Marina Bokelman and David Evans share their highly personal perspectives regarding their fieldwork into the downhome blues traditions found largely in rural Louisiana and Mississippi during the summers of 1966 and 1967 in Going Up the Country. Their engaging call and response reveal a great deal not only about the nature and importance of their months-long odysseys, but also about their musical, academic, and personal lives before and after their experiences. Going Up the Country is an intimate, detailed, and truly singular account that has been a long time coming.--Kip Lornell, professor at George Washington University and author of eighteen books on American vernacular music
This is a monumental work that plunges the reader into the sixties through the blues culture of the Deep South. It is a deeply American tale of discovery, sadness, and celebration that truly touches the heart.--William Ferris, author of Give My Poor Heart Ease: Voices of the Mississippi Blues
The journeys and their hardships are depicted in the form of meticulous "diary entries", which make for fascinating reading and are excellently complemented by Bokelman's evocative photos.--Charley Nilsson "Jefferson"
In Going Up the Country, Evans and Bokelman offer a vivid snapshot of an era of ethnographic fieldwork with its own assumptions, procedures, vocabulary, etiquette, sensitivities, and blind spots. Anyone who fell in love with blues music in the 1960s or who recognizes its enduring importance today will find this book an honest, sometimes painful, sometimes funny opportunity to ride along.--Erika Brady, professor of folk studies at Western Kentucky University
If I told y'all everything I like about this book, it'd be too many pages long, so just let me say that if you love blues like I do, this is a joy to read, and every page is fascinating. I highly recommend it.--Charlie Musselwhite, Grammy Award-winning blues harp player
This is a book to acquire and savor.--Chris Smith "Blues and Rhythm"
The core of the book is an evocative tour through the lives of blues and gospel singers, with a level of detail and attention to both the music and their lives rivaling any blues study before or since.--Alex Greene "Memphis Flyer"
A tremendously compelling book. . . This is a study of life, real life, in a pivotal place and a crucial time, with two bright and intrepid young scholars taking copious notes along the way.--David Wesley Williams "Chapter 16"
Readers who are familiar with the blues will be fascinated by Evans and
Bokelman's accounts of their personal encounters with musicians.--David Ferris "Journal of Southern History"