BOLDEN, Charles
Amerikaans musicus (1868-1931)
Bijnamen 'Buddy' of 'King'
* ± 1868 New Orleans - † 4.11.1931(?) Jackson (Louisiana)
Didn't He Ramble
for Charles "Buddy" Bolden
By Rudolph Lewis
If the Devil is a master musician,
Buddy Bolden was his Man.
This black boy had it in him. Seems
like only yesterday on a First Street
box step he played notes bodaciously
that started in the toes as hoodoo. And in no
time he had the body in a wild reckless joy.
Had you blind, simple, crazy — cakewalking,
Second-Line stepping along Rampart & Perdido.
Had the damnest eyes women call bedroom eyes.
He'd have the ladies swaying like Pontchatrain
palms to a slow blues. Waiting in desperation,
knowing he the One. They felt it as women
feel it. They'd say, "Ain't that Kid something.
Those eyes, that honey skin." They all
wanted to wean him on their special brew.
The King took a breast full and then some.
Got to be the Sweet Man: a diamond smile.
Tight and easy, dressed as the Cock of
St. Peter, he ruffled, pleased the Ladies
of the Globe. Each will take a piece
before the night ends. He's generous—
market feet busy in the streets. Those eyes,
that smile would say, "Lay me a pallet, on
the floor, make it low, make it soft."
He was the Man, a wild blues horn
that set a salon or a joint on fire.
In Algiers, his wailing staccato burst
snapped a drag world living in an echo
chamber of quadrille and lace.
In Pecan Grove, a new jazzed-up world
came to life. Big, brassy, b-flat notes
of Delta sugarcane cutters and Mississippi
cotton pickers—raw-bone blues men black
& sweaty. Washerwomen regal, balancing
mountains of other people's clothes & sins,
smelling like lye. He didn't care
He took them all on. With his horn
raised to the Milky Way, Funky Butt
conquered the stars whipping space
with quilted sounds. Buddy Bolden served
up a gumbo. Threw it all in. Didn't care what
other bands did. He knew what the blues
could do. When he told his children to come
—they came, clapping their hands, moving
their rhythm feet. When he told them to go
they went dancing . . .
Bolden's funk broke all the walls down
into natural soul. Stepped in everybody's yard
—the sheets of quadrille folks along Esplanade.
And I heard him say, heard him shout, "Open
that window! Open it and let that foul air out!"