by johnny2hats » Thu Apr 25, 2013 9:59 pm 
			
			This is my first post! (besides my intro, bio deal) Great topic to get started. So . . . about 18 years ago I had the honor of holding and admiring what was  Elmore James's last guitar. I was hesitant to play it because I didn't want to taint a relic. I live in the Mississippi Delta near Greenwood. (where Robert Johnson was poisoned) I was 18 or 19 years old and a blossoming blues lover. (My first post and I've already used the word "blossoming"! Yikes!!!) Two years before, I befriended a local blues dj who was also a publicist and promoter for Mississippi Crossroads Inc. They owned the rights to, represented, and managed the Robert Johnson estate, and were in the process of taking on the Elmore James estate. They also produced a blues radio show, which was played on stations across the country. Anyway, getting to Elmore . . . . One day my cousin and I stopped by the studio, and my dj friend, Pat, said he had a surprise to show us. He left the room and came back with a guitar case in his hand. In this case was Elmore's last known guitar. Sources said that Elmore, in classic unpredictable bluesman fashion, pawned his guitars. He was known to be a gambler and moonshine "enthusiast" Preparing to go play overseas at the American Folk Blues Festival, he acquired this last guitar. It's been so long and I was not the vintage pawn shop guitar freak that I am now, therefore I don't recall what brand it was. Sorry!!!! It was missing a couple of strings, but the blues don't need but one. It was brought to the Crossroads office by a family member of Mr. James. The story goes, he was putting some strings on it while at his cousin's house, stopped, went in the bathroom and died of a heart attack. The guitar didn't see the light of day for more than 30 years until a relative found it and and gave it to Mississippi Crossroads Inc. The Crossroads took on several bluesmen's estates to protect, preserve, promote, and manage them in the interest of the artists' descendants, overseeing the portioning of royalties amongst legitimate family. You can only imagine how many folks came out of the woodworks! It was quite a task! So anyway, that's my first post, and I promise they won't all be this long.