A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 29: “Maybellene” by Chuck Berry
Episode Date: April 22, 2019Welcome to episode twenty-nine of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs. This is the second of our three-part look at Chess Records, and focuses on “Maybellene” by Chuck Berry. Cl...ick the full post to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. (more…)
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A History of Rock Music in 500 songs
By Andrew Hockey
Episode 29
Maybelline
By Chuck Berry
And here's a guy that is just the greatest
Chuck Berry
Welcome to the second part of our trilogy
On Chess Records
This week we're going to talk about
the most important single record chess ever put out,
and arguably the most important artist in the whole history of rock music.
But first, we're going to talk about something a lot more recent.
We're going to talk about Old Town Road by Lil Nas X.
For those of you who don't follow the charts,
and the music news in general,
Old Town Road is a song put out late last year
by a rapper but it reached number 19 in the country charts because it's a country song
that's a song that's a song with banjo and mandolin with someone singing in a low johnny cash style
voice about riding a horse while wearing a cowboy hat it's clearly cool
country music, if anything at all is country music.
But it was taken off the country music charts the week it would otherwise have made number
one. In a decision that Billboard was at pains to say was nothing at all to do with his race.
A hint. If you have to go to great lengths to say that the thing you're doing isn't racist,
it's probably racist. Because genre labels have always been about race.
and about policing racial boundaries in the US since the very beginning.
Remember that when Billboard started the R&B charts,
they were called the race music charts.
You had the race music charts for black people,
the country charts for lower class whites,
and the pop charts for the respectable white people.
That was the demarcation, and that still is the demarcation.
but people will always want to push against those constraints.
And in the 1950s, just like today,
there were black people who wanted to make country music.
But in the 1950s, unlike today,
there was a term for the music those people were making.
It was called rock and roll.
For about a decade, from roughly 1955 through 1965,
rock and roll became a term for the music which disregarded those racial boundaries,
and since then there has been a slow but sure historical revisionism.
The lines of rock and roll expand to let in any white man,
but they constrict to push out the women and black men who are already there.
But there's one they haven't yet been able to push out,
because this particular black man playing country music was more or less
the embodiment of rock and roll. Chuck Berry was, in many ways, not at all an admirable man.
He was one of all too many rock and roll musicians to be a sex offender. And again, please see
the disclaimer episode I did close to the start of this series for my thoughts about that.
Nothing I say about his work should be taken to imply that I think that work mitigates some of the
awful things he did. And he was also, by all account, an unpleasant person in a myriad other ways.
As I talked about in the disclaimer episode, we will be dealing with many awful people in this series,
because that's the nature of the history of rock and roll, but Chuck Berry was one of the most
fundamentally unpleasant, unlikable people will be looking at. Nobody has a good word to say about him,
as a human being and he hurt a lot of people over his long life. When I talk about his work
or the real injustices that were also done to him, I don't want to forget that. But when it comes to
rock and roll, Chuck Berry may be the single most important figure who ever lived and a model for
everyone who followed. To talk about Chuck Berry, we first of all, I'm going to talk about Chuck Berry, we first of all,
have to talk about Johnny Johnson. Johnny Johnson was a blues piano player who had got a taste of life
as a professional musician in the Marines, where he played in a military band led by Bobby Troop,
the writer of Route 66, among many other songs. After leaving the Marines, he'd moved around
the Midwest, playing blues in various bands, before forming his own trio, the Johnny Johnson
trio in St. Louis.
That trio consisted
of piano, saxophone and drums
until New Year's Eve
1952 when the
saxophone player had a stroke
and couldn't play.
Johnson needed another musician
to play with the trio and
needed someone quick, but it was
New Year's Eve. Every
musician he could think of would be
booked up, except for
Chuck Berry. Berry was a
guitarist he vaguely knew,
and was different in every way from Johnson.
Where Johnson was an easy-going, fat, jovial man,
who had no ambitions other than to make a living playing boogie-woogie piano,
Chuck Berry had already served a term in prison for armed robbery,
was massively ambitious, and was skinny as a rake.
But he could play the guitar and sing well enough,
and the customers had hired a trio, not a duo,
and so Chuck Berry joined the Johnny Johnson.
trio. Berry soon took over the band as Johnson, a relatively easy-going person, saw that Barry was so ambitious
that he would be able to bring the band greater success than they would otherwise have had. And also,
Barry owned a car, which was useful for transporting the band to gigs. And so the Johnny Johnson
trio became the Chuck Berry trio. Barry would also play gigs on the side with other musicians.
and in 1954 he played guitar on a session for Ecclipso record on a local independent label.
However, when Berry tried to get that label to record the Chuck Berry Trio,
they weren't interested.
But then Barry drove to Chicago to see one of his musical heroes, Muddy Waters.
We've talked about Waters before, but only in passing.
But Waters was, by far, the biggest star in the Chicago Electric Blues style,
whose driving propulsive records were more accessible than Howling Wolf,
but still had some of the delta grit that was missing from the cleaner sounds of people like T-Bone Walker.
Berry stayed after the show to talk to his idol and asked him how he could make records like Waters did.
Waters told him to go and see Leonard Chess at Chess Records.
Barry went to see Chess, who asked if Barry had a demo tape.
He didn't, but he went back to St. Louis and came back the next week with a way of recording of four newly recorded songs.
The first thing he played was a blues song he'd written called The Wee We Hours.
In the Wee We hour, that's when I think of you.
In the Wee We hours, that's when I think of you.
You say, but yet I wonder if your love was.
That was too generic for chess, and the blues they put out tended to be more electric Chicago blues,
rather than the Nat Cole or Charles Brown style Barry was going for there.
But the next song he played had them interested.
Barry had always been interested in playing as many different styles of music as he could.
He was someone who was trying to incorporate the sounds of Louis Jordan, Muddy Waters,
Charlie Christian and Nat King Cole, among others.
And so, as well as performing blues, jazz, and rhythm and blues music,
he'd also incorporated a fair amount of country and western music in his shows.
And in particular, he was an admirer of Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys,
and he would perform their song Ida Red in shows,
where it always went down well.
We already had an entire episode of the podcast,
podcast on Ida Red, which I'll link in the liner notes to this. But as a quick reminder,
it's an old folk song, or collection of folk songs, that had become a big hit for Bob Wills,
the Western Swing Fiddle Player.
The Latin Foller, foreign the great clock on the manilson, it's getting laid curtains on the windows,
snow is white, the paulers fleddened on Sunday night.
Ida Red, I'd a Red, I'm plump fool about Ida,
Barry would perform that song live, but messed around and changed the lyrics a lot.
He eventually changed the title to Ida Mae for a start.
And when he performed the song for Leonard Chess, Chess thought it sounded great.
There was only one problem.
He thought the name made it too obvious where Barry had got the idea,
and he wanted it to sound more original.
They tried several names and eventually hit on Mabeline,
after the popular cosmetics brand, though they changed the spelling.
Ida Red wasn't the only influence on Mabelene, though.
There was another song called Oh Red, a Hocum song by the Harlem Hamfats.
Larry Bernbaum, in Before Elvis, suggests that this was the only influence on
Mabelene, and that Barry was misremembering the song, as both songs have read in the titles.
I disagree. I think it's fairly clear that Mabeline is inspired, both by Ida Red's structure and
patter lyric verse, and by O Red's chorus melody. And it wasn't just Bob Wills' version of Ida Red
that inspired Barry. There's a blues version by Bumblebee Slim, which has a guitar break that isn't a
million miles away from what Barry was doing.
And there's another influence as well.
Barry's lyrics were about a car chase
to try to catch up with the cheating girlfriend
and other things that makes the song so unique.
They, and the car horn sound of the guitar,
seem to have been inspired by a hillbilly boogie song
called Hot Rudd Racer by Archie Shibley and his Mountain Dew Boys.
Now me and my wife and my brother Joe took off in my fort from San Pedro.
We hadn't much gas and the taras was low, but the dog going for it could really go.
Now long about the middle of the night we were ripping along like white folks might
when a murky behind he blinked his lights, he honked his horn and he flew out of the side.
We had twin pots in the clumb your butt, you people may think that I'm in a rut,
That had been a successful enough
That had been a successful enough country song
That it spawned at least three hit cover versions, including one by Red Foley.
Barry took all these Western Swing, Blues and Hillbilly Boogie influences
and turned them into something new.
Why can't you be true?
Even this early, you can already see the thing you used to do
I'm reading over the hill
I saw mebeline in a coopery bill
This early, you can already see
The Chuck Berry style fully formed
Clean blues guitar
As clean as clean as someone like
T-bone Walker, but playing
almost rockabilly phrases.
This is closer to the style
of Elvis's son records
than it is to anything else that
Chess were putting out.
And punning, verbose,
witty lyrics, talking about something that would have a clear appeal to people half his age.
All of future rock is right there.
The line-up on the record was the Chuck Berry trio.
Barry on guitar, Johnson on piano, and Ebby Hardy on drums, augmented by two other musicians.
Jerome Green, the Maraca player, is someone we'll be talking about next week,
but we should here talk a bit about Willie Dixon, the bass player,
because he is probably the single most important figure in the whole chess record story.
Dixon had started out as a boxer.
He'd been Joe Lewis's sparring partner,
before starting to play a bass made out of a tin can and a single string for him
by the blues pianist Leonard Kasten.
Dixon and Kasten formed an ink spot style group,
the five breezes.
But only let it be
as the moonlight you and me, sweet.
But when I looked into
eyes...
But when America joined in World War II,
Dickson's music career went on hold,
as he was a conscientious objector,
unwilling to fight in defence of a racist state,
and so he spent ten months in prison.
He joined chess in 1951,
shortly after Leonard Chess took over full control of the company
by buying out its original owner.
Right after the club Chess had been running
had mysteriously burned down
on a day it was closed,
giving him enough insurance money to buy the whole record company.
And Dixon was necessary
because among Leonard Chess's flaws was one fatal one.
He had no idea what real musical.
talent was or how to find it, but he did have the second-order ability to find people who could
recognise real musical talent when they heard it, and the willingness to trust those people's
judgment, and Dixon was not only a real talent himself, but he could bring out the best
in others too. Dixon was, effectively, the otter behind almost everything that Chess
records put out. As well as a session bass player who played on almost every chess release that
wasn't licensed from someone else, he was also their staff producer, talent scout, and staff
songwriter, as well as a solo artist under his own name. He wrote and played on hits for Muddy Waters,
Howling Wolf, Sunny Boy Williamson 2, Little Walter, Cocoa Taylor, Bo Diddley, Elmore James,
To all intents and purposes, Willie Dixon was the Chicago Blues.
And when the second generation of rock and rollers started up in the 1960s,
white boys with guitars from England,
it was Willie Dixon's songs that formed the backbone of their repertoire.
Just a few of the songs he wrote that became classics
include Little Red Rooster for Howling Wolf.
Bring it on home.
for Sonny Boy Williamson too.
You need love for muddy waters.
You get the idea.
In any other session he played on,
played on. In any other room he ever entered, Dixon would be the most important songwriter in the
room. But as it turned out, on this occasion, he was only the second most important and influential
songwriter there, as Mabelene would be the start of a run of singles that is unparalleled for its
influence on rock and roll music. It was the debut of the single most important songwriter in rock and
role history. Of course, Chuck Berry isn't the only credited songwriter, and separately, he may not
have been the song's only writer, but these two things aren't linked. Leonard Chess was
someone who had a reputation for not being particularly fair with his artists when it came to
contract. Her favourite technique for him was to call an artist and tell him that he had some new
papers to sign. He would then leave a bottle of whiskey in the office and not be in when the musician
turned up. His secretary would say, Mr. Chess has been delayed. Help yourself to a drink while you
wait in the office. Chess would only return when the musician was totally drunk and then get him to
sign the contract. That wouldn't work on Barry, who didn't drink. But Chess did manage to get
Barry to sign two-thirds of the rights to
Maybelline over to people who had nothing to do with it.
Russ Frato and Alan Freed.
Freed had already taken the songwriting credit
for several songs by bands he managed,
none of which he wrote,
but now he was going to take the credit for a song
by someone he had never met.
Chess added his name to the credits as a bribe
in order to persuade him to play the song on his radio show,
Russ Freito, meanwhile, was the landlord of chess records officers
and owned the stationary company that printed the labels Chess used on their records.
It's been said in a few places that Fretto was given the credit
because the Chess brothers owed him money,
so they gave him a cut of Barry's royalties to pay off their own debt.
But while Freedom Freito took unearned credit for the song,
it's at least arguable that so did Chuck Berry.
We'll be looking at several Chuck Berry songs over the course of this podcast,
and the question of authorship comes up for all of them.
After they stopped working together,
Johnny Johnson started to claim that he deserved co-writing credit
for everything that was credited to Barry on his own.
Johnson claimed that while Barry wrote the lyrics by himself,
the band as a whole worked out the music,
and that Barry's melody lines would be based on Johnson's piano parts.
To get an idea of what Johnson brought to the mix,
here's a performance from Johnson without Barry many years later.
It's impossible to say with certainty who did what.
Johnson sued Barry in 2000,
but the case was dismissed because of the length of time
between the songs being written and the case being brought.
and Johnson worked with Barry on almost all his albums before that,
so we don't have any clear guides as to what Barry's music sounded like without Johnson.
Given Barry's money-grubbing grasping nature
and his willingness to see every single interaction
as about how many dollars and cents were in it for Chuck Berry,
I have no trouble believing that Barry would take the credit for other people's work,
and not think twice about it,
so I can fully believe that Johnson worked with him
on the music for the songs.
On the other hand, most of the songs in question
were based around very basic blues chord changes,
and the musical interest in them
comes almost solely from Barry's guitar licks.
Johnny Johnson was a very good blues piano player,
just like a thousand other very good blues piano players.
but Chuck Berry's style is absolutely distinctive
and unlike anything ever recorded before
but the crucial evidence as to how much input
or lack of it Johnson had on the writing process
comes with the keys Barry chose
Mabeline is in B-flat
a lot of his other songs are in E-flat
these are not keys that any guitarist
would normally choose to write in
If you're a guitarist writing for the guitar, you'd probably choose to write in E or A if you're playing the blues.
D if you're doing folkier stuff.
Maybe G or C if you're doing something poppier and more melodic.
These are easy keys for the guitar, the keys that every guitarist fingers will automatically fall into,
unless they have a good reason not to.
E flat and B flat though.
are fairly straightforward keys on the piano
if you're playing the blues,
and their keys that are absolutely standard
for a saxophone player.
Alto saxes are tuned to an E-flat,
ten are saxes to B-flat.
So if you're a band where the sax player
is the most important instrumentalist,
those are the keys you're most likely to choose
all else being equal.
Now, remember that Chuck Berry
replaced the saxophone player in Johnny Johnson's band.
Once you know that, it seems obvious what's happened.
Berry has fit himself in around arrangements and repertoire
that Johnson had originally worked up with the sax player,
playing in the keys that Johnson was already used to.
When they worked out the music for Barry's songs,
that was the pattern they fell into.
So, I tend to believe Johnson that the backing,
were worked out between them after Barry wrote the lyrics.
Johnson's contribution seems to have come somewhere between that of an arranger and of a songwriter,
and he deserves some credit, at least morally, if not under the ridiculous legal situation
that made arrangements uncopyrightable.
Maybelline's success was, in part, because of a very deliberate decision Barry had made years earlier,
having noted the success of white performers singing black musicians material
and deciding that he was going to try to get the white people to buy his recordings
rather than the cover versions,
by singing in a voice that was closer to white singers than the typical blues vocalist.
While it caused him problems in early days,
notably with him turning up to gigs only to be told,
often with accompanying racial slurs,
that they'd expected the performer of Mabelene to be a white man, and he wasn't allowed to play.
His playing down of his own blackness also caused a major benefit.
He became one of the only black musicians to chart higher than the white cover version.
It would normally be expected that Mabelene would be overshadowed on the charts by Marty Robbins's version,
especially since Marty Robbins was a hugely popular star,
and Bury was an unknown on a small,
blues label.
Instead, as well as going to number one on the R&B chart,
Barry's recording went to number five on the pop chart,
and other recordings by him would follow over the next few years.
He was never a consistent chart success.
In fact, he did significantly less well
than his reputation in rock and roll history would suggest,
but he notched several top ten hits on the pop charts.
Mabeline did so well that even Wee We Hours released as the B-side
went to number 10 on the R&B charts
and Barry's next single was a Mabeline sound alike.
30 days.
I'm going to give you 30 days to get back home
I don't call up a gypsy woman on a telephone
once in a night a world ride hoodoo
that'll be the very thing that'll suit you
It's a great track, but it didn't do quite so well on the chart.
It went to number two on the R&B chart and didn't hit the pop charts at all.
The single after that, No Money Down, did less well again.
But Barry was about to turn things around again with his next single.
You don't need anything more, do you?
That's the Chuck Berry formula
Right there
You don't even need to hear the vocals
To know exactly what the record is
That record is, of course
Roll over Beethoven
It's worth listening to the lyrics again
Just to see what Barry is doing here
Well in the morning
I'm giving you my morning
Don't you step on my blues way shoe
Hey diddle I'm a play my fiddle
Ain't got nothing to lose
Roll over Beethoven
What we have here is, as far as I can tell,
the first time that rock and roll started the pattern of self-mythologizing
that would continue throughout the genre's history.
Of course, there had been plenty of records before this
that had talked about the power of music,
or how much the singer wanted to make you dance, or whatever.
But this one is different in a couple of ways.
Firstly, it's talking about recorded music specifically.
Barry isn't wanting to go out and listen to a band play live,
but he wants to listen to the DJ play his favourite record instead.
And secondly, he's explicitly making a link between his music,
these rhythm and blues, and the music of the rockabilly artists from Memphis.
Don't step on my blue-swade shoes.
and Barry's music did resemble the Memphis Rockabilly
more than it resembled anything else.
Both had electric lead guitars, double bass, drums and reverb,
and no saxophone and little piano.
Both sang sped up hillbilly boogies with a hard backbeat.
Rock and roll was, as we have seen, a disparate genre at first,
and people would continue to pull from a whole variety
of different sources. But working independently, and with no knowledge of each other,
a white country hick from Tennessee and a sophisticated black urban act from the Midwest,
had hit upon almost exactly the same formula, and Barry was going to make sure that he made
the connection as clear as possible. If there's a moment that rock and roll-and-roll culture coalesced
into a single thing, it was with Rollover Beethoven, and Barry now had his
formula worked out. The next thing to do was to get rid of the band. Roll over Beethoven was the
penultimate single credited to Chuck Berry and his combo rather than to just Chuck Berry.
We'll look at the last one, recorded at the same session, in a few weeks' time.
A history of rock music and 500 songs is written produced and performed by Andrew Hickey.
Visit 500Songs.com. That's 500Songs.com. That's 50.
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including a mixed cloud stream of all songs excerpted in this episode.
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