Focus on the Blues
Richard Waterman's never-before-published photographs caught the roots music legends at their down-home best
- By David Friend
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2003, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
“That’s like Faulkner saying that he was a farmer, not a writer,” says William Ferris, a folklorist and a former chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities. “There’s no question [Waterman] knew what he was doing and he did it systematically, like any good folklorist or documentary photographer. He is a national treasure.”
Howard Stovall, a former executive director of the Memphis-based Blues Foundation, says Waterman “had amassed an incredible body of work before it even occurred to him that there was a ‘body of work.’ ” He adds, “There’s probably no one in America who was that close to that many blues artists—with a camera in his hand.”
Waterman’s camera work is only now coming to light, but his efforts on behalf of musicians have long been recognized. “Dick helped shepherd the blues to a place in the culture that truly befits its worth,” says Raitt. He has had David-and-Goliath triumphs over record companies, extracting copyrights and royalties for blues musicians and their heirs. “In those days,” says James Cotton, the Mississippi-born harmonica master and bandleader (whom Waterman did not represent), Waterman “was the tops because he treated his artists right and he made them money.” Peter Guralnick, author of biographies of Robert Johnson and Elvis Presley, sees a connection between Waterman’s management style and his photography: “Dick’s [career] has always been about treating people fairly. I think the photographs are about trying to reflect people honestly.”
Since 1986, Waterman has made his home in the Delta, that fertile corner of northwest Mississippi known for growing cotton and bluesmen. He describes himself as one of Oxford’s token Northerners. “Every Southern town has to have a crackpot eccentric Yankee,” he says. As it happens, he lives a short drive from Clarksdale, site of the mythical “Crossroads,” popularized by Eric Clapton and Cream, where blues legend Robert Johnson supposedly traded his soul to the Devil in exchange for a wizard’s way with a guitar.
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