In the Pines: A Guide
On this blog, we often play detective. In fact, thatâs pretty much all we do, and this post is no different, but Iâm going to start by turning the tables. What, if anything, do you make of these fragments?:
A woman being questioned. Pine trees. A long train. A decapitated head. A missing body.
If you know from these clues that in this post weâll listen to some great 20th century American musicians â including Lead Belly, Bill Monroe, Nathan Abshire, Roscoe Holcomb, Pete Seeger, the Kossoy Sisters, the Dead, Kurt Cobain, Odetta, and others â then you’ve just engaged in a mental process called âminding the gapâ: making up images that resolve the gaps created by missing data in order to create coherent thoughts. âMinding the gapâ is a form of story-making â retrieving a familiar tale from your mental library or making up a new one to connect otherwise fragmented bits of information. The phrase comes from the London rapid transit system where it serves as a public safety warning, a reminder to rail passengers to be careful when crossing the gap between the train door and the platform, lest they fall onto the tracks and get run over.
If you didnât recognize the traditional American folk song âIn the Pinesâ from the above clues, or didnât anticipate all the musicians I listed, donât worry. Youâre in good company. Also known as âWhere Did You Sleep Last Night?,â âBlack Girl,â and âThe Longest Train I Ever Saw,â the song consists entirely of fragments, snippets of dialogue and startling single images that force the listener to make up his or her own story. Further, the fragments constantly change shape in dozens of song variants â reportedly there are now over 160 â all of which have, in turn, been covered dozens of times by artists in a variety of genres. Dizzy yet? Navigating all these fragments and the gaps between them requires a sure foot.
The original meaning of âmind the gapâ is also relevant, perhaps, because the songâs primary image suggests a horrible rail accident: a decapitated head found stuck in a trainâs driving wheel.
Accident, you say? Sounds like murder to me. Letâs go sleuthing. Take my hand, mind that gap.
Letâs start with the two versions of the song that are best known today. The first is Lead Bellyâs legendary version. Or, rather, one of them. Lead Belly recorded the song multiple times between 1944 and 1948, and each one is a bit different. The second is Kurt Cobainâs version, recorded for MTVâs Unplugged in late 1993 and released as a single following his suicide several months later. Cobain introduces his version as an homage to Lead Belly and it sounds a lot like a specific 1944 Lead Belly recording, with the notable exception that Cobain chooses to scream the last lines.
âIf you were breathing, sentient, and reasonably conscious in 1994, you saw the footage of [Cobain’s] performance about twelve million times in the months following [his] suicide,â writes Ron Kretsch on the website Dangerous Minds. Writing about âIn the Pinesâ in the New York Times in 1994 a few months after Cobainâs suicide, music writer Eric Weisbard concluded that Cobainâs rendition was definitive, the final word: ââIn the Pinesâ will have other versions, of course. But there is really no need for anyone to ever sing it again.â
Wow. Perhaps for you as well, a worrisome new cognitive gap opens up right there: I believe I was reasonably conscious in 1994, but I donât remember seeing Cobainâs performance then, nor would I doom all future versions to irrelevance. But, obviously, for many people these two versions of the song are now inextricably linked, and Cobainâs is conclusive.