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Stones in My Pathway

April 22 - June 25, 2016

61 Highway is the longest road I know 
Goes all the way from Chicago to the 
Gulf of Mexico
Son Thomas, Highway 61 Blues

Driving along Highway 61 on a muggy summer day, the road ahead disappears into wavering bands of heat, telephone poles become rows of crosses, and overhead power lines buzz like late summer cicadas. The highway rises out of Louisiana swamps entering southernmost Mississippi to trace the Civil War through Natchez, Port Gibson, and Vicksburg, before cutting through the heart of the Delta like a long thin incision into Memphis, and weaving toward its final destination somewhere in Illinois.

In August of 1992, I drove on Highway 61 for the first time past Delta towns like Lake Cormorant, Bobo, Alligator, Mound Bayou, Panther Burn, Nitta Yuma, and Rolling Fork. I stopped in the little town of Leland in search of bluesman and folk artist, Son Thomas. His son, Pat, met me at the door of their weathered shotgun shack and invited me in. To my left, a homemade casket held the carved likeness of a dead woman in a blue print dress. On a shelf to my right sat a grinning clay skull with two rows of human teeth and aluminum foil eye sockets. I found Son seated on the side of his bed hunched over and holding aloft a cigarette with an arching three-inch ash.

Son Thomas spent most of his life as a day laborer, gravedigger, and part-time blues musician, while entertaining at local parties around Washington County. Despite international recognition late in life as one of the South’s most important blues and folk artists, he still struggled to make a decent living with his art. The afternoon I spent with him talking about his life and hearing his music made an indelible impression on me. I vowed to come back as soon as I could. When I returned the following Spring, Son was lying in a hospital bed dying of a brain tumor.

Since that first visit, I’ve witnessed many changes in the Delta. Not only has the blues world lost many important artists like Son, but the arrival of casinos has brought with them a flood of fast food, chain stores, and competition to the rural juke joints that help keep the Blues alive in Mississippi. The plantation where Robert Johnson first learned music is now home to three casinos, and billboards now pockmark Highway 61 where once there was an unobstructed view of vast fertile cotton fields.

These changes are significant because the history of the Blues parallels the history of Black Americans in the twentieth century. To many of the three million African-Americans who migrated from the South in the first half of this century, Mississippi is the ancestral homeland, the American “Egypt” from which they escaped social and economic bondage. The same Mississippi soil that transformed the Delta into the land of king cotton with the sweat and suffering of slaves and sharecroppers also produced a cultural legacy of music, religion, and rural traditions that shaped and defined the African-American community. The Blues, one of our country’s oldest original forms of music, was born of field hollers, railroad chants, black spirituals, jump-ups, European folk music and the ability of the human spirit to dignify itself in the face of oppression.

These photographs are my attempt to document the living legacy of this rich cultural tradition. The Blues is our country’s most important musical art form for it has shaped every musical form developed in its wake, including gospel, jazz, rock and roll, bluegrass and modern country. Its echoes still resound in the sweaty juke joints and dusty cotton fields along Highway 61.

-Bill Steber

I got stones in my passway
And my road seems dark at night 
I got a pain in my heart 
It has taken my appetite
Robert Johnson, Stones in my passway