Where
Dead Voices Gather
by Nick Tosches
Many years ago, I wrote a book called Country.
Two of the chapters closest to its heart were devoted to the mystery of
Emmett Miller, whose startling and mesmerizing music seemed to be a
Rosetta Stone to the understanding of the mixed and mongrel bloodlines of
country and blues, of jazz and pop, of all that we know as American music.
The alchemy of Emmett Miller's music is as
startling today as it was when he wrought it. Definable neither as country
nor as blues, as jazz nor as pop, as black nor as white, but as both
culmination and transcendence of these bloodlines and more, that alchemy,
that music, stands as one of the most wondrous emanations, a birth–cry
really, of the many–faced and one–souled chimera of all that has come
to be called American music. The very concept of him—a white man in
blackface, a hillbilly singer and a jazz singer both, a son of the deep
South and a roué of Broadway —is at once unique, mythic, and a perfect
representation of the schizophrenic heart of what this country, with a
straight face, calls its culture.
I first became intrigued by the elusive
figure of Emmett Miller in 1974. I may have been vaguely aware of him
before then, but it was I Love Dixie Blues, the album Merle Haggard
dedicated in part to Miller's music, that truly whetted my curiosity. In
the bargain bin of a record store on Eighth Street in New York, I found a
copy of an album whose stark and drab cover was ugly even by bootleg
standards: title misspelled in plain black lettering on plain yellow
stock. But this cover belied not only the beautiful disc of clear green
vinyl that lay within, but more so the wonder of what that green vinyl
held. Issued by the Old Masters label in 1969, Emmet Miller Acc. by His
Georgia Crackers had been the first in a series of limited–edition
pressings for jazz collectors; the spelling of Miller's name was obviously
not as important as the fact that these recordings featured rare
performances by Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey, Eddie Lang, and Gene Krupa.
Subsequently reissued on common black vinyl but with Miller's name spelled
right, in black on white, this album remained the sole available
collection of Miller's work for more than a quarter of a century,
superseded only in 1996 by Emmett Miller: The Minstrel Man from
Georgia, a Columbia/Legacy CD that included six recordings more than
the earlier album.
When I heard Miller's actual voice,
forthshining from the coruscations of those slow–spinning emerald
grooves, I was astounded, and my search for information on him began in
earnest. What little I found was included three years later in Country.
"It is not known exactly when Emmett Miller was born or when he
died," I wrote. "Nor is it known where he came from or where he
went. We don't even know what he looked like, really."
For a long time, these statements remained
true. In November of 1988, eleven years to the month after the publication
of Country, another book —bigger and more lavish, but with a
similar title —brought forth the first published photograph of Miller.
The book was Country: The Music and the Musicians, produced by the
Country Music Foundation and Abbeville Press. I wrote the chapter on
honkytonk, in which I devoted two paragraphs to Miller's influence on Hank
Williams; and it was in this context that the photograph of Miller,
middle–aged and in blackface, appeared as an illustration. Five years
later, Abbeville published a parallel volume called Nothing But the
Blues: The Music and the Musicians, in which a second picture of
Miller, also in blackface, accompanied four paragraphs on him, as an
influence on Jimmie Rodgers, in a chapter by Charles Wolfe on white
country blues. But beyond these curious masked images, the mystery of
Emmett Miller remained largely unsolved, and the words I'd written long
ago remained largely true.
In 1994, in a Journal of Country Music
article called "The Strange and Hermetical Case of Emmett
Miller," I set forth all that had been discovered regarding Miller
since the writing of Country. And yet, even then, it could not be
said with certainty exactly when or where he was born, or exactly when or
where he died, or even whether Emmett Miller was really his name. The
paragraphs on Miller in Nothing But the Blues stated with an air of
certitude that "Miller was born in Macon, Georgia, in 1903."
This assertion would be repeated by Wolfe a few years later in the notes
to the Minstrel Man from Georgia CD: "Emmett Miller, we now know, was
from Macon, Georgia, born there in 1903. His parents were longtime
residents of the area, and owned a nearby farm." But no evidence for
these "facts" was offered, and I chose to doubt them. As it
turned out, I was right to doubt: Emmett Miller was not born in 1903, and
drinking milk was probably the closest his family came to owning a farm.
But for all my sensible doubting and
senseless searching, the mystery of Emmett Miller, after twenty years,
remained unsolved. And who cared? Indeed, when I stopped to think of it, I
wondered what end this search could serve, except, as it did, to distract
me from more meaningful and lucrative pursuits. Unfinished poems, an
unfinished novel, magazine assignments were pushed aside, and for what? To
follow a ghost? This distraction from more meaningful and lucrative
pursuits had, for me, a strong, perhaps pathological appeal; but that did
not explain it, for there are other far more enjoyable distractions.
Ultimately I did not and could not, I do not and cannot, explain it. I can
say that the search, the mystery, was twofold. Who was this guy —when
was he born, when did he die? And what was the source of his music,
vanished in the undocumented darkness and the lost and unknown recordings
of an unexplored subculture? Whether seen as detective work or archeology,
as serious investigation or deranged folly, the case of Emmett Miller was
not without its gratifications, its thrills and satisfactions of discovery
and of learning.
As for its being without meaning, it now
has occurred to me, in the few sentences since my mention of more
meaningful and lucrative pursuits, that, after all is said and done,
meaning is the biggest sucker's–racket of all; and any regard for it, no
matter how fleeting, befits a middle–aged fool like me. So meaning be
damned; on with these words.
In the spring of 1996, as was I revising
and expanding the Journal article to appear as the appendix to the
reprint of Country published by Da Capo Press, I received a call
from my friend and intrepid cohort Bret Wood.
Earlier Bret had found, amid handwritten
records of the Thirteenth Census of the United States (1910), evidence of
a thirteen–year– old white male named Emmett Miller living with his
family in the town of Barnesville, in Pike County, Georgia, about midway
between Atlanta and Macon.
For years I had been unsure that Emmett
Miller was the real name of the person whose identity I sought. Poring
through the "Minstrelsy" columns of issues of Billboard
from the 1920s, on reel after reel of microfilm, I had come across many
obscure performers named Emmett. Too many. I suspected that the name of
Emmett had been taken commonly by minstrels to evoke the name of Daniel
Decatur Emmett, the most celebrated of the old–time minstrels. I thought
this might help to explain why no biographical facts had been unearthed
regarding the birth, death, or offstage life of Emmett Miller. At the same
time, removing the possible baffle of his first name left only a surname
so common that his true identity might never be found.
But here was an actual Emmett Miller. The
Barnesville census was enumerated on April 27, 1910; the
thirteen–year–old Emmett Miller was listed as the son of one Walter
Moore. Why his surname, like that of his four siblings, was different from
his father's was a perplexing detail; but any detail, no matter how
perplexing, was welcome amid the vaster perplexing vagueness of the search
for Emmett Miller. For all my doubts regarding the accepted
"facts" of Emmett Miller's origin, I shared the assumption,
based on a 1928 published reference to him as "the young man from
Macon," that Macon was indeed his hometown. But I figured now that
Miller might have named that nearby and well–known town as such instead
of small, little–known Barnesville. The census record would fix his year
of birth at 1896 or 1897. There seemed to be no other documentation of an
Emmett Miller that presented itself as a possibility. A
thirty–year–old mulatto house–mover boarding in Macon was found in
the census of 1920: an unlikely candidate. While Bret drew no conclusions,
I rashly did, and offered them just as rashly in the letters section of
the Journal of Country Music, Vol. 17, No. 3. This proposed
evidence, I dare say, met with no little acceptance by the esteemed and
eminent community of Millerologists at large; and I felt that a search of
nearly twenty years was nearing its end. But alas, as they say in the
funnybooks, alas.
Then, on April 4, 1996, in the state
archives at Atlanta, Bret found the document that would at long last truly
serve as the key to the mystery of Emmett Miller.
There would be no record of Emmett Miller's
birth. We knew that much. Birth certificates, registrations of birth, were
not legally required in Georgia until 1919. Until that time, they were
rare, especially for children born at home, as most were. Though access to
existing birth records in Georgia is restricted to the persons whose
records they are, a worker at the Bibb County Health Department in Macon
was both able and kind to confirm that there was, as expected, no birth
certificate in the name of Emmett Miller. The offices of the health
department are located on Hemlock Street: an irony here compounded, for it
was through Emmett Miller's death, and not his birth, that the story of
his life opened to me.
The revelatory document that Bret found in
the state capital was a certificate of death, Georgia State File No. 9378:
a record of finality that might serve as well, I hoped, to seal and lay to
rest an obsession.
There was time to incorporate only the
barest elements of this discovery into the Country appendix. That
done, Bret and I arranged to travel to Macon, to where the clues of this
document beckoned. "Emmett Miller: The Final Chapter," an
account based on what we gathered, the missing pieces of the life of
Emmett Miller, was written for the Journal of Country Music. Though
I was the author of that account, it could not have been written without
the work of Bret Wood, for whose inspired research skills I here express
my profound respect, and for whose selfless dedication to this
loss–intensive project, my profounder gratitude.
The article proved to be far from a final
chapter. Even as I readied it for publication, I knew that there was more
to be discovered, that further exploration lay before me. What follows,
these years later, is a synthesis —a bringing to harmony, a bringing to
culmination—of all that I have written regarding Emmett Miller, and of
all that I have learned regarding Emmett Miller. Above all, it is a
bringing to an end of a mystery —and the bringing to light, however dim,
of a far bigger mystery, and the journey to solve that bigger mystery in
turn: through kerosene lamp and light of neon and no light at all, through
palimpsest and shards, the echoic whisperings of ghosts, howls from hidden
vanished places, loud electric crackling rhythms and cries of seers and
fools, all–telling breezes, no–telling winds.
Copyright © 2001 by Nick Tosches
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