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Tobacco Road

 
Album Review: Tobacco Road

Review

The Nashville Teens were a truly kick-ass rock & roll band from London. Their main claim to fame was providing the kamikaze backup behind Jerry Lee Lewis on his Live at the Star Club LP and recording the massive hit "Tobacco Road." This disc reissues that entire 1964 album and adds another 14 bonus tracks to it, getting us all the way to 1971 in the group's recorded output. Hot versions Of "Mona," "I Like It Like That," "La Bamba," and "Too Much" are the album's high points, and while the later tracks are a nice touch, they don't quite measure to the group's halcyon days. ~ Cub Koda, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Tobacco Road (Lyrics) John D. Loudermilk The Nashville Teens (2:27)
Mona The Nashville Teens (4:38)
Need You Francis Craig The Nashville Teens (2:56)
Bread and Butter Man The Nashville Teens (2:36)
Hurtin' Inside Cirino Colacrai, Teddy Randazzo The Nashville Teens (2:03)
(I'm Your) Hoochie Coochie Man Willie Dixon The Nashville Teens (3:37)
Google Eye John D. Loudermilk The Nashville Teens (2:20)
Too Much John Carter, Carter-Lewis The Nashville Teens (2:47)
Parchment Farm Mose Allison The Nashville Teens (2:15)
I Like It Like That Chris Kenner, Allen Toussaint The Nashville Teens (2:02)
How Deep Is the Ocean? Irving Berlin The Nashville Teens (2:42)
La Bamba Ritchie Valens The Nashville Teens (2:09)
TNT John Hawken The Nashville Teens (2:53)
Devil-In-Law The Nashville Teens (2:59)
Find My Way Back Home The Nashville Teens (2:23)
What'cha Gonna Do? [*] David "Dai" Jenkins The Nashville Teens (1:46)
I Know How It Feels to Be Loved [*] The Nashville Teens (2:45)
Upside Down [*] Arthur Sharp The Nashville Teens (2:22)
Forbidden Fruit [*] The Nashville Teens (3:01)
Revived 45 Time [*] The Nashville Teens (1:45)
That's My Woman [*] The Nashville Teens (2:04)
I'm Coming Home [*] The Nashville Teens (3:05)
The Biggest Night of Her Life [*] Randy Newman The Nashville Teens (2:24)
Last Minute [*] Arthur Sharp The Nashville Teens (1:57)
All Along the Watchtower [*] Bob Dylan The Nashville Teens (2:48)
Sun Dog [*] Ray Phillips, John Hawken, Arthur Sharp, John Allen The Nashville Teens (3:10)
Poor Boy [*] The Nashville Teens (2:32)
Ella James [*] Roy Wood The Nashville Teens (2:51)
Tennessee Woman [*] The Nashville Teens (3:01)

Credits

Chris Welch (Liner Notes), Arthur Sharp (Vocals), The Nashville Teens (?), Ray Phillips (Vocals), John Allen (Guitar), Barry Jenkins (Drums), Ray Phillips (Harmonica), John Hawken (Keyboards), Pete Shannon (Guitar (Bass)), Mickie Most (Producer)
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Wikipedia: Tobacco Road (novel)
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1st edition (Scribners)

Tobacco Road is a 1932 novel by Erskine Caldwell about Georgia sharecroppers. It was dramatized for Broadway by Jack Kirkland in 1933, and ran for a then-astounding eight years (3,182 performances). A 1941 film version, deliberately played mainly for laughs, was directed by John Ford, and the storyline was considerably altered. [1]

Plot introduction

Tobacco Road is set in Augusta, Georgia during the worst years of the Great Depression. It depicts a family of poor white tenant farmers, the Lesters, as one of the many small Southern cotton farmers estranged by the industrialization of production and the migration into cities. The main character of the novel is Jeeter Lester, an ignorant and sinful man who is redeemed by his love of the land and his faith in the fertility and promise of soil.

Plot summary

Lov Bensey, a friend of the Lesters, walks to his home at the train yard coal chute. He has walked seven and a half miles to get a sack of winter turnips for fifty cents; which is half of his daily wage. On his way home he stops by the Lesters to talk to Jeeter about Jeeter's twelve year old daughter Pearl, who is married to Lov. While Lov is talking to Jeeter, the book introduces the reader to sixteen year-old Dude, the youngest of the Lester boys; Ada, Jeeter’s wife; Grandma Lester; and Ellie May, an eighteen year old girl with a grotesque cleft lip. The entire family, acting in complete desperation, works to steal the turnips from Lov, who then becomes nauseated by the sight and leaves for home.

At this point the preacher Bessie emerges on the scene. Sister Bessie Rice, like Ellie May, also has a deformity of the face. Bessie’s nose contains no bone, and so when looking straight at her face one can see straight into her nostrils, like a pig. Despite this, Jeeter is still attracted to her. She does some preaching and praying for everyone’s sins, and then proposes marriage to Dude. However, Dude is more interested in her offer of letting him drive the new automobile which she promises to purchase, than in actually getting married to her. Bessie then goes home to her hovel to ask God whether or not she and Dude should get married.

Jeeter has lived on the same plot of land since he was born, and even though his standard of living continues to decline until he and his family begin to starve, Jeeter stubbornly refuses to move to the city to make a better life for himself by working in a cotton mill. Such a life, he insists, would be impossible for him to live.

Alongside Jeeter’s preoccupation with farming the land is his preoccupation with his own imminent death. Ada as well is fixated on her death, but their morbidity does not take the form of lamentation or self-pity. Ada’s main concern is that she won't be buried in her tattered, old, out-of-style calico dress, while Jeeter’s main concern is that his body will not be left in the old corn storage shed where it might be eaten by rats. He has held a terrible phobia of rats ever since he saw his dead father’s face half-eaten by them on the day of his funeral. Neither of these two characters have any doubts that they are going to die sometime soon, and it is not their present life but their lifeless bodies which they care about most. Possibly they realize that their way of life is already dead; thus their primary concern becomes not the preservation of that life but its appearance during burial.

When Sister Bessie returns the next day to the Lester house, she exclaims that God has given her his approval for the marriage between Dude and herself. The two then start the long walk to Fuller in order to purchase a new Ford, for the purpose of traveling around the country and preaching. Once they are in the auto showroom, the salesmen take advantage of Bessie's rural naiveté to pull off a quick and profitable sale, while at the same time constantly making fun of her deformed nose. Later, Dude and Bessie then go off to get their marriage certificate and are questioned by the county official, who reprimands Bessie for attempting to marry a boy of sixteen years. Finally, they get the marriage license, and the anxious Dude gets to drive the automobile again. Dude incessantly sounds the car horn whenever he gets behind the steering wheel to drive off somewhere.

Over the course of the next two days, the automobile slowly gets wrecked more and more. First there is an accident with a wagon in which they end up killing the negro driver, and then Dude drives into a stump. The seats get torn by Jeeter’s blackjack wood, which he attempts to sell in the city of Augusta. The engine also becomes irreparably damaged by being run without enough oil. On top of this, the spare tire is sold for three dollars in order to pay for gasoline, food, and a night at a disreputable hotel where Bessie willingly gets prostituted by the manager from room to room. Much later Bessie refuses to let Jeeter ride in her car anymore, which makes him upset to the point of kicking her off the land. When she physically attacks him, Ada and Jeeter proceed to beat Bessie and poke her with sticks until she and Dude take off in the car.

While fleeing from Ada and Jeeter’s onslaught, Dude backs right over Grandma Lester, who then lays mashed into the dirt road, near dead. Lov runs down to see Jeeter, and asks him if he knows what happened to Pearl, Lov’s 12-year-old wife, who had run away to the city to be free of Lov, and the bleak and desperate country life surrounding her. Jeeter notes that more than a few of his daughters have run away to the city. After this discussion about the girls running away, the two notice Grandma’s corpse and drag her into the field to dig her grave and bury her.

Lov departs and Caldwell reflects on Jeeter’s position as a tenant farmer in the South. Even though Jeeter, like so many others around him, had the urge to plant a crop during this time of the year, there was nothing he could do. His landlord was an absentee and had abandoned Jeeter and the rest of those who had lived on his land and given him shares of their crop in exchange for credit for seeds and fertilizer. The stores in the city would not grant any more credit to Jeeter or any of the other farmers because it was too risky and there were too many asking for it.

On this sad note the novel concludes. As Jeeter and Ada sleep, they are killed by a fire that ignites the shingles of their house, which fire Jeeter had created to burn off broom sedge, in the hope of being able to somehow gain enough credit to farm his land that spring.

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tobacco road
Caldwell, Erskine Preston (American writer)
Ole Olsen (literature)

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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