Huddie
Ledbetter, better known to the music world as “Lead Belly” was born
January 20, 1889, in Mooringsport, Louisiana (near Shreveport). Lead
Belly was the only child of Wesley and Sally Ledbetter. Lead Belly first
tried his hand at playing music when he was only two years old. As a
young man he was introduced to the guitar by his Uncle Terrell Ledbetter
and from that moment on he was electrified by the guitar. He mastered
that instrument and just about any instrument he laid his hands on. He
learned to play the accordion, mandolin and piano. Which gave him a
wide knowledge of various musical instruments and rhythm. It has been
said that one day Lead Belly witnessed a Mexican guitarist playing the
twelve string guitar which struck his interest in mastering the unusual
instrument.
After the 8th grade, he quit school and, by the time
he was 14 years old, he was a popular musician and singer in the weekend
“sukey jumps” and “juke joints.” He later became known as the king of
the twelve-string guitar and “Stella” as he affectionately called his
guitar became his ticket to life and his freedom. Leadbelly was
passionate about his love of music. It was his way of expressing what
was written on his heart and soul. This love of music led him to leave
his father’s farm at an early age to pursue his music. Huddie traveled
the southwest playing his guitar and working as a laborer when he had
to. Huddie was legendary for picking 1,000 lbs of cotton a day, and
lining the railroad tracks.
Lead Belly once said, "When I play, the women would
come around to listen and their men would get angry." In 1918, he fought
and killed a man in Dallas and was sentenced to thirty years to be
served in the state prison in Huntsville, Texas. In 1925, he wrote a
song asking Governor Pat Neff for a pardon. Neff, who had promised at
his election never to pardon a prisoner, broke his promise and set
Huddie Ledbetter free. Back on the road with many new songs he had
learned or written at Huntsville, Huddie again found enthusiastic
audiences throughout the south. But, as the center of admiring crowds,
he was again the target of envy and jealousy. In 1930, after a fight at
a party, which was normal in the Jim Crow south he was sentenced to
another prison term in the infamous Angola Farm prison plantation in
Louisiana. In a way, this was a stroke of luck, because he was
discovered by folklorists John and Alan Lomax, who were recording prison
songs for the Library of Congress. John Lomax and his son Allen, who
brought him to New York where he played on college campuses like
Harvard, Princeton, NYU and the list goes on. He was received with great
acclaim.
Shortly
thereafter Lead Belly relocated to New York, where he forged a
reputation on the folk circuit, making personal appearances, recording
for a variety of labels and doing radio work. In the early 40s he
performed with Josh White, Sonny Terry, Brownie McGhee and Woody
Guthrie. In 1948 Lead Belly cut, with the aid of the newly invented long
playing record, what would later become known as his Last Sessions, a
definitive document of The Life and Music of the King of the
Twelve-String Guitar. Lead Belly enjoyed national recognition as a blues
and folk musician and singer. Lead Belly felt his music and talent were
gifts from God. His songs could not be put into one category. He wrote
children’s songs, field songs, ballads, square dance songs, prison
songs, folk songs, and blues.
Lead Belly was a man whose life, like that of any other man, had its ups
and downs. Good or bad, Lead Belly told the world about those things
through his songs. Lead Belly’s fame and success continued to increase
until he fell ill while on a European Tour. Tests revealed that he
suffered from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig’s disease) in
1949. This disease destroyed all the muscles in his body giving him
little opportunity to fully play the guitar without pain. He died on
December 6,1949 and never got to fully enjoy the fruits of his music. In
which Lead Belly's song catalog is consisted of well over 500 songs. The
most famous were Midnight Special, Cotton Fields, Boll Weevil, Kisses
Sweeter than Wine, Rock Island Line, and many, many more.
After Lead Belly’s death, the Weavers, a folk quartet
sent “Good Night, Irene” to #1 on the charts, which became the most
famous song in his repertoire. That song sold a million copies and was
recorded also six months later by Pete Seeger. His music still has a
great influence on some of the greatest artists both black and white.
Artists like The Beatles, The Rolling Stones,
Eric Clapton, Little
Richard, have all expressed their early studies of music to Lead Belly's
records.
Today
Lead Belly is remembered not only as a musical giant but a legend in his
own right throughout the world. He is remembered as the “King of the
12-String Guitar.” Many of his songs can be found in the Library of
Congress, where generations to come can listen and enjoy them.