Presented to the Monday Evening Club, May 12, 2008 by Albert E. Easton
Alvin Pleasant Carter, known as A.P., was born in 1891, the oldest child in his large family in the hills of southwestern Virginia. His father, Bob Carter, was one of two sons born to Nancy Carter, who had a weakness for pipe smoking and men. When asked about Bob Carter’s paternity, Nancy Carter just said: “Law, honey, when you run through a briar patch, you don’t know which one scratched you.” A. P.’s mother, Mollie Bays was a God-fearing woman who did her best at the task of raising eight children in the tiny town of Poor Valley. Poor Valley was so named not because the inhabitants were poor (although they were) but because the poor soil made it hard to earn a living from farming, the main occupation.
On the other side of Clinch Mountain was Rich Valley, with much better soil, and a somewhat better, but still modest standard of living. By 1914, A. P. was working selling fruit trees by walking from door to door. He didn’t mind walking, and one of his walks was over the mountain to try to sell some trees to Milburn and Melinda Nickels, distant relatives of his mother, and it was there that he met Sara Dougherty. Sara’s mother had died of typhoid when she was three, and the Nickels family had taken her in. Sara loved music, and when she was twelve, she had sold enough greeting cards to get an eight key autoharp. I’ll talk more about the auto harp in a minute. When A.P. met her, she was sixteen, and singing. He was enchanted. A year later, he married the 17 year old Sara.
I brought an autoharp, so you can see how it functions. The strings are tuned using a wrench, very similar to the tuning of piano strings. When the buttons designating the various chords are pushed, felt pads mute all the strings with notes not in the chord. Playing the autoharp is fairly simple, since it requires only that you be able to strum with your right hand, and push the buttons for the chord changes with your left. [Demonstrates]
A. P. had a younger brother, Ezra, called “Eck”, who was a real go-getter. Eck managed to land a job as a railroad mail clerk traveling from Bristol, Virginia to Washington and back. Eck bought the first automobile in Poor Valley, a Model A Ford. He also bought another modern convenience, a phonograph. In March, 1926, Eck, the most eligible bachelor in Poor Valley, married the girl of his dreams, Maybelle Addington. Eck met Maybelle through his sister-in-law, Sara, who was already teaming up with Maybelle to sing.
Maybelle Addington Carter was certainly a prize, even for the most eligible bachelor in Poor Valley. She could sing, dance, play the guitar, ride a horse or a motorcycle, and bake a banana cream pie to curl your toes. Like his brother A. P., Eck Carter chose a young bride. Maybelle was just sixteen when they slipped off to be married.
Maybelle’s guitar technique was an excellent and unusual one. With her thumb, she plucked the melody on the bass strings, and simultaneously strummed chords on the higher strings, bringing her fingers up to sound the chords, rather than down as most guitar players do. This distinctive style, now often encountered in country music, has become known as the “Carter Scratch”.
By the summer of 1926, A. P., Sara, and Maybelle began appearing together often in musical entertainments, singing the songs they had learned in the hills. With Eck out of town on the railroad about 4 days a week, Maybelle had plenty of time on her hands. In those days, there were very few phonographs, so musical entertainments at schoolhouses or church halls by small groups like the Carter family were very popular, and even at the low admission price of 15 cents, the musicians could go home with a few dollars in their pockets.
The Victor Company, primary producer of phonographs, had been famous for years as the premier source of high quality musical entertainment. Enrico Caruso’s exclusive American recording contract was with Victor, and they had recorded and marketed many other examples of excellent music for the parlor. But the top quality market they had served was saturated, and they had hopes of branching out into other fields. At this point, they hired Ralph Peer to seek out other kinds of music.
Ralph Peer haled from the Midwest, but was always seen wearing London tailored suits with a silk handkerchief in his breast pocket. His personal tastes ran to opera and chamber music, but he was not averse to making a buck. Among other things, he is said to have coined the terms “race” and “hillbilly” to describe two types of music that were to become popular in the 1930’s. He claimed to despise some of the music he was recording, and was quick to exaggerate both the shortcomings of the artists and his own contribution to the effort. He made his fortune by launching the careers of two country music artists: Jimmie Rogers and the Original Carter Family.
Ralph Peer and the recording industry grew up together. In 1892, when Ralph Peer was born, phonographs were offered by the Edison Company for $190, making them exclusively a rich man’s toy. But less then two decades later, the price was down to $10. Abraham Peer, Ralph’s father, sold a good many from his furniture store in Independence, Missouri. Ralph was sure he had a future in the recording business, and began working in it when he was only 18. By 1921 he was recording all kinds of foreign language records: German, Polish, Swedish, etc., catering to the immigrant groups in the Midwest. The records were marketed by a label called “Okeh”, a subsidiary of Columbia. This was his background for the assignment he assumed for the Victor Company.
In July of 1927, A.P. Carter saw an ad in the Bristol, Virginia newspaper for the local Victor Phonograph dealer proclaiming “The Victor Co. will have a recording machine in Bristol for 10 days beginning Monday to record records – Inquire at our store”. A.P. believed that the musical heritage of the hills was a valuable one, and he hoped to prove it. After inquiries, he learned that a man named Ralph Peer would be in Bristol, paying the enormous sum of $50 for every song he liked well enough to record. He borrowed Eck’s car, and also Eck’s wife, Maybelle, who was 8 months pregnant, and the Original Carter Family (A. P., Sara, and Maybelle) set off for Bristol and their destiny.
I’m going to play a copy of the first song they recorded that day – “Bury Me under the Weeping Willow”. In it, you can hear just about everything the Carter Family had to offer – Maybelle’s guitar technique, Sara’s autoharp, and the vocal harmonies of Sara on lead, Maybelle in the alto range, and A. P. on Baritone. (#3) I’ll also be passing around a picture of the group at the time of that session. If you look closely, you can see Sara with her eight key autoharp, probably the one she had gotten ten years earlier selling greeting cards, and a very pregnant Maybelle.
The Carters recorded six sides at that session, held in a warehouse loft with blankets hanging on the walls, and took home the amazing sum of $300, plus a promise of future royalties. A.P. Carter is credited as the composer on almost all the music the Carters recorded. Even though most of the songs were commonly performed in the hills, Peer copyrighted them all, and paid royalties to A.P. A.P. managed the finances, and split all the income three ways. Several of the songs sold fairly well, and Peer arranged another recording session the following May, this one at the Victor studios in Camden, New Jersey.
The Model A had had three flat tires on the short trip from Poor Valley to Bristol in July, 1927, so no plans were made to drive the 500 mile trip to Camden that May. Instead, the Carters went by overnight train. They had rehearsed about a dozen songs, working hard on the harmonies, and making sure they had versions that came in between 2 ¾ and 3 ¼ minutes, the available time on a Victor 78. That twelve song session in Camden made the Carters’ reputation. Many of the songs they cut that day have been recorded over and over, by various country and folk artists.
The first one I want to play for you became the Carters’ biggest hit, their only record to sell over a million copies. The song was one Maybelle and Sara had known since they were children, originally on a parlor song published in 1860 by Maud Irving and J. P. Webster, who also wrote “Lorena”. The original words were:
“I’ll twine ‘mid the ringlets of my raven black hair
The lilies so pale and the roses so fair
The myrtle so bright with an emerald hue
And the pale aronatus with eyes of bright blue.
By the way, so far as anyone knows, there is not and never has been a flower or plant called “aronatus” No wonder the words had been changed by the time the Carters learned it to “the pale and the leader”. Unfortunately, that doesn’t make any sense either. Sara sings this one alone, backed up by Maybelle’s guitar. (#1)
A. P. even wrote a song himself for the session. I heard a cover of this by Joan Baez during the folk music years of the 60’s. (#5) You can hear all three of the Carters joining in on this one.
With Ralph Peer paying a royalty of ½ cent per record, in addition to regular fee of $50 a song, the Camden session made A.P. one of the most prosperous men in Poor Valley. He bought himself a house and a new red Chevrolet with the share he and Sara got. They had three children by now, and the room was welcome. The Carters were traveling around the hills now every week or so, doing entertainments in church halls and theaters, which helped to sell records and brought in some extra money. And Ralph Peer had no intention of letting things rest. He scheduled another Camden session for February 1929, and still another in Atlanta in November. Here is one more song from the Atlanta session. It’s another song that A.P. seems to have adapted himself, based on one by a mountaineer named Will Hayes. On this one, Sara sings alone, and Maybelle backs her up with some outstanding guitar. (#16)
A.P.’s fortunes rose and fell like a tide. With the depression, the royalties began to dry up. Ralph Peer was willing to record more numbers, but A.P. couldn’t come up with any more good material. A.P. began taking long trips through the hills, looking for songs. While he was away, he left his younger cousin, Coy Bays, in charge of the house. The inevitable happened. By the time he got back from a long trip, it was obvious that Coy and Sara were in love.
There were a lot of Carters and Bays in Poor Valley in that time, and they were outraged when they became aware of the situation. Finally, it was agreed that Coy would go to live with his mother in California, and he and Sara would see no more of each other. Problem solved? Of course not! Sara was distraught. Within a few weeks, she filed for divorce from A.P. When Ralph Peer learned of all this, he was not happy at having his gold mine dry up. Somehow, he managed to persuade Sara to continue with the group “for professional purposes only”.
Sara did stay with the group, and Maybelle’s three daughters, Helen, June and Anita began making occasional appearances. Ralph Peer booked them in to Radio City Music Hall in 1933 for a live radio broadcast. Radio was a good fit for the Carters. By 1938, they had moved to Texas and booked a contract for a weekly show on a 500,000 watt station XERA, just over the Texas border in Mexico. The most powerful commercial stations allowed today are 50,000 watts, so you can imagine the effect of a 500,000 watt transmitter. It was heard from Maine to Guatemala.
Station XERA was the pride and vehicle of Doctor John Brinkley. Doctor Brinkley’s story is an interesting one itself. In 1915, it was possible to get a license to practice medicine in Kansas by completing six weeks of study at the Kansas City School of Eclectic Medicine, and Doctor Brinkley had done so. He was an impoverished country doctor until one of his patients came to him complaining of “having lost the pep in his marriage”. Brinkley experimented with grafting goat gonads onto the patient, and for some reason, it worked. As a result, his fame spread.
Brinkley repeated this simple procedure on literally thousands of patients: Under general anesthetia, he would punch a hole in the patient’s testicle, and insert an appropriate sized section of goat testicle. He never worried about connecting nerves or blood vessels. He advertised his availability on his own radio station, KFKB. Even in the 1920’s Kansas had a Medical Society, and they eventually managed to put the doctor out of business. There were also, of course, a number of lawsuits resulting from patients who had become infected and died in the course of having their virility restored. At this point, Doc Brinkley moved his medical practice to Mexico, and obtained a license from the Mexican government for station XERA.
It was while broadcasting from Mexico one night that Sara, about to sing a song she had recorded many years before, announced: “This song is for Coy Bays, wherever he is.” (#11) Coy Bays happened to be listening in California, and when he heard this he set out to find Sara. He caught up with here in Texas, and they were married within a week; six years after their involuntary separation back in Poor Valley.
After being married to Coy, Sara’s involvement with the group began to dwindle. A new treaty between the US and Mexico shut down the 500,000 watt border stations, and the law finally caught up with Doctor Brinkley. A.P went into retirement and died in 1960. Maybelle and her daughters became a fairly famous country act. (At this point, Maybelle became known as “Mother Maybelle”. June Carter, Maybelle’s second daughter, married Johnny Cash in 1964, and is probably the best known member of the Carter family at the present time. Maybelle and Sara died within a few months of each other in 1978.
Photo of Maybelle Carter via Wikipedia.
Sunday, March 1, 2009
The Carters: A family of country musicians
The Carters: A family of country musicians
Life Insurance
5.0
stars based on
35
reviews
Presented to the Monday Evening Club, May 12, 2008 by Albert E. Easton Alvin Pleasant Carter, known as A.P., was born in 1891, the oldest ch...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Paling Dibaca
-
Photo by Alberto Biscalchin , used under Creative Commons Licens Presented to the Club on Monday evening, Dec. 4, 2017 by William P. Densmor...
-
Photo by Rick Eh? — Used under Creative Commons License Presented to the Club on Monday evening, December 15, 2003 by William A. Selke In M...
-
The graphically degenerated seal on our current wallet cards One of the Monday Evening Club's longstanding traditions is that the Secret...
-
This is the fourth post in a series on the historic membership roster of the Club. These posts may be updated as additional biographical inf...
-
Click for larger view Presented to the Club by Martin C. Langeveld on May 16, 2011 From December 7, 1941, until August 1945, the personifica...
-
Robert Maurice Henderson passed away in Lenox, Massachusetts, on October 16, 2017, the morning of his 68th wedding anniversary. Wife, Aleva,...
-
Presented to the Club by William A. Selke on Monday evening, March 21, 2011 It was on "The hair of my chin," his beard, that the l...
-
Presented to the Club on June 13, 2011 by David T. Noyes "What are you reading?" Such was the signature greeting of my mentor, Dr....
Healthingme. Powered by Blogger.
Search This Blog
Blog Archive
- April 2021 (1)
- January 2021 (2)
- March 2020 (3)
- December 2019 (1)
- September 2019 (1)
- March 2019 (2)
- February 2019 (1)
- September 2018 (1)
- March 2018 (1)
- December 2017 (2)
- October 2017 (1)
- July 2017 (1)
- June 2017 (1)
- March 2017 (2)
- February 2017 (1)
- December 2016 (1)
- March 2016 (2)
- July 2015 (3)
- June 2015 (1)
- December 2014 (1)
- September 2014 (1)
- August 2014 (2)
- July 2014 (2)
- June 2014 (1)
- May 2014 (1)
- April 2014 (1)
- February 2014 (1)
- November 2013 (1)
- May 2013 (1)
- April 2013 (1)
- March 2013 (2)
- February 2013 (1)
- January 2013 (1)
- November 2012 (1)
- October 2012 (1)
- April 2012 (1)
- March 2012 (1)
- January 2012 (1)
- December 2011 (1)
- November 2011 (1)
- June 2011 (2)
- May 2011 (1)
- April 2011 (1)
- February 2011 (1)
- November 2010 (2)
- October 2010 (1)
- September 2010 (3)
- June 2010 (2)
- May 2010 (1)
- April 2010 (2)
- March 2010 (4)
- February 2010 (4)
- January 2010 (1)
- December 2009 (2)
- November 2009 (3)
- September 2009 (1)
- August 2009 (3)
- July 2009 (5)
- June 2009 (2)
- May 2009 (1)
- April 2009 (1)
- March 2009 (13)
- February 2009 (3)
Labels
- Alaska
- Albany
- Albert E. Easton
- Algonquin
- Allotment
- American Centinel
- animal rights
- Appalachian Trail
- Argentina
- Arthur Conan Doyle
- artificial intelligence
- automobiles
- automotive safety
- aviation
- beards
- Benjamin Thompson
- biography
- black death
- Bobby Fischer
- Boston
- Brad Spear
- Brahmins
- brain injury
- Carter family
- Charles F. Sawyer
- Charles Schultz
- Charles W. Whittlesey
- Civil Rights Movement
- Clark Art Institute
- Cleveland Amory
- Club of Rome
- computers
- con men
- confidence
- Count Rumford
- Creationism
- culinary revolution
- cycling
- Danish resistance
- Darwin
- David T. Noyes
- Dawes Act
- death
- Denmark
- distribution of wealth
- Dutch East India Company
- education
- Edward Cabot Clark
- Einstein
- election of 1896
- Erie Canal
- Erik Bruun
- ethics
- Evan Dobelle
- evolution
- facial hair
- Ferdinand de Lesseps
- fireworks
- Fool Me Twice
- Founding members
- Frederic Church
- fur seals
- future
- geoengineering
- George Gershwin
- Gold Rush
- Grover Cleveland
- Grover Cleveland Bergdoll
- Hai Bar Animal and Nature Reserve
- Harold I. Salzmann
- Henry Hudson
- Henry Laurens Dawes
- Henry Sargent
- Henry Ward Severance
- Hirohito
- historic membership
- history of the club
- humor
- ice
- Irises
- Isaac Merritt Singer
- Isaac Watts
- J. S. Bach
- James Lumsden
- James Madison
- Jazz
- John H. Spencer
- John Irving
- John Singer Sargent
- jokes
- Kiliaen van Rensselaer
- King James Bible
- Kurt Masur
- Kurt Vonnegut
- language extinction
- language survival
- laughter
- Lawrence Otto
- learning
- Martin C. Langeveld
- Mary Dyer
- Max Eastman
- Mayflower Compact
- Michael A. Shirley
- misquotations
- money
- moria grandissima
- multiple intelligences
- mystery novels
- National Rifle Association
- Native Americans
- Naulakha
- Neapolitan Children Bathing
- New Amsterdam
- New England
- newspapers
- Norman Rockwell
- North American regional cultures
- Olana
- On American Nations
- paintings
- Panama Canal
- PETA
- Peter Stuyvesant
- physician-assisted suicide
- Pittsfield Airport
- plague
- PTSD
- puns
- Railroad Street Youth Project
- religious tolerance
- Richard L. Floyd
- Richard Nunley
- Robert G. Anderson
- Robert G. Newman
- Robert M. Henderson
- Robert Sterling Clark
- Roger B. Linscott
- Roger Williams
- Rolls Royce
- Romania
- Ronald Trabulsi
- Rudyard Kipling
- Rules of the Club
- Russian Schoolroom
- SALT
- same-sex marriage
- Sandy Hook
- seal of the Club
- Selective Service
- Separatism
- servants
- shakers
- Shakespeare
- Sherlock Holmes
- singularity
- slavery
- Soviet education
- space program
- Steve Martin
- stroke
- Sturge-Weber Syndrome
- Suez Canal
- superintelligence
- teaching
- technology
- terracotta army
- terraforming
- theater
- Theodore Roosevelt
- Thilo Rethmann
- Thilo Timothy Newman
- thinking computer
- Thomas Jefferson
- Thomas Nelson Baker
- Thomas Paine
- Three Stooges
- Van Gogh
- Vince Lombardi
- Wednesday Evening Club
- WGBH
- William A. Selke
- William Cullen Bryant
- William J. Bartz
- William Jennings Bryan
- William McKinley
- William P. Densmore
- World War II
EmoticonEmoticon