Book Reviews

Blues & Chaos: The Music Writing Of Robert Palmer

BLUES & CHAOS: THE MUSIC WRITING OF ROBERT PALMER

By Robert Palmer; Edited By Anthony DeCurtis

(SCRIBNER)

[Rating: 4.5 stars]

The estimable, passionate critic and journalist Robert Palmer is no doubt best recalled 13 years after his death as the author of the seminal book Deep Blues, and as host and tour guide of the Mississippi โ€œmusical pilgrimageโ€ documentary derived from it. As weโ€™re reminded by this most welcome anthology, well-culled and assembled by Anthony DeCurtis, the heart of Palmerโ€™s wide-ranging writing over the course of 25-plus years almost always took the reader on some journey or other, and very regularly went deep. His musical profiles are most riveting (and, you sense, were for him, too) when the subjectโ€™s musical development encompassed a journey as wellโ€”Muddy Waters, Ray Charles, Sam Cooke, Jerry Lee Lewis, the early punk scene.

He was always looking for a moment, place and musical castโ€”a rising musical situationโ€”that lives and breaths in rhythm, whether the rhythm happened to be that of blues, rock, jazz, country, avant-garde classical, or whatโ€™s now called โ€œworld music,โ€ and heโ€™s astonishingly at home in them all. When he knows heโ€™s called on to be the readersโ€™ teacherโ€”on Texas Blues, or Philip Glass, or Moroccoโ€™s Dionysian Master Musicians of Jajoukaโ€”heโ€™s great at it, getting down the facts and making them rattle. And for all of his attraction in life to that chaos mentioned in this volumeโ€™sย title, his writing is clear, clean and artfully ordered.