Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The Ways – Transformation, Binding and Presence
- 1 Axes: Ecstatic Heights and Nightmare Depths
- 2 Magic: Transformation and Self-determination
- 3 Music: Going Down to the Crossroads
- 4 Gods: Appointments with the Divine
- 5 Terminus: The Night, the Crossroads and the Stake
- 6 Literature: Liminal Ground in Early Modern Drama
- 7 Hallowed Roads: Routes to the Crossroads
- 8 Wanderers: The Predicament of a Stranger
- 9 Monsters: ‘Spirits of another sort’
- 10 Protection: The X in the Landscape
- Conclusion: The Parting – Intersections
- Notes
- Index
3 - Music: Going Down to the Crossroads
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 November 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The Ways – Transformation, Binding and Presence
- 1 Axes: Ecstatic Heights and Nightmare Depths
- 2 Magic: Transformation and Self-determination
- 3 Music: Going Down to the Crossroads
- 4 Gods: Appointments with the Divine
- 5 Terminus: The Night, the Crossroads and the Stake
- 6 Literature: Liminal Ground in Early Modern Drama
- 7 Hallowed Roads: Routes to the Crossroads
- 8 Wanderers: The Predicament of a Stranger
- 9 Monsters: ‘Spirits of another sort’
- 10 Protection: The X in the Landscape
- Conclusion: The Parting – Intersections
- Notes
- Index
Summary
I went to the crossroad, fell down on my knees
… Asked the Lord above ‘Have mercy, now save poor Bob, if you
please’
Standin’ at the crossroad, tried to flag a ride
… Didn't nobody seem to know me, babe, everybody pass me by
Standin’ at the crossroad …
… poor Bob is sinkin’ down.
Robert Johnson, ‘Cross Road Blues’ (1936)
If there is a single narrative that captures the modern understanding of transformative crossroads magic it is the spurious fable of the selling of Robert Johnson's soul. When, in the paleoanthropology of twentieth-century rock and roll music, the biographers of the shortlived blues legend claimed that he had been down to the Dockery Plantation crossroads at midnight to sell his soul to the Devil in exchange for guitar skills, they were perhaps unwitting witnesses to the long history of myth and ritual that has been deeply associated with the transformative space of the crossroads. They were not lacking in foresight, however, about the way in which such a claim would enhance their subject's credibility. The value of such a sulphurous reputation for a musician is not merely a recent phenomenon but also has historical precedents. A hundred years before Johnson (who lived 1911–38), the guitarist and violinist Niccolo Paganini (1782–1840) was considered such a suspiciously devilish virtuoso that his audiences were reputed to cross themselves before his concerts in hope of apotropaic protection from subtle demonic influence. One audience member even fled a concert after reporting seeing the Devil himself aiding Paganini's performance. Going a little further back, Giuseppe Tartini (1692–1770) explained of his best-known sonata, ‘The Devil's Trill’ (1713), that he had ‘written down the piece after waking from a particularly vivid dream of the Devil playing a violin with ferocious virtuosity’, and claimed that it was ‘but a shadow of what he had witnessed in the dream, for he was unable to capture on the page the Devil's full intensity’. His long career was certainly not harmed by this youthful excursion into Hell. These devilish associations may in fact have added to a perception of the capacity that music has always had of conveying a kind of mystery, one hard-won perhaps through ‘occulted’ practice techniques, so lending the musician a certain aura of mystique or magic, and music itself a spiritual dimension.
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- A History of Crossroads in Early Modern Culture , pp. 57 - 83Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2022