
Juke joints and barrel houses welcomed itinerant blues musicians who traveled by rail
PART
I
In
the early morning of Nov. 3, 1969, a sleek red and yellow southbound
passenger train called the Southern Belle slowly pulled away from
Shreveport's downtown Union Station. The train had a dubious honor.
It would be the last passenger train ever to leave the station.
Within days, the storied building on Louisiana Avenue – soon to be
closed – was heavily damaged in a mysterious fire that started in
the basement. The fire was strangely symbolic: an unplanned funeral
pyre for a fading era in American history, a death mirrored across
Shreveport and America as, one by one, passenger rail lines ceased
running.
Union
Station, which at its peak welcomed up to thirty-five passenger
trains a day, was eventually razed and forgotten. All that remains of
the station today can be seen looking down from the Common Street
overpass: a slab, some stairs, and a few green and white tiles that
once decorated the floor of a restroom. The stretch of railroad that
served Union Station, which is still an active rail line, is called
Wilson's Alley. At the heart of Wilson's Alley sits the old KCS
Restaurant, fittingly located between two railroad tracks. The
building at 830 Louisiana Avenue now houses an eatery called Northern
Comfort Food and Catering. Also, on Louisiana Avenue lies the
Jefferson Hotel built in 1922. When first built, the hotel housed
train travelers. Today it is an apartment building.
In
its heyday, Shreveport's Union Station was like every great train
station in America. It isn't hard to picture the shiny floors,
suitcases, and shoeshine stands. The people were probably adorned in
suits, fedoras, and coiffed hair. Young boys hawked newspapers and
belted out breaking news headlines. Undoubtedly there were painful
wartime goodbyes and joyous hellos. There were more than likely a few
movie-esque moments, too, like when lovers said goodbye as they were
separated by the quickening chug, chug, chug of a train pulling out
of the station.
When
passenger rail service to Shreveport ended, these scenes in
Shreveport all ended too. In time trains became utilitarian shuttlers
of coal and cargo – but not people. Trains became objects that
infuriated automobile drivers as they blocked the road. If not for
that and the occasional distant lonesome whistle blowing in the
night, trains in the psyche of Shreveport-Bossier residents would be
almost completely forgotten.
The
relationship between America and its passenger trains is complex. The
completion of the Transcontinental Railroad in May of 1869 helped
usher in the end of the American frontier. Trains expedited the
growth of the American West and made the United States smaller and
more accessible. No longer did pioneers cross the vast reaches on
horseback or wagons. Instead, the country was open to anyone who had
a hankering for an adventure and a train ticket.
For
the next century, trains were the great muse of American culture,
inspiring films, books, and, most prolifically – music. When trains
opened the American landscape, musicians didn't miss the opportunity.
The result was a cross-pollination of melodies and lyrics that
traversed America like an unimaginably big spider web. And because
blues musicians rode trains, they sang about trains.
A
lot.
The
music of the rails was born in small establishments in railroad towns
across America. They were all the same, but all different –
described with terms like juke joints and barrel houses. Shreveport
was like other American cities in this regard. A bustling music scene
developed in downtown Shreveport around Union Station, and the ghosts
of the juke joints and barrel houses still linger.
Blue
Goose sat in a long-forgotten area of downtown Shreveport called
Crosstown, on the corner of Snow and Pickett streets. It was a small
market and grocery with a bar in the back, so named because of a blue
goose painted on the wall. The reason for the painted goose is
unknown. Blue Goose is not well known in the annals of Shreveport's
history. It's mentioned most often in newspaper clippings for police
arrests. An entertaining Blue Goose story was in the Sunday, May 18,
1924, edition of the Shreveport Times. When one man accused of
gambling at Blue Goose turned up in court, he told the judge it was
"preposterous" he and his cohorts were gambling for money
because they didn't have any.
Blue
Goose also turns up in song.
Shreveport
bluesman Jesse "Babyface" Thomas wrote a song called "Blue
Goose Blues." He often sang and played at Blue Goose. In the
song's lyrics, Jesse mentions having two bits to lose, a gambling
reference. He then justifies the gambling saying he can always go
back to chauffeuring. Jesse recorded "Blue Goose Blues" in
Dallas in 1929. Did he take a train from Shreveport to get there?
Like
passenger rail travel, the neighborhood surrounding Blue Goose, too,
was a victim of "progress." Most of Crosstown was bulldozed
to make way for Interstate 20. The original Blue Goose building was
eventually replaced with a brick structure in 1940. It survived the
Interstate's construction and is still there today. It was later
renamed the Silver Slipper Bar and briefly the Ebony Club in the
1990s.
Musicians
of the era were, by nature, itinerant. Both known and unknown blues
musicians passed through Shreveport by train. We can only assume that
if they stopped at Union Station in Shreveport, they quite possibly
visited Blue Goose. After all, bluesmen were drawn to the music.
Among the many notable blues musicians that passed through Shreveport
by train was Blind Lemon Jefferson, a known contemporary of Huddie
"Lead Belly" Ledbetter.
If
you stand in front of Blue Goose today, its connection to the railway
is self-evident. Shreveport's bustling Union Station sat directly
adjacent to the Crosstown neighborhood, making it an attractive spot
for travelers to drop in. Much like early blues history, though, most
itinerant blues musicians' adventures were not well documented. We
can only surmise from cryptic clues how they were connected.
A
perfect case in point is the song by Shreveport bluesman Oscar
"Buddy" Woods, who played a bottleneck slide on a steel
guitar. He recorded a song with Ed Schaffer called "Flying Crow
Blues" about a train that came through Shreveport called The
Flying Crow. The train was so named because the line from Port Arthur
was straight – as the crow flies.
Woods'
lyrics in the 1932 recording lamented the meaning of the red and blue
lights on the back of the Flying Crow as it passed. A mere five years
later, blues giant Robert Johnson recorded "Love in Vain,"
where he sings lyrics that were almost identical to those of Woods:
"When the train left the station there were two lights on
behind/well, the blue light was my blues and the red light was my
mind."
Johnson,
from Mississippi, most likely passed through Shreveport on his way to
Dallas to record his famous albums. Did Robert Johnson stop by the
Blue Goose and hear Oscar woods sing "Flying Crow Blues"?
We can only guess, but the fact that the same lyrics turned up in two
different songs by two different bluesmen suggests that they, or
their music, had crossed paths somewhere.
A
walkable distance from Union Station was Texas Avenue, a hopping
predominantly African American business and entertainment district.
Before Interstate 20 came through, Texas Avenue was the main highway
route through town (Highway 80). The clubs of Texas Avenue were
closely clustered in the 1000 block. These included the Golden Lily
Ballroom, the Plamoor Ballroom and the Star Theatre. You can hear a
firsthand account of that era in the song "Saturday Nights on
Texas Avenue" by David "Three Fifteen" Brunson and His
Squares.
Perhaps
the most well-known club on Texas Avenue was the rooftop garden of
the Calanthean Temple, known for attracting jazz musicians of the
era. Considering Union Station was in its heyday in the 1920s, jazz
musicians likely passed through there on their way to play on the
rooftop of the Calanthean Temple.
Famed
big band leader Charlie Barnet was one of America's first white band
leaders to hire black musicians. He had big band hits "Cherokee"
and "Skyliner." In his autobiography, he recounts how he
met his friend and future bandmate, famed jazz trumpeter Peanuts
Holland, on the roof of the Calanthean Temple in Shreveport one night
after a gig at the Washington-Youree Hotel. When Barnet first heard
him, Holland was in "…a black band playing a one-nighter for a
black audience on the roof of a warehouse."
Jazz
great Jelly Roll Morton had a song called the "Shreveport Stomp"
– also connecting him to Shreveport for posterity. Whether he
traveled there by train is unknown, although there was routine
passenger service to Shreveport from New Orleans. As a side note, the
international reach of Shreveport's music history is emphasized by
the fact that the most popular swing band in Hamburg, Germany, is
called Shreveport Rhythm. Their name, they said, was directly a
result of their appreciation for the music of Jelly Roll Morton.
The
proximity of all these clubs, juke joints, and barrel houses to Union
Station are hard to ignore. They were, in a sense, a magnet whose
proximity to a busy train station made them an intoxicating
destination for any musician on the move. As both jazz and blues and
train travel reached their apex of popularity in American culture in
the 20th Century, they were indelibly and forever intertwined; the
music of an American era and the transient musicians who played it.