Coming up Hard in Kentucky
By DAVE SHIFLETT
In the world of bluegrass there is no greater figure than Bill Monroe, which is a great tribute to his music if not the man, at least as he is portrayed in Richard D. Smith's workmanlike biography, "Can't You Hear Me Callin'" (Little Brown, 384 pages, $25.95). Monroe could carry grudges for decades, steal songwriting credits, heist another man's wife, petition to keep competitors out of the Grand Ole Opry and strongly criticize players who exceeded his somewhat narrow standards.
Then again, Mr. Smith argues, Monroe came up hard, and it wasn't easy making your living playing "hillbilly music." Born near Rosine, Ky., on Sept. 13, 1911 (a Friday, Mr. Smith points out), Monroe lost his mother at 10, dropped out of school after the fifth grade, had an eye that pulled toward his nose (corrected in his teens) and all told was a lonely child, as he explained later in his life: "For many years, I had nobody to play with or nobody to work under. You just had to kindly grow up. Just like a little dog outside, tryin' to make his own way, trying to make out the best way he can."
Monroe, who died in 1996, did have two things going his way: a high, powerful voice and a talent for playing the mandolin. He also had a decided interest in not becoming a millworker, which he estimated would have been his fate had he not prevailed in the music biz. Even those without much interest in bluegrass, which has been described as folk music in overdrive, will admire Monroe's remarkable tenacity.
Full Schedule, Empty Seats
His touring schedule was brutal, sometimes requiring him to play four shows a day after all-night drives. Performances sometimes featured full-throated hecklers -- some of whom Monroe ushered to the door himself. Audiences could be quite small: During a lull in his career, Monroe once played a full and apparently enthusiastic show for two patrons.
Yet he also achieved greater glories. He was a long-time member of the Grand Ole Opry and hosted daily radio shows during prime time, which in his business meant at noon, when fans came in from working in the fields to eat their midday meal.
Because of his prominence, heightened by popular songs such as "Blue Moon of Kentucky" and the hard-driving instrumental "Rawhide," he attracted legendary sidemen and guests such as Don Reno, Flatt and Scruggs, Kenny Baker, Del McCoury, Ry Cooder and Sam Bush. At one point, Mr. Smith writes, a young nine-fingered banjo player named Jerry Garcia drove east from California to Bean Blossom, Ind., to audition for Monroe's band, but chickened out in the end. Garcia later started the Grateful Dead, a band that would eventually make upwards of $30 million a year. Monroe didn't do nearly as well: Financial figures late in his life showed him to have real-estate holdings of several hundred thousand dollars but less than $12,000 in available cash. That's not a lot of lucre for a legend.
As Mr. Smith points out, there are those who dispute Monroe's paternity as the true "father of bluegrass," though there's no question where the author stands. Early on, he insists that Monroe is not only "the most broadly talented and broadly influential figure in the history of American popular music" but is "the only person to create -- not just dominate but wholly create -- a distinctive music genre."
He returns to Earth later, explaining that Monroe "was very much like the director of a major motion picture" who "brings everything together in accordance with his/her own vision of the final film." Meanwhile, fans of Earl Scruggs say it was his syncopated banjo style that provided the lightning that brought the beast to life. (Mr. Scruggs's departure from Monroe's band with guitarist Lester Flatt resulted in decades of illwill on the part of Monroe, who charged that they "stole" his music.) Whichever side one takes, there is no disputing that Monroe's percussive mandolin chop and "high lonesome" voice are central to bluegrass, which in turn influenced performers with much broader popularity, including Elvis Presley and Bob Dylan.
According to Mr. Smith, Monroe wasn't always lonesome -- and he apparently was never high. His dedication to teetotaling was matched by a long career chasing skirts, which broke up several marriages, including his final one at age 73 to Della Streeter, who was 41 at the altar. The author does assure us that Monroe, who composed and sang profound gospel numbers, was not an unscrupulous philanderer; he refused to pursue the girlfriends of his sidemen or married women in general.
Birth of a 'Love Child'
Save for one. Bessie Lee Maudlin bounced between Monroe and her State Trooper husband several times before finally settling on Monroe (who was legally enjoined from marrying her). According to Mr. Smith, she bore him a female "love child" whom Monroe never legally acknowledged, though her existence may explain an unendearing provision in Monroe's will: "If it shall be proved in any Court of law with appropriate jurisdiction that I have any children other than my son James William Monroe, then I direct that any such child shall inherit a sum of one dollar as that child's share of my estate."
Mr. Smith includes these prominent warts, but elsewhere his tone is almost worshipful. "The immense Monroe persona attracted people like a mammoth star whose gravity holds planets and comets in orbit, and even shapes the fabric of surrounding space and time," he observes in one gaudy riff. In the same spirit he begins chapters with quotes from such hillbilly sages as Voltaire, Ovid, Shakespeare, Queen Victoria and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. He also engages in a bit too much sensitivity chatter for some tastes (ahem), as when charging one of Monroe's brothers with inflicting trauma-inducing "physical abuse" by occasionally taking drunk and whacking young Bill.
At the time of his death, Monroe was admired by friends and old foes alike, including players of the highly improvisational "newgrass," which he initially said he hated. One imagines he would have had warm feelings toward an upcoming tribute CD ("Big Mon," Scaggs Family Records), which not only reflects his influence on rockers Bruce Hornsby and John Fogerty but includes performances by Dolly Parton and the Dixie Chicks, whose various talents would no doubt fill his heart with song.
Mr. Shiflett is a writer based in Midlothian, Va. |