As part of an ongoing series about rule breaking, Alison Stine answers questions I posed about conventions of genre, expectations of reader, when genre or context or venue changes truth to Truth and back again. As I read her essay Snowfall Blues in the winter issue of Virginia Quarterly Review, I thought how very much that essay reads like a journalistic profile, not exactly like anything's of Stine's I'd read before. Here, for Essay Daily, Stine describes how her essay twisted through many incarnations of "the rules," finding one set of rules to follow there, another here--NW.
On Breaking
When
I first heard his voice coming from the kitchen, I had no idea what a hold his
story would have over me. I
didn’t know anything about him yet. I only knew I had to hear him again.
My husband had
bought the album after hearing it in a NYC record store, and for weeks,
lonesome tunes floated about the duplex. Every time one of the songs came on, I
would ask, Who is this? I couldn’t
remember his name, couldn’t seem to stick it in my head; I had certainly never
heard it before.
But
as soon as Jackson C. Frank sang, something would come over me, freeze me where
as I stood. The songs were aching, but the voice was strong.
Who is this?
When I
researched the musician’s life, I felt the unmistakable tugs of a story.
Singer
songwriter Jackson C. Frank, born in upstate New York and raised there and in
Ohio, was a fire survivor, one child of only about half of his sixth grade
class to escape a disaster that decimated his school in 1954. He was severely
scarred. After a difficult recovery, Frank had gone on to live the kind of remarkable
life that movies are made of: met Elvis as a child, loved Sandy Denny, was
roommates with Simon and Garfunkel, married Edie Sedgwick’s cousin.
It was also a
life filled with misfortune and pain. Frank released only one self-titled album
in 1965. Though it influenced a generation, defining the 60s British Folk
Revival, his music remains obscure; many fans still think the dozens of
musicians who have covered Frank’s tunes (including Nick Drake and Al Stewart)
wrote them. He never got a second album together. He never got it together.
***
The first
Frank song I remember is “Kimbie,” a traditional folk tune, first set down
by Bascom Lamar Lunsford,
who called it “I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground.”
The narrator is
in trouble, with a woman and maybe the law. In Frank’s spare, aching cover, he
sings: “She wants a nine dollar shawl—/ and I need a mackinaw.” In the same
breath, he asks: “baby, where you been so long,” then answers, “I been in that
state pen, / with those rough and rowdy men.” When the woman asks his whereabouts again, he repeats his answer:
“I been in that state pen.” Then he
sings—softer now, swallowing the words, the vowels like lonesome caves—“and I
gotta go back again.”
Lunsford’s song
is dark, but Frank’s version is heartsick. He sings from the point of view of a
drifter, an ex-con who’s messed up again, already heading back to jail, who’s
leaving in the morning, and would buy his girl an expensive, trivial thing
rather than take care of himself.
The lyric “I
wish I was a mole in the ground” may have originally been in reference to a
wish to work as a miner, once a more profitable and safer job than working on
the railroads. But in Frank’s
version, this line doesn’t feel like a metaphor. Desperation snags at his
voice, and it feels like he really is
wishing he was an animal, was someone or something else, was capable of tearing
down the mountain of misfortune looming over him.
***
Frank likely
suffered from mental illness, including Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, and
dealt with many physical ailments: malfunctioning thyroids, pain from skin
grafts, scars, massive weight gain, problems walking. He was institutionalized
multiple times. He was homeless. His first baby died. He once disappeared for a
decade. He was partially blinded by a bullet late in life. He lived the blues.
And he did not
live long.
I started
writing about Frank. Ten pages turned into thirty, then sixty, then ninety.
I was working on
my PhD at the time. I scrapped my original dissertation—and wrote some more
about this strange singer (I also wrote about a graffiti artist, a circus
performer, and the abandoned factories of my home). I passed my defense. One
year flew by, then three.
***
I had heard Lunsford’s
version before—but it was Frank’s “Kimbie” I listened to for hours, so much so
that I considered naming my first child after the song. When I learned the midwife’s
granddaughter was actually named Kimbie,
it felt like some kind of sign.
And when my son
was born, for months “Kimbie” was the only song to which he would fall asleep,
maybe because he had heard it so often in the womb.
***
Last year, Virginia Quarterly Review accepted my
essay about Frank. But they wanted some changes. The piece was way too long.
What was
left out, taken in dribbles, excised like the Operation game, the editor and I
lifting bone by bone shard, careful not to trigger, not to set off an alarm?
Pieces
of me.
I
wasn’t trained as a journalist, but I know the rules, and the biggest one was:
Keep yourself out of it.
***
I was born the
year Frank’s album was re-released (to little fanfare), during a blizzard that
buried a semi tractor, and killed a woman as she walked, blinded by drifts, to
her barn. The storm stranded my mom and
me in the maternity ward for a week—the roads impassable, my dad trapped at
home. My parents were Mods. My dad had horn-rimmed glasses. My mom wore an
avocado green mini to their rehearsal dinner. They lived in married student
housing until my mom, 19 at their wedding, finished her teaching degree. My dad
escaped Vietnam because of a bad back.
There were
albums around the house: Simon and Garfunkel, Denny. I remember spending afternoons
as child lying on our corduroy couch, holding the Best of Peter, Paul and Mary above my head, staring at the pictures
on the cover, flowers and lambs and butterflies.
Did my parents
buy Jackson C. Frank Again the year I
was born? If so, they didn’t keep
it. Did they see it at the store, for
sale alongside Boys in the Trees by
Carly Simon, Dylan’s Masterpieces or Street Legal, Stewart’s Time
Passages, Fairport Convention’s Tipplers
Tales?
So many of
Frank’s friends had albums out that year, such a big year for that crowd. Was
his album even for sale? My parents didn’t remember it. Neither of them had
heard of Frank.
I bought my mom
his album a few years ago, slipping it into the CD player in the kitchen. I told
her the story of his life. She looked away from the stove, holding a spoon as
if she had forgotten what it was for.
***
The
magazine had fact checkers. Thorough ones. The piece was mostly history: lists of the names Frank had
influenced, how he had influenced them, the songs he had recorded, the
tragedies he had survived. Those were the facts. Those were checkable.
Other aspects of
the story were not so.
It
was a story full of holes. Most of the characters, including Frank himself,
were dead. Accounts of Frank’s life contradicted each other, differing dates
and names. There just wasn’t much on Frank, which made his story both compelling
and difficult. The editor called me when I was in line at Kroger. I did a major
re-write on Thanksgiving. The process of fact-checking a mystery left us both
exhilarated and stumped.
Everything
had to be true, right? But what was true? Some of the lyrics didn’t have
definite sources. Most of the photographs were black and white, or grainy. Was
that a long-sleeve shirt? Was his hair more white or yellow? What had really
caused the fire?
There
were many I don’t know’s in the piece. Many if’s. Many, many more questions than
answers. How I discovered Frank, why I personally was drawn to him, why I
couldn’t let go—those questions were not going to be answered, either, not in
the essay.
***
VQR published my story in early January 2015: “Snowfall Blues:The Hard Life and Clear Sound of Jackson C. Frank.” VQR also commissioned for the piece a collage by artist Jen
Rinnger, of vintage photos of Frank, disintegrating into flames. The fire in
the image is sharp and bright, a yellow-orange wisp, flecked by black char,
that hurts the eyes.
Frank’s eyes in
the old photographs, avoiding the reader’s stare, hurt too.
***
Why did I fall for Frank so hard? Why am I
haunted by his story, still?
It’s just not
just the music, which is stunning. It’s not just his life, which is unbelievable—but
I believe it. I know it. I am a person with an invisible disability: I was born
partially deaf, which I have been told by those who don’t know any better, I hide very, very well—and he was a person
with an obvious disability.
He could not
hide his scars. Intentionally or unintentionally, I have been hiding mine all
my life.
A rule I broke
and broke hard? I saw myself in him, my true self. Frank on the outside was me
on the inside. Maybe
the same thing in me responds to him that responds to graffiti. Maybe the same
thing in me that loves abandoned places, impoverished flyover towns, loves
Jackson C. Frank.
With
writing the piece, with publishing it, I just wanted to draw attention to
Frank. I just wanted people to know his music, to say his name, to search for
and purchase his album, to realize the impact he had, to understand his
suffering—to understanding suffering in general. Frank was broken, as I am
broken, as the places I come from and love are broken.
Frank
lived, Frank tried, these things happened,
though in what order and in what time and place we do not know for sure
anymore. There is no surety, not anymore. There is only his singing: that sweet,
strong voice, sure and true, unbroken as a bell.
Alison Stine is the author of three books of poetry—Wait (Wisconsin, 2011), Ohio Violence (North Texas, 2009), and Lot of My Sister (Kent State, 2001)—and a novel, Supervision (Harper Voyager, 2015). Her essays have appeared or are forthcoming in the Awl, the Toast, Defunct, and Southern Humanities Review.
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