Mavis
Staples is 80 years old.
An
artists’ age is generally not germane to a discussion about what they’re doing,
but in this case it’s instructive. And that’s because she’s not just soul and
gospel music royalty – born into the legendary Staple Singers, daughter of
Roebuck ‘Pops’ Staples, with a catalogue which stretches back into the 1950s –
but because she has been at the frontline of the struggle for civil rights in
the US. The Staples Singers were the house band for Martin Luther King Jr and
soundtracked the long, hard fight for African-American people to live without
discrimination in their own country. And you’ve probably noticed that the fight
for racial equality, civil rights and basic human respect has taken something
of a hit since that election in 2016.
But if
you’ve thought that Staples would have left the fight, then you’d be sorely
mistaken. In May 2019 she released the fiery We
Get By, an album written and produced for her by Ben Harper, which is
both a beacon of hope and a call for action in the Trump era. And she’ll be
bringing it and her considerable catalogue to WOMADelaide in a city about which
she has especially fond memories.
“I
remember Adelaide! I could not pronounce it the first time we came there,” she
laughs uproariously down the phone line from her home in Chicago. “I was trying
to talk to the audience and I said ‘I’m so happy to be here in…’ and finally I
just said ‘…in Lemonade!’ And boy, the people they just cracked up! They had a
fit! So yes, we have a history.”
With
the impeachment of Donald Trump gathering steam the themes of We Get By seem pretty much
ripped from the headlines, raising the eerie possibility that Harper is a
soothsayer. Certainly it captures the mood of the times in a very specific way.
“Oh, it
does, it does, and that’s exactly what
we wanted. When we went in the studio that guy was on everybody’s mind, the guy
in the White House, and we needed these songs, we needed this message to send out to the
people, to make a believer out of them that it can get better if we be close
and love one another,” she says, with emphasis. “You pass somebody on the
street and you just smile, that can do so much. You never know what the person
is going through and maybe they need a smile. And Ben Harper, his lyrics are so
strong and powerful and meaningful, and we want people to hear these lyrics and
believe ‘em and start living ‘em.”
Staples,
you see, has hope – but she also knows that hope is nothing without action and
that right now we need both, in unfailingly large supplies.
“That’s
why I sing these songs, these message songs, because all these years I’ve been
singing, that’s my desire: to try to help, to bring people together, and all
this shootin’ and killin’, it’s a different thing going on than was happening
in the sixties, and I credit this man for starting all this bigotry all over
again. It had calmed down, it was better, and now you have college students
marching with torches [at white rallies], high schoolers making hangin’ nooses,
that really got to me. I was like ‘are they gonna burn crosses next?’ And when
I do my shows I talk about it. I let the people know, we got work to do.”
She
chuckles wickedly. “And sometimes I go too far and say ‘I’m gonna go up to that
White House and I’m gonna slap that guy around!’ We’ve come all the way from
the 50s and the 60s and I can’t give up now! As long as I have my health, my
spirit and my voice I’m gonna be putting it out there in my songs. And I hope
it matters to some people.”
While
Harper is her most recent collaborator, Staples has always been beloved by
groundbreaking artists. Bob Dylan legendarily asked for her hand in marriage,
and Prince wrote an entire album for her in the 80s. In recent times she’s had
songs composed for her by everyone from Neko Case and M. Ward to Funkadelic’s
George Clinton and Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy (with whom she’s made three albums to
date). Given the calibre of artists that have written for her, has she ever had
to say to someone “sorry, this tune isn’t up to scratch?”
“Well, Ben did come in with one called Adelaide,” she slyly responds. “And I said ‘well look, I’ll sing this but I’ll have to change the words to Lemonade.’”
Mavis Staples will perform at WOMADelaide on Monday 9 March
6 – 9 March
WOMADelaide 2020
Andrew P Street is a freelance writer whose books include The Short And Excruciatingly Embarrassing Reign Of Captain Abbott (2015) and The Long And Winding Way To The Top (2017).
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