87
melody 11, 49, 110
Mercurius 58
migration 16
Mills, Violet 41
mirroring 47, 79
Mississippi 13, 50, 52
Mississippi Delta 13, 49, 112
Mitchell, Stephen 103
Montgomery, Little Brother 85
Moore, Alice 54
Moore, Robert 44
Moore, Thomas 14
mortificatio 79
mother archetype 38
mother-infant dyad 2, 37, 38, 39
mythology 5, 9, 20, 27, 51, 54,
56, 57, 58, 86, 91, 108, 115
myths 35, 38, 51, 52, 56, 58, 91
N
narrative 7, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94,
96, 98, 101
122
Deep Blues
Navajo 64
Neal, Larry 63
Neumann, Erich 6, 25, 26, 27, 30,
33, 36, 38, 39, 44, 45, 48,
50, 51, 63, 70, 71, 75, 90,
116
Newbern, Hambone Willie 45
Nietzsche, Friedrich 31
Nighthawk, Robert 16
nigredo 52, 80
numinous 35, 42, 57, 70
Pleasant Joe 41
Pontalis, J.B. 60, 116
possession 47, 50, 61, 62, 63, 65,
66, 82
prima materia 10, 66, 112
prisoners 13, 99
profane 31, 44, 57, 85
psychic energy 71
psychoid realm 26
Odin 64
Odysseus 9
Oedipus 57
Ogden, Thomas 26
Oliver, Paul 5, 17, 31, 50, 60, 64,
100, 116
omnipotence 40
ONeal, J. 22, 48, 100, 108, 117
ontological time 33
oppression 14, 15, 16, 52, 71, 76,
99, 100
Orpheus 8, 9
P
Pan 9, 41, 70
parable 25
Paracelsus 67
paranoia 40
paranoid-schizoid position 40
Parker, Little Junior 22, 51, 74
participation mystique 26, 47
passion 3, 35
pentatonic scale 13
performer-listener dyad 48
Persephone 8, 9
personification 7, 81, 82, 86, 87,
88
Phillips, Washington 76
plantation 11, 16
Plato 8, 67
play 44
S
sacred 3, 11, 31, 44, 57, 64, 71,
76, 85
sadness 1, 10, 17, 22, 72, 75, 79
Santaria 86
Satan and Adam 33
Schafer, Roy 68, 91
Schopenhauer, Arthur 70
selfobject relationship 60
Sels, Robin van Loben 65
sensuality 21
shadow 11, 15, 70, 75, 76, 111
sharecroppers 13
Sharp, Daryl 3, 26, 117
123
124
Deep Blues
T
Taylor, Koko 21, 112
temenos 3
Temple, Johnnie 78
Terry, Sonny 112
theodicy 5
theology 5
therapy 3, 7, 14, 15, 70, 80, 82
Thomas, Elmer Lee 72
Thornton, Big Mama 113
Titon, Jeff 5, 14, 15, 21, 22, 64,
68, 73, 90, 93, 94, 98, 117
trance 25, 44, 58, 61, 63
transcendent function 48, 82
transference 47, 115
U
unio mentalis 26, 77, 80, 101
unitary reality 6, 25, 26, 27, 28,
30, 32, 33, 39, 45, 46, 48,
49, 50, 59, 61, 63, 65, 66,
70, 71, 80, 85, 107, 108
unus mundus 26, 80
V
vaudeville 5
Vaughan, Stevie Ray 17, 41, 113
von Franz, Marie Louise 53, 71,
117
voodoo 62, 86
W
Wachandi tribesman 72
Walker, T-Bone 18, 30, 43, 113
Waters, Muddy 11, 20, 29, 42, 43,
113
Wells, Junior 113
Wells, Little Whitt 25, 48, 62
West Africa 10
Wheatstraw, Peetie 54, 55
White, Georgia 23, 88
Whiteis, D. 101, 117
Wilkins, Rev. Robert 72
Willeford, Bill 1, 2, 18, 21, 43, 65,
89, 95, 96, 117
Williams, Big Joe 113
Williamson II, Sonny Boy 46, 86,
101, 113
Williamson, John Lee Sonny
Boy 55, 86, 113
Wilson, Smokey 113
Winnicott, Donald 65, 117
wish 2, 54, 80, 117
Y
Yas Yas Girl 19
Yggdrasill 64
Z
Zen 22
Zeus 35
125
In his ever-fascinating book, Dr. Mark Winborn goes where few authors on the blues
have ever gone: into the profoundly psychological implications of the genre. A Jungian
by training, Winborn argues convincingly how the blues communicates for reasons
that extend to the symbolic language of the unconscious. His results are sure to
inspire future research in not just the blues but in other areas of traditional culture
and the creative act.
Dr. William L. Ellis, Saint Michaels College, Colchester, Vermont
Ethnomusicologist - Musician - Music Critic
Just like a ne bluesman, Winborn riffs on the various psychological aspects of his
topic: the genesis of the sound, the unitary reality created in playing and listening to
the blues, its archetypal manifestations and healing potential, and the inuence of the
personality of performer and performance. As he states,the blues belongs among the
great arts because of its extraordinary capacity to embrace, embody, and transcend
the opposites, especially as they become manifest in the experience of tragedy and
suffering. Using original lyrics throughout,Winborn invites us to reimagine the power
of the blues in its ability to deepen our own soulfulness.
August J. Cwik, Psy.D., Jungian Analyst & Musician
Deep Blues explores the archetypal journey of the human psyche through an
examination of the blues as a musical genre. The genesis, history, and thematic
patterns of the blues are examined from an archetypal perspective and various analytic
theories especially the interaction between Erich Neumanns concept of unitary
reality and the blues experience. Mythological and shamanistic parallels are used to
provide a deeper understanding of the role of the bluesman, the blues performance,
and the innate healing potential of the music. Universal aspects of human experience
and transcendence are revealed through the creative medium of the blues. The
atmosphere of Deep Blues is enhanced by the black and white photographs of Tom
Smith which capture striking blues performances in the Maxwell Street section of
Chicago. Jungian analysts, therapists and psychoanalytic practitioners with an interest
in the interaction between creative expression and human experience should nd
Deep Blues a worthy contribution. Deep Blues also appeals to ethnomusicologists and
enthusiasts of all forms of music.
Mark Winborn, PhD, NCPsyA is a Jungian Psychoanalyst and Clinical Psychologist.
He is a training and supervising analyst of the Inter-Regional Society of Jungian
Analysts. Dr. Winborn maintains a private practice in Memphis, Tennessee where he
is also currently the Training Coordinator for the Memphis Jungian Seminar.