Comparing Sonny's Blues And The Weary Blues

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In both “Sonny’s Blues” and “The Weary Blues”, music serves as a form of catharsis; in “SB” Sonny is able to escape his troubled life, and in “WB” the Negro man expresses his sadness about his difficult life. The portrayal of music differs in that it’s more of a joyful presence in “SB” but a grim and depressing one in “WB”. Music is something that allows people to express feelings and emotions that can’t be easily said out loud. Sonny in James Baldwin’s “SB” turns to music as a temporary getaway from his family conflicts and drug addiction. He said “it's the only thing I want to do” for the rest of his life, and it’s the only positive thing in his life (Baldwin 32). Though his brother sees jazz as a connection to Sonny’s drugs and detrimental to his life, Sonny …show more content…

At the club in the final scene, his veins are described as boring “royal blood” (Baldwin 45). He’s back on his throne (the stage), with his people (Creole and others in the club who respect him as a musician), and rules his kingdom (performs his music). Baldwin describes him playing the piano as, “Sonny's fingers filled the air with life, his life” (Baldwin 48). Even if it was just for a song or two, Sonny found his passion and reason to live through music. He forgot his dead parents, disapproving older brother, and the future he would have had in Harlem. Though it didn’t seem as cathartic in Langston Hughes’ “WB”, the Negro man was still able to tell his story. With the simple phrase in line 30 “I wish that I had died,” the audience understands what his life has been like. Music serves as a messenger for the man. He’s able to express his loneliness and catches his audience’s attention about his wish of suicide through song. Unlike in “SB” where music is described as “personal, private, vanishing evocations,” there’s no sense of privacy when it comes to singing the blues in “WB” (Baldwin 46). It’s almost like

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