A trip on the Blues Trail

Little or nothing to do with distillation.

Moderator: Site Moderator

Post Reply
The Booze Pipe
Swill Maker
Posts: 449
Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2015 5:00 pm
Location: PNW

A trip on the Blues Trail

Post by The Booze Pipe »

I totally forgot to mention I am taking a short trip, flying into Memphis and driving to Clarksdale, MS including a day trip south through Mississippi on the "Blues Trail". My Partner has been before but I have not.

Very excited for some good food, history, and blues music!

Anyway, if you have any suggestions let me know. We fly out in the morning!
13.5g/50L keg
modular 3" pot/VM copper&stainless w/offset gin head
26g 4" stripping still
5500watts of fury
Bradster68
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 2272
Joined: Mon Dec 06, 2021 9:57 am
Location: Canada

Re: A trip on the Blues Trail

Post by Bradster68 »

We have the Bruce trail here. You won't be driving though. I hiked 300km of it in 17 days. Hope you have as much fun as I did 🍻
I drink so much now,on the back of my license it's a list of organs I need.
The Booze Pipe
Swill Maker
Posts: 449
Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2015 5:00 pm
Location: PNW

Re: A trip on the Blues Trail

Post by The Booze Pipe »

Bradster68 wrote: Wed Mar 27, 2024 12:41 pm We have the Bruce trail here. You won't be driving though. I hiked 300km of it in 17 days. Hope you have as much fun as I did 🍻
I’ve been on lots of different trails, and trails. Cheers!
13.5g/50L keg
modular 3" pot/VM copper&stainless w/offset gin head
26g 4" stripping still
5500watts of fury
User avatar
jonnys_spirit
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 3672
Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2015 7:58 am
Location: The Milky Way

Re: A trip on the Blues Trail

Post by jonnys_spirit »

I go to Memphis for work fairly regularly and will always head down on a Friday to spend the weekend in Clarksdale. First off - Be careful.. It can be sketchy. I can recommend staying at the Shack Up Inn in Clarksdale. Also, make sure to get some delta tamales.
Take a drive out to the levee if you get a chance and snack on your tamales. Buy the tamales off a street vendor if you can. The vendor might be lugging around a cooler full of em and they'll go very quick. Also hit up Gus's Fried chicken down in the waterfront district. Best fried chicken ever :)

DON;t sign any documents presented by a man dressed in all black under a full moon with a sick dog whelpin and howlin down in the gutter makin a racket - well... Up to you..

Beale st... meh...

Cheers,
jonny
————
i prefer my mash shaken, not stirred
————
The Booze Pipe
Swill Maker
Posts: 449
Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2015 5:00 pm
Location: PNW

Re: A trip on the Blues Trail

Post by The Booze Pipe »

jonnys_spirit wrote: Wed Mar 27, 2024 5:07 pm I go to Memphis for work fairly regularly and will always head down on a Friday to spend the weekend in Clarksdale. First off - Be careful.. It can be sketchy. I can recommend staying at the Shack Up Inn in Clarksdale. Also, make sure to get some delta tamales.
Take a drive out to the levee if you get a chance and snack on your tamales. Buy the tamales off a street vendor if you can. The vendor might be lugging around a cooler full of em and they'll go very quick. Also hit up Gus's Fried chicken down in the waterfront district. Best fried chicken ever :)

DON;t sign any documents presented by a man dressed in all black under a full moon with a sick dog whelpin and howlin down in the gutter makin a racket - well... Up to you..

Beale st... meh...

Cheers,
jonny
We’re staying on Beale st. Getting Gus’s chicken soon as we land. And will be getting tamales from (I think) Abe’s in Clarksdale.
13.5g/50L keg
modular 3" pot/VM copper&stainless w/offset gin head
26g 4" stripping still
5500watts of fury
User avatar
jonnys_spirit
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 3672
Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2015 7:58 am
Location: The Milky Way

Re: A trip on the Blues Trail

Post by jonnys_spirit »

Robert Johnson been playing down in Yazoo City and over at Beulah trying to get back up to Helena, ride left him out on a road next to the levee, walking up the highway, guitar in his hand propped up on his shoulder. October cool night, full moon filling up the dark sky, Robert Johnson thinking about Son House preaching to him, “Put that guitar down, boy, you drivin’ people nuts.” Robert Johnson needing as always a woman and some whiskey. Big trees all around, dark and lonesome road, a crazed, poisoned dog howling and moaning in a ditch alongside the road sending electrified chills up and down Robert Johnson’s spine, coming up on a crossroads just south of Rosedale. Robert Johnson, feeling bad and lonesome, knows people up the highway in Gunnison. Can get a drink of whiskey and more up there. Man sitting off to the side of the road on a log at the crossroads says, “You’re late, Robert Johnson.” Robert Johnson drops to his knees and says, “Maybe not.”

The man stands up, tall, barrel-chested, and black as the forever-closed eyes of Robert Johnson’s stillborn baby, and walks out to the middle of the crossroads where Robert Johnson kneels. He says, “Stand up, Robert Johnson. You want to throw that guitar over there in that ditch with that hairless dog and go on back up to Robinsonville and play the harp with Willie Brown and Son, because you just another guitar player like all the rest, or you want to play that guitar like nobody ever played it before? Make a sound nobody ever heard before? You want to be the King of the Delta Blues and have all the whiskey and women you want?”

“That’s a lot of whiskey and women, Devil-Man.”

“I know you, Robert Johnson,” says the man.

Robert Johnson, feels the moonlight bearing down on his head and the back of his neck as the moon seems to be growing bigger and bigger and brighter and brighter. He feels it like the heat of the noonday sun bearing down, and the howling and moaning of the dog in the ditch penetrates his soul, coming up through his feet and the tips of his fingers through his legs and arms, settling in that big empty place beneath his breastbone causing him to shake and shudder like a man with the palsy. Robert Johnson says, “That dog gone mad.”

The man laughs. “That hound belong to me. He ain’t mad, he’s got the Blues. I got his soul in my hand.”

The dog lets out a low, long soulful moan, a howling like never heard before, rhythmic, syncopated grunts, yelps, and barks, seizing Robert Johnson like a Grand Mal, and causing the strings on his guitar to vibrate, hum, and sing with a sound dark and blue, beautiful, soulful chords and notes possessing Robert Johnson, taking him over, spinning him around, losing him inside of his own self, wasting him, lifting him up into the sky. Robert Johnson looks over in the ditch and sees the eyes of the dog reflecting the bright moonlight or, more likely so it seems to Robert Johnson, glowing on their own, a deep violet penetrating glow, and Robert Johnson knows and feels that he is staring into the eyes of a Hellhound as his body shudders from head to toe.

The man says, “The dog ain’t for sale, Robert Johnson, but the sound can be yours. That’s the sound of the Delta Blues.”

“I got to have that sound, Devil-Man. That sound is mine. Where do I sign?”

The man says, “You ain’t got a pencil, Robert Johnson. Your word is good enough. All you got to do is keep walking north. But you better be prepared. There are consequences.”

“Prepared for what, Devil-man?”

“You know where you are, Robert Johnson? You are standing in the middle of the crossroads. At midnight, that full moon is right over your head. You take one more step, you’ll be in Rosedale. You take this road to the east, you’ll get back over to Highway 61 in Cleveland, or you can turn around and go back down to Beulah or just go to the west and sit up on the levee and look at the River. But if you take one more step in the direction you’re headed, you going to be in Rosedale at midnight under this full October moon, and you are going to have the Blues like never known to this world. My left hand will be forever wrapped around your soul, and your music will possess all who hear it. That’s what’s going to happen. That’s what you better be prepared for. Your soul will belong to me. This is not just any crossroads. I put this “X” here for a reason, and I been waiting on you.”

Robert Johnson rolls his head around, his eyes upwards in their sockets to stare at the blinding light of the moon which has now completely filled tie pitch-black Delta night, piercing his right eye like a bolt of lightning as the midnight hour hits. He looks the big man squarely in the eyes and says, “Step back, Devil-Man, I’m going to Rosedale. I am the Blues.”

The man moves to one side and says, “Go on, Robert Johnson. You the King of the Delta Blues. Go on home to Rosedale. And when you get on up in town, you get you a plate of hot tamales because you going to be needing something on your stomach where you’re headed.”
————
i prefer my mash shaken, not stirred
————
User avatar
Stonecutter
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 1943
Joined: Fri Apr 16, 2021 2:40 pm
Location: Somewhere within the Milkyway

Re: A trip on the Blues Trail

Post by Stonecutter »

Freedom had been hunted round the globe; reason was considered as rebellion; and the slavery of fear had made men afraid to think. But such is the irresistible nature of truth, that all it asks, and all it wants, is the liberty of appearing.
-Thomas Paine
User avatar
jonnys_spirit
Site Donor
Site Donor
Posts: 3672
Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2015 7:58 am
Location: The Milky Way

Re: A trip on the Blues Trail

Post by jonnys_spirit »

Be careful down there in the delta booze pipe. It ain’t all pretty.. unless you like that kinda thing.

https://www.shackupinn.com/

There’s a path right up by the shackup inn that old highway 61/49 crosses over. You can walk down there in the middle of the night and it’s a little creepy.
IMG_2943.jpeg
————
i prefer my mash shaken, not stirred
————
User avatar
acfixer69
Global moderator
Posts: 4855
Joined: Mon Dec 20, 2010 3:34 pm
Location: CT USA

Re: A trip on the Blues Trail

Post by acfixer69 »

The Booze Pipe
Swill Maker
Posts: 449
Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2015 5:00 pm
Location: PNW

Re: A trip on the Blues Trail

Post by The Booze Pipe »

We had a great time on our trip. Memphis was good, had some great food with friends. Then traveled down to Clarksdale for a couple nights, stopped in on several blues trail markers between there and Cleveland. Found some amazing soul food there, and also in Holly Springs up in the Hill Country.
Saw a great show at the Shack Up Inn, Jesse Cotton Stone (hills country style blues) but no midnight spokey trail ha. Overall it was really neat to see where all these great musicians, and American music was born.
13.5g/50L keg
modular 3" pot/VM copper&stainless w/offset gin head
26g 4" stripping still
5500watts of fury
Post Reply