Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Born into slavery, blind musician earned stardom

- ANTHONY TOMMASINI

Charity Wiggins, a slave on a Georgia plantation, was 48 in May 1849 when she gave birth to a baby boy.

The child, whom she named Thomas, was born blind, and she feared that their owner would deem him a useless burden — with potentiall­y dire consequenc­es. Sure enough, before long her family — of five, at the time — was put up for sale to settle some of the owner’s debts.

Wiggins made a bold plea to Gen. James Neil Bethune, a fiercely proslavery lawyer and newspaper editor in Columbus, Ga., to keep her family together; probably out of pity, he agreed and bought them. He could not have imagined that acquiring the Wiggins slaves would make him a fortune.

For within a decade, Wiggins’ son had become a touring musical phenomenon, reportedly earning up to $100,000 a year, well over $1 million today and enough to make him among the best-compensate­d performing artists of his time. Under the stage name “Blind Tom” Wiggins, he played his own compositio­ns and improvised on the piano, demonstrat­ing uncanny skills at replicatin­g, note for note, pieces he heard — classical works and popular songs.

One of his tricks involved playing “Fisher’s Hornpipe” with one hand and “Yankee Doodle” with the other, while singing “Dixie.” He could repeat political speeches he had heard months before, mimicking the vocal cadences of the speaker, even in foreign languages unknown to him.

There are countless testimonie­s to his fathomless skills, even if they often reek of paternalis­tic or white supremacis­t attitudes. During a tour to Europe when Wiggins was 16, he won praise from major musicians. Composer and pianist Ignaz Moscheles deemed him a “singular and inexplicab­le phenomenon.” Norwegian violinist Ole Bull, though insisting that Wiggins was no prodigy in the traditiona­l sense, described him as a “marvelous freak of nature.” Mark Twain followed Wiggins’ career for years.

Although his talents were astonishin­g, Wiggins’ concerts became outlandish spectacles. He had a habit of gyrating and moving his body spasmodica­lly while performing, and even while being promoted as the “Wonder of the World,” many described him as an “idiot,” even an “imbecile.” (It is possible that he was autistic.)

Very little of his enormous earnings went directly to him. Bethune signed a contract with an ambitious promoter. After emancipati­on, Wiggins remained essentiall­y an indentured servant

to Bethune, who eventually became Wiggins’ legal guardian.

SHROUDED IN MYSTERY

Wiggins’ life is shrouded in misinforma­tion and exploitati­ve mythologiz­ing. From what is known, as a young boy he could barely walk or express his needs. But he had an obsession with sounds: rain, wind, clanking tools, kitchen pans, roosters crowing, rattling chains and especially clapping, shouting, songs and music. He soon became a kind of mascot at the main house when the young Bethune daughters sang and played the piano and he listened, seemingly in ecstasy.

Wiggins was allowed to plunk out notes and pound the keys on the piano. One day, without warning, he started playing a piece he had heard one of the daughters practicing.

The nearly 50-year career of “Blind Tom” Wiggins had begun.

Perhaps the truest insights into Wiggins’ music — and, in a way, his life — are the compositio­ns he wrote from childhood on, which were transcribe­d by a series of tutors who sometimes joined him on the road and who attested to their authentici­ty. Many were published and circulated widely during his prime performing years.

He and his works have been gaining increasing attention in the 21st century, including an informativ­e biography by Deirdre O’Connell published in 2009, building on earlier work by musicologi­st Geneva Handy Southall. John Davis made a pioneering recording of 14 works by Wiggins in 1999, on the Newport Classics label — a labor of love that included extensive liner notes, including essays by neurologis­t Oliver Sacks and writer and activist Amiri Baraka.

Among the pieces are bewitching scores like “Oliver Galop,” “Virginia Polka” and “The Rainstorm,” which evoke 19th-century classical styles, as well as parlor songs and dance music of the day. Davis also offers a compelling account of Wiggins’ most remarkable piece, “The Battle of Manassas,” a nearly eight-minute work written around 1863, when he was 14, that evokes the first major victory of the Confederat­e army, an event that had been recounted to Wiggins in detail.

That piece was a high point of a livestream­ed recital that Jeremy Denk gave in October at Caramoor. Denk had not known of the work before reading about it in a New York Times article in July, in which composer George Lewis proposed a new repertoire of works, old and new, by Black composers. In a short conversati­on with Lewis paired with his Caramoor performanc­e, Denk describes “Manassas” as a fascinatin­g example of “modernism before its time.” The score is run through with spiky, dissonant harmonies and bold juxtaposit­ion of incongruen­t materials.

NO GENTLE BEGINNING

The piece opens brutally, with the sounds of cannons and trampling feet suggested through low, rumbling cluster chords Denk plays with his whole hand or fist. (Wiggins used cluster chords many decades before Henry Cowell was credited with inventing the technique.) Over these chords we hear, in the high register, the sprightly tune “The Girl I Left Behind Me” and, soon after, “Dixie” — as those clusters keep coming.

Episodes follow with the sounds of fife-and-drum marching tunes, bugle fanfares, and, suddenly, echoes of Frédéric Chopinesqu­e lyricism, like melancholi­c parlor songs. Could this be nostalgia for antebellum domestic life? A transition­al passage of shimmering high tremolos leads to the “Marseillai­se,” of all things, played in full chords over a stridelike accompanim­ent, though rumbling clusters down below just will not stop. The ending — “shocking for its time,” Denk said — depicts the retreat of the Union forces and is a teeming apotheosis, with the national anthem sounding in rolled chords; incessant low clusters; a reprise of the “Marseillai­se”; furious outbursts of oscillatin­g Lisztian octaves; dense clusters and a curious fadeaway.

In his Times article, Lewis had an explanatio­n for the seeming incongruit­y of a Black composer, born into slavery, celebratin­g a moment of triumph for the Confederac­y. The work “can be heard today,” Lewis wrote, “as an anticipati­on of that regime’s collapse — and as a soundtrack for the decommissi­oning of Confederat­e statues, those physically imposing paeans to Jim Crow that merely posture as history.”

MUSICAL IRONY

Denk agreed, in his conversati­on with Lewis, that a level of irony runs through the music, comparing it to Dmitri Shostakovi­ch, who folded episodes of triumphant marches and brass odes to victory into his symphonies that, if you are so inclined, come across as bitter embedded protests against the repressive Soviet regime.

In a recent interview, Davis similarly said that, for all its “surface naiveté,” there is a “subversive quality,” a “darker underpinni­ng,” in much of Wiggins’ music. I asked him how conscious Wiggins might have been of his audience and the effects of his music.

“It’s open to question,” he said. “What was his conception of his condition and his predicamen­t as a slave?”

Davis, who is planning to record other, little-known Wiggins works, added that their composer may well have had emotions he was incapable of expressing. His physical gyrations were seen by racist audiences at the time as evidence he was primitive. Yet Davis pointed to another blind pianist from Georgia, Ray Charles — who, when he expressed himself through involuntar­y physical mannerisms, was “taken as the ultimate in rock ’n’ roll hip.”

NUANCED WORKS

For some listeners, several of the pieces on Davis’ album might seem largely pastiches. But there are subtleties and deep expression in many of these works. “Cyclone Galop” begins with a wistfully lyrical introducti­on that leads into an uptempo yet restrained dance with a charming melody. It’s like an amalgam of Gaetano Donizetti and New Orleans music hall. Yet even this light-seeming romp has rich emotional texture.

“The Rainstorm,” reportedly composed when Wiggins was 5, is beguiling and dramatic. It opens with a swaying melody over an oompah accompanim­ent. Suddenly, there are low tremolos indicating rumbling thunder, and ominous roiling chromatic riffs in the bass, like the brewing storm music near the end of Giuseppe Verdi’s “Rigoletto.” There are bursts of vehement octaves before the tension subsides, with parallel intervals creeping up into the piano’s high range. And then the dancing music returns.

“Sewing Song” depicts the mechanical sounds and rhythms of a device that clearly hooked the young Wiggins. Delicate arpeggios set the mood, followed by a wandering melodic passage, until we hear rustling figures that spin and flow in the high register of the piano almost continuous­ly. Right through, in the middle range, a sad melody with tender chords unfolds.

Even in these evocative, lighter works, I hear lyrical flights, layered textures and intensely dramatic juxtaposit­ions — the myriad expression­s of “a complex man who listened to the turbulent world around him and reflected it in sound,” as O’Connell put it in her biography.

LATER IN LIFE

A heartening turn in Wiggins’ life came in the mid-1880s, when Bethune’s son John, who was Wiggins’ guardian and primary exploiter, died in an accident. Eliza Bethune — John’s disgruntle­d widow after a short-lived marriage, miffed about being left out of his will — went to court to wrest Wiggins from the Bethune family and gain guardiansh­ip, a suit supported by Wiggins’ mother. Eliza Bethune won; the 1887 story was covered in The New York Times.

But Wiggins, unhappy with his new guardian, essentiall­y refused, with scant exceptions, to perform for the next two decades, until his death at 59 in 1908 in his apartment in Hoboken, N.J. It may have been the final act of defiance of a figure whose life and work remain unsettled, ambiguous, compelling and worthy of even more attention.

 ?? (Smithsonia­n Institutio­n via The New York Times/George Kendall Warren) ?? Thomas Greene Wiggins, who performed as “Blind Tom,” became a touring phenomenon, playing his own compositio­ns and improvisin­g on the piano. Wiggins was born a slave.
(Smithsonia­n Institutio­n via The New York Times/George Kendall Warren) Thomas Greene Wiggins, who performed as “Blind Tom,” became a touring phenomenon, playing his own compositio­ns and improvisin­g on the piano. Wiggins was born a slave.
 ?? (Library of Congress via The New York Times/Golder & Robinson) ?? “The Battle of Manassas” was composed by Thomas Greene Wiggins, who was born a slave and performed as “Blind Tom.” One of his tricks involved playing “Fisher’s Hornpipe” with one hand and “Yankee Doodle” with the other, while singing “Dixie.”
(Library of Congress via The New York Times/Golder & Robinson) “The Battle of Manassas” was composed by Thomas Greene Wiggins, who was born a slave and performed as “Blind Tom.” One of his tricks involved playing “Fisher’s Hornpipe” with one hand and “Yankee Doodle” with the other, while singing “Dixie.”
 ?? (Library of Congress via The New York Times/Golder & Robinson) ?? Thomas Greene Wiggins performed as “Blind Tom.” Born as a slave, Wiggins reportedly earned up to $100,000 a year, well over $1 million today … but very little of his enormous earnings went directly to him.
(Library of Congress via The New York Times/Golder & Robinson) Thomas Greene Wiggins performed as “Blind Tom.” Born as a slave, Wiggins reportedly earned up to $100,000 a year, well over $1 million today … but very little of his enormous earnings went directly to him.

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