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Hardcover Jimmie Rodgers: The Life and Times of America's Blue Yodeler Book

ISBN: 0252007506

ISBN13: 9780252007507

Jimmie Rodgers: The Life and Times of America's Blue Yodeler

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Porterfield uses his skills as an English professor and novelist to produce a biography that is as remarkable for its readability as for its wealth of hitherto unknown details...This is a model study of a country music giant and the supporting cast that helped to make him great.

Customer Reviews

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The Definitive Biography of Jimmie Rodgers

Nolan Porterfield's book is a detailed, thoroughly researched account of Rodger's life. Porterfield travelled and read widely to provide what will certainly remain the definitive biography. It is hard to imagine a writer putting in so much effort if he were not a huge fan of Rodgers, and Porterfield is a fan. Yet he is careful not to exaggerate the Blue Yodeler's accomplishments and avoids sentimentalizing him. It would be tempting to do so since fictionalized biographies of "misunderstood" and "underappreciated" artists who died young are often crowd-pleasers. Porterfield keeps a cool head throughout and aims for accuracy and honesty. Recognize that Porterfield's book is a piece of scholarship, a work covering 460 pages with nearly 100 pages devoted to appendices, tables, and acknowledgments. Each chapter is heavily endnoted. So there is a possibility that the book will tell readers more than they want to know. But the book is always accessible, and readers will leave it feeling as if they tagged along with Rodgers to his recording dates and live appearances. By the way, a good companion piece for this book is Will You Miss Me When I'm Gone?: The Carter Family & Their Legacy in American Music by Zwonitzer and Hirschberg. The original Carters--Sara, Maybelle, and A.P.--were also recorded by Ralph Peer of the Victor Talking Machine Company (later merged with RCA) and made recordings with Rodgers (not their best work, in my opinion). The Carter Family's work extended beyond the early thirties and involved close associations with Hank Williams, Elvis Presley, and Johnny Cash. That book fills in what happened to "hillbilly" music after Rodgers' death and also shows how live radio worked in the border radio days, an important area that Porterfield's book does not cover much since Rodgers was not a regular radio performer. Both books provide fascinating accounts of the phonograph recording process used in the 1920s.

Jimmie Rodgers

Nolan Porterfield's 1979 Jimmie Rodgers is the definitive Jimmie Rodgers biography, a frank and honest look at a man who was determined to make the most of what he knew was going to be a very short life. Porterfield pulls no punches in the biography and spends as much time discussing Jimmie's weaknesses as he does his strengths. As a result, the story that he tells is even more astounding than if he had written a puff piece portraying Jimmie as the perfect superstar of his day. Jimmie Rodgers did not have a great singing voice. He was not an exceptionally talented guitar player and, in fact, was not known to be a very good musician. He found it difficult to keep time when recording with other musicians and was nowhere near the songwriter that he is "officially" credited with having been. That lack of songwriting ability when coupled with Jimmie's difficulty in learning new material limited the number of recording sessions that could be scheduled during his short lifetime. But Jimmie Rodgers was one of the great stylists of his day and he used his unique "blue yodel" and combined "hillbilly" and blues music in a way that continues to influence country music even today. He paved the way for the "singing cowboys" who became so popular in Hollywood movies after his death. Porterfield quotes music historian Henry Pleasants this way about the limitations of Jimmie's voice: "Well, great voices do not great singers make. Great singers are made by what musically creative men and women do with the voices God gave them." Exactly. James Charles Rodgers, the youngest of three children, was born to a poor Mississippi couple on September 8, 1897. His father left a job with the railroad to farm the land on which the family lived in an attempt to provide a steadier living and so that he could spend more time with his growing family. But when Jimmie's mother died in 1903, Aaron Rodgers returned to the railroad life and the Rodgers children were housed with other relatives. Jimmie, who spent much of his young adult life working railroad jobs like his father, never seemed to see his railroad wages as anything more than the money he needed to tide him over until his singing career blossomed. Despite that, Jimmie Rodgers will always be remembered as a "railroad man" because he billed himself for a long time as "The Singing Brakeman," an image that Hollywood used in the one short film recording that was made of Jimmy performing some of his songs. Jimmie Rodgers was a man in a hurry. He knew that tuberculosis would kill him, especially if he did not spend weeks at a time in bed resting and recuperating from the effects of the disease that was killing so many of his countrymen. But Jimmie Rodgers was not one to spend his time bedridden and worrying about himself. He decided to make the most of the time he had, and only took to his bed when his doctors told him that he was near death if he refused to end his non-stop touring and recording schedule for a

Jimmie Rodgers: The Life and Times of America's Blue Yodeler

This book gave more insight into Jimmie Rodgers than I have ever read. Very well written and a definite must for those interested in the history of true Country Music.
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