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Exhibit
opening/reception March
4, 2010
Photographs by: Michael
Loyd Young
Foreword by: David
Alan Harvey
The Mississippi River
Delta is flat country.
Not a hill in sight.
It is often way
too cold or way too hot.
But there is a
subtle beauty to it. Large
plantation owners
used to rule this
delta country and
I imagine what
it my have been like
100 years ago.
I can almost smell
the history as
a thunderstorm rolls
loud and black
across the flats, creating
waves in the wheat
fields resembling
a green tumultuous
sea.
“From these former cotton fields came a new art form. Out of commerce,
out of slavery, out of greed, out of necessity, out of Africa, came the BLUES.
Yes, the music: blues, jazz, rock n’ roll, and rap came from these cotton
fields. Out of these cotton fields and out of these little one-room churches
came the voice of an enslaved people. The voice of the men and women that toiled
in these fields is the blues, and it is still a voice heard around the world.”
—David Alan Harvey Blues,
Booze, & BBQ, the first book by Michael Loyd
Young, documents the 150 miles of Highway 61, the famed
blacktop road snaking from Memphis, TN down to Greenville,
MS. At the halfway point, in the heart of the Mississippi
Delta, sits Clarksdale, MS, the city considered the birthplace
of the blues and the location of Robert Johnson’s
famed “Cross Road Blues” intersection of Highway
61 and 49.
The Delta has been
home to blues legends such as Charley Patton, John Lee Hooker,
Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Ike Turner, Cadillac John Nolden, B.B. King,
T-Model Ford, Mississippi Slim, Big Jack Johnson, and Willie King, among countless
others whose music has become the glue that holds these communities together
as they struggle to survive. Young’s photographs, taken at juke joints,
in private homes, or just hanging out, illustrate the bond blues creates between
the Delta and its people. It is through this music that the people pass on
their heritage and culture to future generations.
Michael Loyd Young lives in Houston, TX. Since 2002 Young has worked on several
projects, traveling to 21 different countries documenting cultural symbols
and the impact they have on the daily lives of the people he photographs. This
is Young’s first book. All proceeds will be donated to the Delta Blues
Museum in Clarksdale, MS. He is currently working on his second book documenting
the hunting and fishing culture along the Gulf Coast, from southern Texas to
the Florida Everglades.
David Alan Harvey discovered photography at an early age and quickly began
photographing his family and neighborhood. At 20 Harvey lived with, and documented
the lives of a black family living in Virginia. These photographs were published
in his first book, Tell It Like It Is. Harvey went on to shoot over 40 essays
for National Geographic Magazine and publish Cuba (National Geographic, 2000),
Divided Soul (Phaidon, 2003), and Living Proof (powerHouse Books, 2007). Harvey
has been at Magnum Photos since 1993 and lives in New York.
Author proceeds will be donated to the Delta Blues Museum.
Books on sale now in Delta Blues Museum Gift Shop
Exhibit opening/reception March 4, 2010
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