Join Books.org — it's free

Fiction Subjects, Peoples & Cultures - Fiction
Been Here and Gone by David Dalton β€” book cover

Been Here and Gone

by David Dalton
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Can I tell you about the blues?
Baby, I was born with the blues...

So begins the fictional memoir Been Here and Gone, the extraordinary story of an all-but-forgotten bluesman, Coley Williams. A backup musician to some of the most famous and infamous figures in the annals of blues music, and a former recording artist in his own right, Williams had a backstage pass to a world that most of us could never even imagine. In 1998 at the astonishing age of one hundred and two, Williams agreed to tell his tale for the first time. We can only be thankful for the fruits this "collaboration" with renowned author David Dalton has yielded: as funny, furious and funky as a lick on a talking guitar, Dalton's rhythmic prose captures the inimitable voice of a man who walks it like he talks it without missing a beat.

From his youth as a tenant farmer on the Mississippi plantations to the Great Migration to the Northern cities, from his incarceration in the notorious Sugarland prison farm to the temptations of freedom on the open road, from the juke joints of the deep South to the stages of Swinging London, Coley Williams' life is at once the story of the blues and the story of the twentieth century. Across a hundred years of tumultuous change, we follow him through the hardships of the Flood of 1927 and the hardscrabble years of the Great Depression, the race riots of the 1960s and the birth of the Civil Rights movement. Along the way, Williams' vividly recounted anecdotes introduce us to the pantheon of blues legends whose paths he crossed: Charley Patton, Tommy Johnson, Bessie Smith, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Ma Rainey, T-Bone Walker, Muddy Waters, B.B. King, the immortal Robert Johnson, and even the young Elvis Presley. Raucous, rambunctious, and often downright dangerous, these larger-than-life musicians, singers, and all-around rabble-rousers live again in Williams' wonderfully colorful recollections. And of course, throughout it all, there is the music: whether it's the plaintive and lonely sound of the Mississippi Delta or Chicago's lowdown and dirty electric hellfire brew. Here is the boisterous blues in all its hues-salty and soulful and sad with a glimmer of hard-won hope always singing out beyond the last note.

Been Here and Gone is a highly personalpanorama of the century as seen and experiencedby one of the most remarkable figures in recentliterature. It is at once a wildly inventive epic, aheartfelt testament to the people and places of avanishing era, and an invaluable contribution tothe literature of - music and popular culture thatwill fascinate blues fans, history buffs, and generalreaders alike. If Coley Williams' story (to quotethe old son) was nearly the "Blues the WorldForgot," then Been Here and Gone is just the tonicwe need to refresh our memories and remindourselves of the vitality of this music and thepeople who have lived it. Here before us is theAmerican Century, set to the tune of the Americanmusic. Can I tell you about the blues? Baby, I wasborn with the blues...

About the Author, David Dalton

David Dalton, a founding contributor of Rolling Stone, is the author of some fifteen books, including James Dean: The Mutant King, El Sid: St. Vicious, Piece of My Heart, Mindfuckers, Painting Below Zero, Faithfull with Marianne, Been Here and Gone, and Bob's Brain: Decoding Dylan, which will be published in late 2011.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Gadfly Magazine

David Dalton may be the best damn music writer alive...This is a must read for any true fan of the blues and a fun read for anyone, even those not musically inclined.

Washington Post Book World

Painstaking and passionate...will educate those unfamiliar with blues culture while delighting aficionados.

New York Daily News

[A] unique, entertaining perspective on a slice of American music history.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Former Rolling Stone contributing editor Dalton (Rock 100) has a transcendent view of the blues. As he writes in his novel's afterword: "The rise of the blues, the music God hummed when he made the world, is to me a miraculous event, a ray of blinding spiritual power cast over the soul-corrupting late 20th century," and the author's passion is evident in a long, loving tale relating the life of Coley Williams, a 100-year-old blues musician. Coley is old enough to have known the first generation of bluesmen, like Charley Patton and Robert Johnson. Describing the Delta landscape of cotton crops and juke joints that gave rise to a whole blues culture, Coley's story is as much about the music of its own telling, in a unique patois comprising French, Yoruba, English and vivid vernacular, as it is about the development of the blues. Between WWI and the Great Depression, playing the piano or the guitar with Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith, Coley meets the devil with Robert Johnson. Intermittently, he returns to his farm and his wife, Vida Lee. Coley and his adventures thrill in the first half of Dalton's well-researched tale, but the second half of the book falters. In his attempt to make Coley Williams's life synonymous with blues history, Dalton strains the plot in trying to bring his protagonist into contact with every significant R & B and rock artist of the century, up to Jimi Hendrix. But a domestic subplot brings it back home, with Vida Lee cuckolding Coley with her "brother" Jimmy. Dalton's shining vignettes, complete with robust dialogue, are the real pleasure of this book--his portrayal of Leadbelly in the Sugarland Penitentiary in Texas is unforgettable, and such shrewd storytelling and strong voices will have blues lovers "hooked, lined and sinkered." Read in tandem with Jack Fuller's The Best of Jackson Payne (Forecasts, Apr. 10) , this novel is yet another course in this season's literary jazz feast. (June) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2000
Publisher
New York : W. Morrow, c2000.
Pages
432
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780380976768

More by David Dalton

Similar books