Robert Johnson — Unrecorded Repertoire
by Robert Johnson

The vast majority of Robert Johnson's musical output — the songs he performed live in juke joints, street corners, and plantation gatherings across the Mississippi Delta but never recorded. Only 29 songs (from two recording sessions in 1936–1937) survive. Musicians who heard him play described dozens of additional original compositions.
Confidence Map
Each section of this reconstruction is graded by the strength of its supporting evidence. Hover over a section to learn why.
General Description
speculativeThe vast majority of Robert Johnson's musical output — the songs he performed live in juke joints, street corners, and plantation gatherings across the Mississippi Delta but never recorded. Only 29 so...
Based on 3 cited source(s) and overall exhibit confidence of 20%.
Historical Context
highRobert Johnson is the most mythologised figure in American music. His 29 recorded songs — cut in a San Antonio hotel room in November 1936 and a Dallas warehouse in June 1937 — became the foundation o...
Supported by multiple scholarly references.
Circumstances of Loss
mediumLost with Johnson's death at age 27; he left no written scores, and the oral tradition preserved only fragments through other musicians' memories
Loss date is documented, lending credibility to the account.
The Story of Loss
Cause: Lost with Johnson's death at age 27; he left no written scores, and the oral tradition preserved only fragments through other musicians' memories
Circumstances: Johnson died on 16 August 1938 in Greenwood, Mississippi, at age 27. His unrecorded songs survived only in the memories of fellow musicians. As those musicians aged and died through the latter 20th century, even the fragmentary oral record faded. Johnny Shines (d. 1992) and Honeyboy Edwards (d. 2011) were the last major witnesses to Johnson's live performances.
Date of loss: 16 August 1938
Historical Context
Robert Johnson is the most mythologised figure in American music. His 29 recorded songs — cut in a San Antonio hotel room in November 1936 and a Dallas warehouse in June 1937 — became the foundation of modern blues, rock and roll, and popular music. But Johnson was a working musician who performed nightly, and his live repertoire far exceeded his recordings. Fellow musicians including Johnny Shines, David "Honeyboy" Edwards, and Robert Lockwood Jr. described hearing Johnson play dozens of songs that were never recorded. Shines, who travelled with Johnson for two years, recalled original compositions, popular songs of the day, and blues that Johnson modified into his own style. Edwards described Johnson as having an enormous working repertoire spanning blues, gospel, hillbilly, and popular songs. The two recording sessions captured only Johnson's most polished originals and a handful of covers. The loss is compounded by the circumstances of Delta blues culture: Johnson could not read or write music, worked in an oral tradition, and performed for audiences who left no written records. When he died on 16 August 1938 — reportedly poisoned by a jealous husband — his unrecorded music died with him, preserved only as fragments in the memories and subsequent recordings of musicians who heard him play.
Reconstruction Methodology
This exhibit's reconstruction was generated using AI analysis of historical records, scholarly references, and contextual evidence from the 1930–1938 period. Each section of the reconstruction is tagged with a confidence level reflecting the strength of the underlying evidence.
Vestige reconstructions are scholarly tools, not definitive claims. They represent our best understanding given available evidence and are always presented with transparent methodology.
Cited Sources
- 1
Searching for Robert Johnson
Peter Guralnick (1989)
- 2
Escaping the Delta: Robert Johnson and the Invention of the Blues
Elijah Wald (2004)
- 3
Up Jumped the Devil: The Real Life of Robert Johnson
Bruce Conforth and Gayle Dean Wardlow (2019)