Garfield Akers (possibly born James Garfield Echols, probably 1908 – c. 1959)
was an American
blues
Blues is a music genre and musical form which originated in the Deep South of the United States around the 1860s. Blues incorporated spirituals, work songs, field hollers, shouts, chants, and rhymed simple narrative ballads from the Afr ...
singer and
guitarist
A guitarist (or a guitar player) is a person who plays the guitar. Guitarists may play a variety of guitar family instruments such as classical guitars, acoustic guitars, electric guitars, and bass guitars. Some guitarists accompany themselv ...
. He had sometimes performed under the
pseudonym "Garfield Partee." Info on him is uncertain, and knowledge of his life is based almost entirely on reports of a few contemporary witnesses.
Akers' extant recordings consist of four
sides, which are nonetheless historically significant. His most well-known song was his debut single "Cottonfield Blues", a
duet
A duet is a musical composition for two performers in which the performers have equal importance to the piece, often a composition involving two singers or two pianists. It differs from a harmony, as the performers take turns performing a solo ...
with friend and longtime collaborator
Joe Callicott on second guitar, based on a song performed by Texas blues musician
Henry Thomas a few years earlier.
Biography
Early life
Akers came to
Hernando, Mississippi
Hernando is a city in, and the county seat of, DeSoto County, which is on the northwestern border of Mississippi, United States. The population was 14,090 at the 2010 census, up from 6,812 in 2000. DeSoto County is the second-most-populous count ...
, a small town near
Memphis, Tennessee, from Brights as a young teenager, already playing guitar at the time. In Hernando he met
Frank Stokes, who is now often considered the "father of
Memphis blues"; together with him he performed as a
songster (a form of itinerant musician), comedian and dancer in the Doc Watts and his Spoan's Linament
Medicine Show, which toured the southern United States, in the mid to late 1910s. In the mid-1920s he married Missie (birth name unknown); their marriage remained childless.
Also in the 1920s, he met guitarist
Joe Callicott, with whom he played well into his 40s and who was his second guitarist. Both played the
Stella
Stella or STELLA may refer to:
Art, entertainment, and media Comedy
*Stella (comedy group), a comedy troupe consisting of Michael Showalter, Michael Ian Black and David Wain
Characters
*Stella (given name), including a list of characters with th ...
brand of guitars, common among blues guitarists at the time, and performed on weekends in the Hernando area, where they made it to local prominence. Akers and Callicott were not professional musicians, however; music was a sideline for them, Akers living as a sharecropper (a form of debt bondage). They rarely played outside the Hernando area; they avoided the
Mississippi Delta
The Mississippi Delta, also known as the Yazoo–Mississippi Delta, or simply the Delta, is the distinctive northwest section of the U.S. state of Mississippi (and portions of Arkansas and Louisiana) that lies between the Mississippi and Yazoo ...
, the real heartland of Mississippi blues, because it was too dangerous for them there and their local popularity in Hernando ensured better income for less effort.
Recordings
Callicott appears on Akers' first release for
Vocalion Records, the two-part Cottonfield Blues, which they recorded in September 1929 at the
Peabody Hotel in Memphis during a joint recording session with other performers such as
Memphis Minnie,
Tampa Red, and
Kid Bailey. For the recording, Akers was paid forty dollars,
[Jim O'Neal, ''Garfield Akers – … to Beale Street and the Juke Joints'' , p. 28] Callicott five.
[Gayle Dean Wardlow: ''Garfield Akers – From the Hernando Cottonfields …'' , p. 27] The Cottonfield Blues was Akers' trademark tune, which he had practiced continually on his own as well as with Callicott since about 1926/27; the recording accordingly clearly illustrates how well the Akers/Callicott team was attuned to each other. Although Akers had prepared additional material for recording, no further recordings were made by the duo at the Peabody Hotel, as producer J. Mayo Williams was eager to record the other musicians invited to the recording session and thus quickly terminated Akers' recording.
Akers recorded another record of similar character to his debut in February 1930, Jumpin And Shoutin' Blues / Dough Roller Blues, the latter piece recognizably varying
Hambone Willie Newbern's piece
Roll and Tumble.
Here, due to the close playing of the two, it is hard to say for sure if Callicott was present as a second guitarist. He is not mentioned, but claimed this himself in an interview, was present at the recording session, and also recorded his only contemporary release there as a soloist. On this one, Akers is credited as author for Callicott's Travelling Mama Blues.
Later years and death
In the 1940s, Akers and Callicott ended their musical work together, and Akers moved to Memphis, where he lived as a neighbor of
Robert Wilkins and worked in a
flour mill. He may have been married to Emma Horton, the mother of
Big Walter Horton. With the latter, Nate Armstrong,
Little Buddy Doyle, and
Robert Lockwood Jr.
Robert Lockwood Jr. (March 27, 1915 – November 21, 2006) was an American Delta blues guitarist, who recorded for Chess Records and other Chicago labels in the 1950s and 1960s. He was the only guitarist to have learned to play directly fr ...
he often played weekends on
Beale Street and performed around Memphis in juke joints. Armstrong also reports that Akers was playing an electric guitar at the time.
There are conflicting accounts about the date of his death, most often giving the year 1959, but "The Mississippi Writers and Musicians Project" gives 1958. However, research on a death certificate between 1955 and 1964 failed. Nate Armstrong reported that he had died as early as 1953 or 1954 after an illness of about six months, but this is not confirmed either.
Only a few years after his death, in 1962, the compilation "Really! The Country Blues 1927-1933" included both parts of Akers' "Cottonfield Blues".
Work
Akers' well-known work includes four tracks recorded by himself and another track recorded by Joe Calicott. All the pieces are played fast and stomping for the time, clearly foreshadowing
rhythm and blues as well as
rock 'n' roll. Akers had a high-pitched voice, his howling,
tremolo
In music, ''tremolo'' (), or ''tremolando'' (), is a trembling effect. There are two types of tremolo.
The first is a rapid reiteration:
* Of a single Musical note, note, particularly used on String instrument#Bowing, bowed string instrument ...
style of singing modeled after Ed Newsome. Robert Wilkins reported that the distinctive and, for the time, very unusual rhythm was not necessarily invented by Akers himself, however, but had already been played by two brothers named Byrd in the Hernando area between 1915 and 1920.
In the mid-1920s Akers must have adapted the rhythm, but it is not clear how exactly he came up with it. Similar rhythms do not reappear in the blues until later, with
Joe McCoy's Look Who's Coming Down The Road, recorded in 1935 but not released until 1940, and Robert Wilkins' Get Away Blues.
The two-part Cottonfield Blues is a blues piece for two guitars and vocals in what from today's perspective is a very traditional blues scheme. While the rhythm guitar plays in eighth notes, without any special emphasis or a ternary shuffle rather boring, the lead guitar's motif of only four notes, which always starts on the second or fifth eighth note and is downward, creates a counter-rhythm so that the actual heavy times are shifted. This leads to irritation when listening, since the harmony changes do not seem to match the meter changes, especially since the vocals are also rhythmically related to the "correct" meter. This and the very bluesy vocal line, which heavily veils the blue notes in intonation and thus distances itself harmonically from the guitars, creates an effect aimed at making the singing, i.e. the singer or narrator, seem left alone, thus heightening the dramaturgy of the textual content (about a man has been abandoned by his lover).
Influence
Akers' style influenced blues musicians such as
John Lee Hooker
John Lee Hooker (August 22, 1912 or 1917 – June 21, 2001) was an American blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist. The son of a sharecropper, he rose to prominence performing an electric guitar-style adaptation of Delta blues. Hooker often ...
and Robert Wilkins in his day. Due to his extremely narrow oeuvre, Akers is little known today outside of aficionado circles. Cottonfield Blues in particular, however, has been reissued numerous times on vinyl and CD and is now considered a classic of the genre.
Bob Dylan biographer
Michael Gray hailed the tune as "the birth of rock 'n' roll ... from 1929!",
Don Kent pointed out that "only a handful of guitar duets in all blues match the incredible drive, intricate rhythms and ferocious intensity
f the piece and called him "one of the greatest vocalists in blues history.".
Gayle Dean Wardlow called the record "one of the classic prewar records" with an "amazing rhythm behind Garfield's moanin'."
Musicologist
Ted Gioia described his style by saying "Here chord fragments ricochet like bullets off the
fretboard, serving as bits of harmonic shrapnel underscoring Akers piercing vocal attack, a long lingering wail that contrasts pleasingly with the rapidfire pulsations of his guitar.".
Discography
All of the pieces have been reissued numerous times on compilations since their original publication; these are not listed here.
* "Cottonfield Blues, Part 1" / "Cottonfield Blues, Part 2," (1929), (
Vocalion Records 1442)
* "Jumpin And Shoutin' Blues" / "Dough Roller Blues," (1930), (Vocalion Records 1481)
References
Bibliography
*Robert Santelli, ''The Big Book Of Blues – A Biographical Encyclopedia'', 1993, , p. 5
External links
Garfield Akers Discography
{{DEFAULTSORT:Akers, Garfield
1900s births
Year of birth uncertain
1950s deaths
Year of death uncertain
Blues musicians from Mississippi
American blues singers
Vocalion Records artists
20th-century American singers
People from Hernando, Mississippi