Saturday, September 3, 2011

John Hornor Jacobs A Southern Gothic Master

                                                  

I met John several months back when doing my second Noir At the Bar in St.Louis. Though our words were limited, I drove four and a half hours to read for fifteen minutes and he drove six hours with wife and kids in tow to do the same, I can say it was well worth it. Even with Aaron Morales trying to cop a feel of my back side while John read one of his stories. At the time each of us was counting down the days till our first books hit the shelves. Mine being Crimes in Southern Indiana and John's being Southern Gods. I recently asked John to write something that influenced the writing of Southern Gods, one kick ass piece of literature and he did. Enjoy!

Somewhere Down South, A Foot is Stomping in a Tenement Shack


There’s music to writing. Sentences have cadences, characters have rhythms to their dialogue, plots have tempo. A writer’s style and tone can sometimes have a minor lilt or major lift. Authorial voices sometimes have bright timbres or bass rumbles.


It makes sense that music influences writers. Seeps into plots. Informs characters.


I grew up on the rhythms of the South. Blues, soul, gospel and country were the constant accompaniment to the long car rides with my father, crisscrossing Arkansas, towing a flatbottom, a full cooler, and rods and reels and shotguns. In every country store dotting the landscape of the delta there was music; you open the door with a creak and the customer bell rings, a voice thick with tobacco and molasses and bacon-fat greets you. The air-conditioner hums and the strains of a gospel choir, tinny and indistinct, sound from the radio above the counter, tuned to the AM band. The hiss of a Coca-Cola being opened and the bright clatter of the cap falling to the floor. The snick of a Zippo. The husky laugh of a woman hefting a child on her hip.  Barefoot feet slapping on a poured-concrete floor.


Many places in the south, we ain’t got shit but music and the music of the bottle or the pipe to get us through.


When I grew older, I became a musician – a fair one, in all honesty, not great but competent enough to tour, play shows all over the south. At some point I fell in love with the blues.


I don’t know what there was about it that really attracted me, the blues. Its deep rhythms, maybe. The sadness, the pain all balled up tight with joy and sex and love and loss. The human heart in conflict with itself. The best blues tunes have the makings of a great novel. The legends of the blues, Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, Albert King, John Lee Hooker, they were generous with their legacy, and it spread beyond race, class. It spread into other forms of music and eventually infected my writing.


Music is an infection. Music is a voice.


When I sat down to write Southern Gods, the amalgam of music from a lifetime of living in the Delta welled up and came out, in one way or another. It spilled into my plot, into my style. Maybe into my voice. I don’t know. But I know what I wanted it to sound like. It needed pain and horror and the suck of gravity. It needed the grit and gravel of car wheels crunching on a backroad. It needed the static and buzz of an untuned radio. It needed to sound like this:


http://www.atomictomato.com/blog_music/rosie.mp3


Call and response. And that’s the relationship between the writer and reader, each one brings something to the song. The writer sings his line, and the reader rises to join him in chorus. It’s give and take. It’s tension and release. It’s the rise and fall of breathing. It’s the barrel and roll of sex.


http://www.atomictomato.com/blog_music/sometimes.mp3

Share | http://www.amazon.com/Southern-Gods-John-Hornor-Jacobs/dp/1597802859/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1302198903&sr=8-1

1 comment:

  1. Great post. Usually, writing about music falls into nostalgia and the rehashing of old feelings, but John's book really tapped on how music plays on somebody's mind.

    ReplyDelete