The Borneo Post

In creating rock, Berry faced daunting racial barrier

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NEW YORK: With “Johnny B. Goode”, a 1958 song that so defined rock ‘n’ roll that the US space programme chose it to introduce the music to potential extraterre­strials, Chuck Berry created a now classic character -- the scrappy guitarist who triumphs through pure skill.

“People passing by, they would stop and say / Oh my, that little country boy could play,” Berry sang.

But Berry had tinkered with the lyrics. He later explained that he had originally written, “that little colored boy could play” -but changed it so the song could appear on the radio.

Berry, who died Saturday at age 90, helped create both rock ‘n’ roll and modern youth culture, becoming one of the first African American stars to win a wide white audience.

Yet Berry was also forced to navigate a delicate line in a country that was still largely under the institutio­nalized discrimina­tion of Jim Crow laws.

His career suffered a major blow when he was imprisoned for allegedly sleeping with an underage waitress -- a conviction seen by many as a warning from the white establishm­ent against African American artists who rise too far.

As for the music, Berry achieved his success in part by his skill in understand­ing the racial divide. Born to a middleclas­s family in St. Louis, Berry played blues guitar but knew that white audiences wanted country.

He combined the two -- joking he was a “black hillbilly” -- as well as other genres, creating the sensation that became rock ‘n’ roll, even if he hesitated to call himself its father.

Voice of youth freedom

As the baby boom generation came of age, Berry won cheering crowds with his consummate showmanshi­p, including his “duck walk” across stage, and lyrics that celebrated youthful freedom. His first song “Maybellene” spoke of cruising in the open air in his Cadillac.

Berry managed to capture “the rebellious­ness, the playfulnes­s, the irrepressi­bility” of a generation, said Jack Hamilton, an assistant professor at the University of Virginia and author of “Just Around Midnight: Rock and Roll and the Racial Imaginatio­n.”

“For a black man to do that in the 1950s was pretty groundbrea­king. He wrote what became the soundtrack for American youth, both white and black,” he said.

Berry rarely spoke to media, fearing he would be sensationa­lized, and was strikingly diplomatic when asked about racial politics -- and how his white contempora­ry Elvis Presley became so much wealthier.

In a 1987 interview with the Los Angeles Times, Berry acknowledg­ed that television networks were white- owned and gave more exposure to Elvis but said he did not see “The King” as his rival.

“It’s not unfair that seven people are eating turkey and I chose to have chili or whatever. That’s what it was. More people chose his music than chose mine,” he said.

In 1959 -- the same year Berry was briefly arrested after a white girl embraced him in Mississipp­i -- the rocker hailed the Eisenhower- era American dream with “Back in the USA”, said to be written after he visited Australia and saw the conditions of aboriginal people.

“I’m so glad I’m livin’ in the USA,” he sang, speaking of a land “where hamburgers sizzle on an open grill night and day.”

‘Brown Eyed Handsome Man’

He touched more directly on race in “Brown Eyed Handsome Man”, which he wrote after visiting California and being struck by being around so many fellow African Americans and Latinos.

“Ever since the world began / There’s been a whole lotta good women shedding tears over a brown eyed handsome man.”

In a cruel irony, Berry was in prison just as white rockers led by The Beatles and The Rolling Stones took over the United States with the British invasion.

Other waves of African American music later transforme­d the landscape from Motown in the 1960s to hiphop, which in contrast to rock ‘n’ roll has its origins in deep community roots rather than fusion.

Rocker Tom Petty, in a speech last month as he accepted a lifetime Grammy award, saw the imprisonme­nt of Berry as part of long conspiracy against rock and its racially mixed origins.

“The music became popular and it empowered the youth of America. The government got very nervous -- especially the Republican­s,” Petty said.

“They put Elvis in the Army and they put Chuck Berry in jail. Things calmed down for a couple of years. But it was too late -- the music had reached England. And they remembered it.” — AFP

 ??  ?? This file photo taken on Apr 15, 2013 shows Berry performing during a concert in Montevideo, Uruguay.
This file photo taken on Apr 15, 2013 shows Berry performing during a concert in Montevideo, Uruguay.
 ??  ?? This file photo taken on July 10, 1981 shows US rock singer Chuck Berry performing in Nice, France during the “Grand Jazz Parade”.
This file photo taken on July 10, 1981 shows US rock singer Chuck Berry performing in Nice, France during the “Grand Jazz Parade”.
 ??  ?? The Chuck Berry House sits at 3137 Whittier Street in St. Louis, Missouri. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2008 and it is the location where Berry wrote and composed some of his memorable songs.
The Chuck Berry House sits at 3137 Whittier Street in St. Louis, Missouri. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2008 and it is the location where Berry wrote and composed some of his memorable songs.
 ??  ?? A young girl and man dance to music by Chuck Berry outside the statue of Chuck Berry on Mar 19 in University City, Missouri.
A young girl and man dance to music by Chuck Berry outside the statue of Chuck Berry on Mar 19 in University City, Missouri.
 ??  ?? A man takes a photos of a statue of Berry in University City, Missouri.
A man takes a photos of a statue of Berry in University City, Missouri.

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