In American Ballads, Marty Stuart's Backstage Photographs Capture A Musical AgeBalladeer in Black and White |
This appeared in The
Nashville Scene - May 29, 2014 |
In a professional career that has
spanned more than 40 years, musician, singer,
songwriter and collector Marty Stuart has
participated in musical history. An accomplished
photographer, he has also captured the images of
that history as well as tableaux from his own life
on the road. Edited by Kathryn Delmez, American
Ballads: The Photographs of Marty Stuart is a
new collection of Stuart's photography; it
accompanies the exhibit currently showing at the
Frist Center for the Visual Arts. Divided into three
sections — "The Masters," "Blue Line Hotshots," and
"Badlands" — Stuart's black-and-white photographs
function like lines from classic ballads, conveying
a concentrated slice from the larger stories of
individuals, settings and times that have nearly
vanished from our homogenized, click-bait age of
Internet memes and trending stories. In her opening essay, Susan H. Edwards describes Stuart's introduction to photography at the hands of his mother, Hilda Stuart, who worked in her uncle's studio while she was in college and continued to pursue photography as a hobby while raising her family. She passed her love for visual imagery on to her son, even as he was becoming a musical prodigy. Marty Stuart's own involvement with photography began in earnest after he joined the band of legendary bluegrass musician Lester Flatt. Stuart, who was only 13 at the time, accompanied Flatt to New York City in 1972. There, in a bookstore in Greenwich Village, Stuart saw the black-and-white photos of jazz musician and photographer Milt Hinton. Hinton's behind-the-scenes images of jazz legends inspired Stuart to undertake a similar documentation of the many country and bluegrass legends he was encountering. These photographs comprise the "Masters" section of American Ballads. A mix of casual shots and posed portraits, Stuart's photographs are peeks behind the mask of fame as legendary figures like Johnny Cash and Ray Charles share a moment of laughter in the studio, or Willie Nelson is captured onstage before an empty auditorium, strumming his famous gut-stringed acoustic guitar for an audience of one. But the most powerful images in "The Masters" speak to the lost world of country's legends. We live in an age where artistic expression and the desire for celebrity are the driving forces behind most musical careers. For the generation immediately preceding Stuart's, however, musical success provided a very real path out of a life of crushing poverty and hard labor. That era is reflected in many of Stuart's images: the dilapidated cabin where country-music patriarch A.P. Carter first plotted his musical escape from the hills of Virginia; Bill Monroe playing his mandolin for a flock of barnyard fowl; Kitty Wells, the "Queen of Country Music," both regal and demure as her makeup is applied backstage. All of these photographs spotlight individuals from simple backgrounds who dared to grasp for hillbilly dreams of glory. In the second section of the book, "Blue Line Hotshots," Stuart turns his camera toward the ordinary eccentrics and personalities that fill the American landscape — people who are the reigning stars of life stories that stretch both backward and forward from the moment captured by Stuart's camera. Whether an anonymous fan at a concert, a stern-faced evangelist posing for a portrait, or an Elvis impersonator singing karaoke at a county fair, all inspire curiosity about the next verse of their personal ballads. The final section of American Ballads, "Badlands," is a collection of images Stuart gathered on his many visits to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in Shannon County, S.D., site of the infamous Wounded Knee Massacre of 1890 and one of the poorest counties in the United States. While it would be simple to find images of destitution and hopelessness in such a location, Stuart instead captures the nobility, pride and hope of people living under the burden of decades of broken treaties, broken promises and broken hearts. As Stuart makes clear in his introductory text, the common thread that runs through American Ballads is the fierce spirit of individualism in his subjects. That same spirit informs the talent behind the camera — and makes Stuart's photographic journeys sweet melodies to behold. By
Randy Fox
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