| |||||
| Books Comics Health & Body Media Mothers Who Think News People Politics2000 Technology - Free Software Project Travel & Food ![]() Columnists
- - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - Also Today For a full list of today's Salon Arts & Entertainment stories, go to the
Arts & Entertainment home page. - - - - - - - - - - - - Search Salon - - - - - - - - - - - - Salon Columnists - - - - - - - - - - - - Recently in Salon Arts & Entertainment Music Review Column Music Review Complete archives for Arts & Entertainment - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
The magical mystery tour
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Oct. 6, 1999 |
The song around which I formed my eternal-mystery theory was not
some illegible bebop map or a question mark from "Big Science."
The song that hammered home the notion that listening to good
music was like watching a quiz show without cue cards was from a
genre not known for its elliptical subtleties -- Dixieland. Specifically,
it was Louis Armstrong doing that old dirge, "St. James Infirmary."
When I was 14, I listened to the one Armstrong record I had every night
before I went to sleep -- theoretically to
help my own trumpet playing (which is what I told my sister
across the hall when she'd had quite enough), but
really because I was hooked on getting spooked. "St. James
Infirmary" never stopped scaring me, never opened up -- and
thus never closed down. Every time the song came on, I closed my eyes and went to
the movies. It's that cinematic, the minor key working as a
kind of lighting, midnight blue gels on a few random spots.
You hear the smudged brass of Armstrong's trumpet before you
hear his voice, harking back to the sad joy of a New Orleans
funeral parade. The camera comes in for a close-up as the
band slides into a smooth shuffle and Armstrong starts to
sing: "I went down to St. James Infirmary/ Sarah Vowell Sarah Vowell's column appears on the Arts & Entertainment site every other Wednesday.
Armstrong's timbre as both a trumpeter and a vocalist is the
perfect match for such a mood, a perfect American marriage
of the gruff and the tender -- which is one reason the song's
next turn is such a surprise. "She can look this wide world
over/ The next verse omits the dead girl altogether. Now he's imagining his own death, and it couldn't get more selfish. When he sees himself as a corpse, it's as an ad for his own success. He doesn't think about the people or places he'll miss. He wants to be buried in a Stetson hat. "Pin a $20 gold piece on my watch chain," he commands the air, "So the boys will know I died standing fat." This song gave me the shivers then and it gives me the shivers now. Not just because it's a morgue scene, not just because of the cold body lying there on a table instead of a bed, but because of the chill of the man's words. Hearing it as a young girl, hearing it before I ever fell in love myself, it frightened me because of the way it shoots down the idea of love as a true possibility. If you need love in part to know you'll be missed when you're gone, what does it mean if your sweetheart stands over your icy corpse and -- instead of wishing to rejoin you on some astral plane -- fantasizes about impressing his buddies with a big dumb coin? That's an ugly thought. But the song's so pretty. The bad thought is expressed in good poetry -- cool phrases such as "sweet man like me," "Stetson hat," "$20 gold piece" -- phrased by a captivating voice working through an addictive blues melody and orchestrated to clarinet and piano perfection. The reason I could listen to the song over and over and never quite figure it out, never get bored -- and the reason the song has been covered by so many performers -- lies in its utter ambiguity. Which is to say, in its freedom. The fact that the song doesn't entirely make sense is an invitation for everyone from Cab Calloway to a new trip-hop band called Snakefarm to get in there and do a little detective work. That jump-cut from the morgue's cold white table to the man's cold dark heart demands interpretation.
| ||||
|
|
Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus
Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.