Review: Greetings From Cairo Illinois
Published August 11, 2005
The category is geography: what city meets at the convergence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers? The answer is Cairo, Illinois (pronounced by locals as Karo). The follow up question: what makes Cairo memorable? Well according to Stace(rhymes with ace) England, in his new release Greetings From Cairo Illinois there's lots about Cairo to remember.
Greetings From Cairo Illinois is the history of a city that started out with such promise and has been in slow decline since the end of the Civil War. Straddling the North/South culture line it would have been an ideal way station in the shipment of goods across the country. Somehow, it was bypassed in favour of Chicago and Portland and it's been one long struggle to survive ever since.
Stace England has created a musical portrait of this sad town. From its early days as a supply depot for farmers until its present state of decay he has either found or created a song for the high, or low, points in the citiy's history. The songs reveal more about the soul of Cairo than any history book.
From the anticipatory pleasure of the farmers preparing to travel to the big town, in the traditional "Going Down To Cairo", the acoustic blues of Henry Spaulding's 1929 "Cairo Blues", and the disc's first original cut "Grant Slept Here", a picture of an exciting, perhaps dangerous, town is painted.
Ulysses S. Grant spent five months of the Civil War based in Cairo, making successful forays into Kentucky and Missouri. In 1880, after he was done with the Presidency, he came down to Cairo for a party in his honour given by a local businessman and buddy.
But the city seemed intent on shooting itself in the foot. Instead of polishing the image of "friend of Presidents", they managed to tarnish themselves with one of the worst examples of mob rule ever seen in the United States. "Equal Opportunity Lynch Mob" tells the story of the double lynching of Will James, a black man, and white Henry Salzner.
Both men were hauled from jail while awaiting trial and hung. When the rope hanging James broke, he was shot, burnt, and then decapitated. His head was stuck on a pole for public display. To commemorate the event the good citizens of Cairo had picture postcards made.
- Review: Greetings From Cairo Illinois
- Published: August 11, 2005
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Culture: Arts, Culture: Society, Music: Adult Alternative, Music: Country and Americana, Music: Folk, Music: Pop, Music: Roots Rock, Review
- Writer: Richard Marcus
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Richard Marcus is a long-haired Canadian iconoclast who writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees it at 

