In the bright sunny south in peace and content,
The days of my boyhood, I scarcely have spent,
The days of my boyhood, I scarcely have spent,
From the deep flowing springs to the broad flowing stream,
Ever dear to my memory and sweet is my dream.
— Dock Boggs
I first learned of Dock Boggs from Greil Marcus' Invisible Republic, the rock critic's look into the "old, weird America."
New York Magazine called Marcus' landscape the "playground of God, Satan, tricksters, Puritans, confidence men, illuminati, braggarts, preachers, and anonymous poets of all stripes."
New York Magazine called Marcus' landscape the "playground of God, Satan, tricksters, Puritans, confidence men, illuminati, braggarts, preachers, and anonymous poets of all stripes."
Boggs was one of the latter—a morose, hard drinking Appalachian poet who sang like his blacksmith daddy and picked a blues-style banjo in the fashion of the Black banjoists he heard in the railroad camps surrounding his home.
Boggs was born in 1898 in Southeastern Virginia and, as a young man, made a living working in the coal mines and peddling moonshine.
For three years in the late 1920s, he tried desperately to earn a living as a professional musician, entertaining at parties in the mining camps and recording 12 songs (eight for Brunswick Records in New York and four for Lonesome Ace Records in Chicago).
But he quit music in 1929 when the stock market collapsed the parties and recording deals came to a sudden halt.
Boggs stayed out of the music business for over 30 years, until he was rediscovered in the early 1960s by the leaders of the folk revival.
In 1963, one of them coaxed the 65-year old Boggs out of Norton to play at large festivals.
Say what you will of it, Boggs' music is raw.
"I put so much of myself into some pieces that I very nearly broke down," he once told folklorist Charles Wolfe.
Greil Marcus claimed in Invisible Republic that Boggs sounds when he sings "as if his bones were coming through his skin."
"If God ever requires that rocks cry out," singer-songwriter Lesley Miller wrote, "they may sound as old and earthy as Dock Boggs.
"His banjo rings like the end of time, and his voice cries out from the deeply submerged recesses of the American heart and mind."
Boggs' old-time music is the polar opposite of today's Country, where the emotions and rural references are formulaic and trite and about as "country" as the corn pone at Popeye's.
Boggs' characters, in contrast, are real: they're dirt farmers, hillbillies, convicts, wastrels, and murderers, all deeply afflicted by the fates they must suffer.
Not one drives a Ram, supports our troops, or wears tight blue jeans.
And they usually wind up vanquished, humiliated, or dead, not home on the couch with the hot wife and the football game.
"Dock deserves fame for his efforts to live true to what he believed God expected of him," English professor Barry O'Connell wrote.
"Never a conventional life, his was also shaped by extraordinary gifts. Among them was an almost instinctive capacity to see and hear the events of his world newly.
"Through his music, he transmuted the everyday into something more beautiful and startling and acute than we are usually able to feel."
Above: Dock Boggs by R. Crumb.
Postscript: Listen to this lovely instrumental by Nora Brown. It's Dock Boggs' "Coke Oven March."