This
Saturday, July 10, at 1 p.m. in the Delta Blues
Museum classroom, Peter Guralnick will discuss his
writing on blues (his first interview was with Howlin'
Wolf) and Sam Cooke, the Clarksdale-born music legend,
with Marc Smirnoff, editor of the Oxford American
magazine. This event is free and open to the public.
Guralnick will be available to sign books after
the talk.
This event is part of the Oxford American's "The
Most Southern Weekend on Earth" celebration of its
"Best of the South" issue, featuring events in and
around Clarksdale July 9-10 and live music at Ground
Zero Blues Club, Clarksdale, MS. For more information,
go to The
Oxford American.
Peter Guralnick
has been writing about American music--blues, country,
soul, R&B, gospel, and rock-and-roll--for 45 years.
His mastery of the facts and his deep feeling for
the heart of popular music is unsurpassed. So is
his gift for portraiture, whether he's producing
snapshots of blues and country musicians in Feel
Like Going Home and Lost Highway, or taking a more
panoramic approach in Sweet Soul Music, a history
of soul music. His two-volume biography of Elvis--Last
Train to Memphis and Careless Love--separated the
man and his music from tabloid myths. Now Guralnick
has pulled off a similar success with the authoritative,
epic Dream Boogie: The Triumph of Sam Cooke.
"A
friend of mine went to the Newport Folk Festival
and came back with a bunch of records. Among them
were a couple of blues records . . . I never heard
anything like it. It just hit me, it just totally
grabbed me, and from that point on, there was no
turning around. I was totally into the blues and
it led me to every other kind of music, gospel to
country." -Peter Guralnick
The Delta Blues Museum is located at #1 Blues Alley
in downtown Clarksdale. The museum is open Monday
through Saturday, from 9 AM to 5 PM. For more information,
call the museum at 662-627-6820.