As a teenager I purchased a copy of Sam's The Country Blues. I enjoyed it and filed it away then never looked at anything he wrote again. Why? Having picked Walking A Blues Road up in Peckham library I'm ashamed that I've ignored Sam for so long. This book, subtitled A Blues Reader 1956-2004, is a superb collection of Sam's writing across his adult life.
It begins with his 1950s infatuation with country blues and old jazz, covers profiles/interviews/sleeve notes he wrote for the likes of Furry Lewis and Henry Townsend and lesser known blues artists, goes into blues as protest, then him getting his head around the electric blues scene in Chicago in the mid-60s - he went on to sign Buddy Guy and Junior Wells to Vanguard and produce albums of theirs - then in the 1970s he went to West Africa to further explore the links between African American music and griots. He comes to a conclusion that while he loves a lot of the music he hears - and records some that must have been released by Folkways in the 1970s - blues is a genuinely American hybrid.
This is followed by more good stuff - long appreciations of Lightnin' Hopkins and Rockin' Dopsie amongst them. He writes clearly and enthusiastically, full of passion and hungry in his quest for knowledge. Nothing here from his time in the Bahamas (which Dave Peabody says is one of Sam's best books). Adam, I've got a new hero to add to the music writer pantheon.
