Harry and the Mudman
Harrison Felder wiped the line of foam from his upper lip and hunched
his shoulders for the trudge back to work.
Mudman Pepper had been a
disappointment. Harrison Felder didn't know just what he had expected, but the
Mudman was not it. The Mudman did not, as far as Harrison could tell, pack a gun
or a knife.
Someday. Someday, he told himself, someday I will play at a bar I can afford to
drink in. The musicians, the side-men, drank down on Bleecker Street, a wild
scuttle between sets, gulping fifteen-cent green ale surrounded by the guttering
neon and sawdust floors of skid row. The Greenwich Village tourist bars were too
expensive for the musicians who played in them.
The Mudman traveled alone and read quietly in the kitchen between sets. No road
manager—just a brown Samsonite overnighter, his guitar case and the baggy blue
suit he stood up in.
Harrison had studied the Mudman's early recordings, slowing them down to pick up
the difficult passages. At the bottom of the grooves, struggling against a tidal
roar of record noise, lay genius. These recordings, the Mudman's grip on
history, had been made at an Alabama prison camp in the 20's. The Mudman had
killed someone at a card game. With an axe handle.
Harrison had not expected the verdigris ambience of a Motown superstar, but he
had expected something. The Mudman had in tow no entourage of elongated,
straight-haired blonde Swedes from Minnesota colleges, no black girls hung with dangles of tribal hodgepodge, there to get
their consciousnesses raised.
Nothing. There was only The Mudman—no groupies, no dope. There were no bimbos,
blonde or black.
When the Mudman played it was as though a light went on somewhere deep inside
his being to become part of his songs. He soared, he flowed, he whispered,
sobbed and screamed, his guitar an involved bird-voice beyond his control. When
the Mudman stopped, the light went off. Diffident, self-effacing, he returned to
the kitchen. Harrison snuck a look at the book. Mickey Spillane—Kiss Me, Deadly.
The bar over the basement coffee house where Harrison played guitar, a competing
premises, was upstairs one flight to MacDougal Street and two doors uptown, the
Kettle of Fish. Harrison drank espresso with whiskey there in the morning, eight
o'clock, before the prices went up at noon. Downstairs at the Gaslight Café,
Mister Horne had decreed liquor stayed in the kitchen; any bottles brought in
were for the exclusive use of visiting celebrities. Like the Mudman—Mudman
Pepper, Delta bluesman, a big black bull-frog from out of the past. The Mudman
was in his seventies, a legend, and he did not drink.
The kitchen bottle stayed closed. Reefer was okay, but outside in the air shaft
where a December drizzle soaked the joints and put them out even in the summer,
New York magic. Barron, the dishwasher, an actor waiting for his big break, got
off on the propellant from the cans of industrial whipped cream Mister Horne
bought by the case for hot cider and cappuccino. It was nitrous oxide, laughing
gas. Harrison had passed through the kitchen on the way to the air shaft for a
toke and discovered Barron convulsed over a sink full of whipped cream, four
empty cans on the floor and a detached nozzle in his nose.
Esme Zilko was the reason Harrison was playing at the Gaslight—Esme had an album
and didn’t wear any underwear. Harrison sat perched atop a high stool wearing a
black suit and played for Esme, just out of a spotlight that shone on Esme and
Esme alone. When she sang, she wobbled her head from side to side on a universal
pivot like a broken doll. It looked like she had been in a car crash and, after
six months in a cervical collar, was testing her doctor's work. “I am feeling
the music,” she explained. Hopefully, she reminded him about her underwear or
lack of same, challenging him to test the truth of her statement. The album she
sold after each set.
Esme greeted him at the door of the cellar café. “Sold ten. Ten albums.” She was
wearing what she called Her Record Hat, a military beret with a 12-inch LP glued
to the top where the tam tassel would be. It looked like a mortarboard from
somebody’s School of Cylindrical Studies, sliced thin. She put it on between
sets to give the folks in the audience the idea that the hustle was on and
they'd better buy. “Mister Horne wants you should get the Mudman out of the
kitchen. He's on next.”
The Mudman looked up from Kiss Me, Deadly.
“Wanna play? You play real good, let's jam.”
“Uh, sure,” an invitation from the legend. Harrison couldn’t refuse.
The Mudman's guitar case was opened. With a dish towel, he fastidiously wiped
the strings, settled himself on a crate of onions and snapped his E-string. The
Mudman's foot started pounding a measured beat. Harrison waited to see where the
Mudman was going, then recognized the rhythm pattern and went up the neck,
comping with three-note chord forms where the Mudman left him openings. It was a
block-form blues in C. They played for ten minutes.
“Okay. There. Stop. Show me that,” said Mudman Pepper.
Esme poked the Record Hat in through the kitchen’s swinging doors. “Harry. Now.
Mr. Horne is getting antsy.”
“What?” Harrison had been drawn into the music. He was playing an unaccented,
simple form in stop-time, the accent note left out, a subtle implication.
“Do it.”
Harrison played the passage again.
“Neat. Show me.”
Harrison showed him several times. The Mudman was a quick study. Soon he was
flying with his own improvisations on the form.
“Yeah. Yeah. You play real good.” The Mudman was pleased with the new lick.
“For a white boy.”
“Heh. Heh.” The big, black bullfrog face produced an immense grin, “You said
that, not me. where'd you ever learn that?”
“Off your old records.”
There was a silence between them that seemed to last longer than it really did.
The Mudman reached into the cabinet above the steam table and broke the seal on
Mister Horne's celebrity bottle.
“Haree! Puleeze!” Esme at the kitchen doors again.
The Mudman took a swallow and passed the celebrity bottle to Harrison. “I guess
just this once. The Church, you know. I took the pledge.”
References:
Mississippi John Hurt on
the Internet Archive, Louis Collins and
Avalon Blues recorded on December 21, 1928
Two 10-inch
tapes of interviews with Skip James of Bentonia, Mississippi, done by Bob Fass, Rob and Jane Hunter, and Bill Barth, on WBAI-FM, New York, ca. 1966.
American Folklife Center—AFS 15,659-15,660]
...and here's
Bill Barth's take on uprooting
a disappeared blues singer.
NOTE—Mudman Pepper is many men. The above are only the most likely suspects.
About
Alarms & Excursions
- Lovers, losers, and part-time demons
- Why Rain of Frogs?
- Jelly side down
- Aldo and the Bristleheads
- Death of a Species
- Alistair Cooke's bones
- Robert Sheckley and Basil Rathbone
- The Year We Invented Rock N Roll
- Mehitabel the Cat
- Hooray for the Pulps
- The Illuminati Owe Carl .57
- The Night Telegraph Operator
- The Fastest Hound Dog in the State of Maine
- The Nooz at Newn
- That Old-tyme Religion
- Why William Powell?
- Judge Crater's First Miracle
- Judge Crater's Second Miracle
- Necrophilia Jones
- Tom Ashley and the coo-coo bird
- Loose Lips Sink Ships
- Harry and the Mudman
- A Deuce of Moose
- Zeitgeist is the Right Geist
- 3 Days with Claudette Colbert
- 3000 Beatniks Riot in Square
- McMuckle makes a Minyan
- Night bowling in Taunton, Mass.
- The Death of James A. Garfield
- The Manticore's tale
- The Bookworm #1
- The Bookworm #2
- Miguel Santandrea
- Miss Sweet Potato Pie
- Lucy and the Mouse
- St Velcro™ and the Swan
More Stuff
- Platterland—2010
- Libby book—2011
- Mark Twain in trouble
- Play it (again), Sam
- Sylvester and Beany
- Scrotum, a wrinkled old retainer
- Fred Splendid, a radio relic
- A Rob Hunter Reader
- Acknowledgements
- Rob Hunter bio
Alternate Realities

- Anna Wilkenfeld
- Bobbie Jean Pentecost
- Charlie Hunter
- Jennifer Claire Hunter
- Markus Neidel
- Barbara Beeman
- Barbara Baig
- Tina Blondell
- Chris Dodkin
- Ray Korona
- Orange Crate Art
- Dum Luk’s
- Tony Trischka
- Ralph Lee Smith
- Elizabeth Ostrander
- Hot Club of San Francisco
- Marshall Payne
- Mom & Pop Culture Shop
- Mondolithic Studios
- Sara Jane Sparks


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