“LEF’ ME HERE TO SING THIS SONG”: A MUSICAL SCARCITY, FIRST EDITION OF NEGRO FOLK SONGS AS SUNG BY LEAD BELLY, BOLDLY SIGNED BY LEAD BELLY
(LEAD BELLY) LOMAX, John A. and LOMAX, Alan. Negro Folk Songs As Sung by Lead Belly. New York: Macmillan, 1936. Quarto, original yellow cloth. Housed in a custom clamshell box.
First edition of this blues classic on the music and legend of Lead Belly—“viewed as the last of the blues singers” (New Grove)—a rare copy boldly signed by him, “Huddie Ledbetter,” with his flourish, featuring 49 songs with musical notations, each contextualized by Lead Belly.
This first edition of Negro Folk Songs, compiled by renowned folklorists John Lomax and his son Alan, is an exceptional copy signed by its subject and co-author—famed bluesman Huddie Ledbetter. Best known as Lead Belly, he was born “the only son of hard-working sharecroppers… His powerful voice, extensive repertory, fancy stepping and virtuosity on guitar, mandolin, piano, accordion and harmonica” brought Lead Belly an early fame that was cut short by his imprisonment for murder in Texas and in Louisiana’s Angola Penitentiary (New York Times). “There he was discovered by the folksong collector John A. Lomax, who recorded him for the Library of Congress and assisted in gaining his parole. Lead Belly went to New York with Lomax in 1934, and from 1935-40 was extensively recorded by him for the Library of Congress… In New York Ledbetter found a welcome audience among jazz supporters, who viewed him as the last of the blues singers… His work is distinguished for its wide range and variety, his full-throated singing with rough vibrato, and his accomplished, highly rhythmic playing of the 12-string guitar” (New Grove X:595-6). Included in this volume’s collection of 49 songs, each contextualized by Lead Belly, are classics such as Frankie and Albert, Midnight Special, C. C. Rider and Shreveport Jail. Prefaced by Lead Belly’s biography. With frontispiece; without dust jacket, rarely found. Newspaper clipping on the death of Lead Belly, with penciled date of “12/7/49,” tipped to front pastedown.
A fine signed copy. Anything signed by Lead Belly is extremely scarce.