Subject: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: Geoff the Duck Date: 19 Feb 01 - 06:43 AM I've just been to a festival at Gainsborough (Lincolnshire, UK) organised by the "Friends of American Old Time Music and Dance" (FOAOTMAD). Performing were Jim Costa and Jim Lloyd, who recreate performances of songs by Uncle Dave Macon and Sam McGee from around the 1930's/40's. Watching them reminded me that years back I found a copy of the LP Laugh your blues away, and intended to learn some of the songs from it. My problem was that I could only decipher half of the lyrics (a combination of old recordings and muffled american accents). Do any of you know if any of Uncle Dave's songs have been put into print, either on paper or on the web? Two from the LP which I partially transcribed were "Go on, Nora Lee" and "Come on buddie, don't you want to go". Can anyone supply me with a set of words for either? Many thanks in advance, Geoff.
-Joe Offer- |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: Pinetop Slim Date: 19 Feb 01 - 10:03 AM Bet you'd find Waterbound on the DT, maybe others. Deer Chase is in Lomax's Folk Songs of North America. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: Geoff the Duck Date: 19 Feb 01 - 06:55 PM I tried the digitrad for the two particular sets of lyrics which I am after, but could not locate anything resembling them. That's why I am looking for help from mudcatters. Are there any Dixie Dewdrop fans out there? Quack GtD. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: Dale Rose Date: 19 Feb 01 - 08:04 PM We're here, Geoff, it's just that sometimes it takes a while. I am sure that somewhere over in the corner, several are hard at work, madly transcribing their favorite Uncle Dave songs.
I know you said you searched the Digitrad, but to see what others have written about him and his songs over the years, have you entered DAVE MACON in the Digitrad and Forum Search box? Many good leads there.
Here are a couple more. Check out the thread Lyr Add: Wait Till The Clouds Roll By As a bonus, there is a link to the Real Audio of the song by Uncle Dave, and a clip of same by Cathy Barton and Dave Para. I certainly hope people are clicking on it, because it is a really great song!
You can find the sheet music for Peek-A-Boo at The Lester S. Levy Collection of Sheet Music, written by William J. Scanlan in 1883 and one of my favorite Uncle Dave songs. Friends of mine perform it, but as an instrumental, Peek-A-Boo Waltz. Now excuse me, while I go over there into the corner and get back to work. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: Geoff the Duck Date: 20 Feb 01 - 05:46 AM Thanks Dale, I'll check them out. Quack! GtD |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: GUEST,Mark Ross Date: 22 Feb 01 - 12:51 AM Some of Uncle Dave's songs can be found in THE OLD TIME SONG BOOK(formerly known as the NEW LOST CITY RAMBLERS SONGBOOK. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: Arkie Date: 23 Feb 01 - 12:26 AM Two performers whose performances are reminiscent of Dave Macon are Doc Wilhite of Kentucky and Leroy Troy, the Tennessee Slicker. Doc does a lot of Uncle Dave's songs and stories. Leroy does not do many of the Dave Macon songs but is a joy to watch as well as hear. He twirls and flings the banjo about as he plays and is certainly an entertainer in the Macon Style. As for songs, one of my favorites which is seldom heard these days is "The Wreck of the Tennessee Gravy Train". The chorus goes "If we were ever up against it, we're up against it now." |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: Abby Sale Date: 23 Feb 01 - 05:45 PM Uncle Dave Macon's Lyrics Page (Clicky) |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: Abby Sale Date: 23 Feb 01 - 06:23 PM Well, it just shows to go that life is a mysterious and transatory and uncontrolled thing - and that I need to update my links every 10 to 13 years... that lyrics page I type in has been kidnapped and ain't there. I just don't know where it is at all. I did find a pretty good old timey page at http://www.folkcircle.com/ though. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: GUEST,Gene Date: 23 Feb 01 - 08:41 PM * CLICK TO: UNCLE DAVE MACON CD/NFO * |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: GUEST,GtD at Alt Amiga show Huddersfield England Date: 24 Feb 01 - 09:59 AM It's not so much geting the recordings of the songs as being unable to quite understand the singing that I have a problem with. That is why I am after something as text - I can usually read that - although when I spent five years editing a local magazine some of the regular contributers put that ability severely to the test.
|
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: Gern Date: 24 Feb 01 - 10:05 AM Abby, your link didn't work (for me, at least,) and I'd really like to find some lyrics. Uncle Dave is notoriously hard to figure out. Let me second the two names mentioned earlier. Doc Wilhite is a dentist from Calhoun, KY, who dresses up like Uncle Dave (with "chin whiskers and gates-ajar collar") and plays songs like "Poor Sinner Fare Thee Well" and "Chewing Gum." Leroy Troy is great! Authentic nostalgia on banjo and vocals. He was a Hee-Haw regular and performer on the 'General Jackson,' and won the big Heritage Award last year at Uncle Dave Macon Days in Murfreesboro, TN (where both Leroy and Doc can be heard each July.) Leroy's Uncle Dave song list includes "Bully of the Town," "On the Dixie Bee Line," "Keep My Skillet Good and Greasy" and others. I've been more successful at pilfering Uncle Dave's lyrics from covers by other artists: Grandpa Jones' "Way Down the Old Plank Road," Stringbean's "I'm the Man Who Rode the Mule Around the World" and the Hotmud Family's "When the Train Comes Along." |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: Stewie Date: 26 Feb 01 - 09:02 PM I have posted a few Uncle Dave lyrics to the forum. Since there is nothing offering elsewhere on the web, perhaps we could use this thread to post lyrics to Uncle Dave's songs. It seem Gern's got a few to begin with. Here's links to what I can find in the DT and Forum already. In the DT: Chicken This is a composite version. In the Forum: Take Me Home, Poor Julia The river name need to be corrected to 'old Peedee'. Don't Get Weary Partial transcription only - gaps to be filled. I've Got the Morning Blues Line breaks need to be inserted.
|
Subject: Lyr Add: GRAY CAT ON THE TENNESSEE FARM (Macon) From: Stewie Date: 26 Feb 01 - 09:08 PM Here's one to start the ball rolling. Any other takers?
GRAY CAT ON THE TENNESSEE FARM
Cattle in the pasture, hogs in the pen
Source: Reissue on Uncle Dave Macon 'Go Long Mule' County CO-CD 3505. Recorded 9 May 1927. --Stewie.
|
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: GUEST,fox4zero Date: 27 Feb 01 - 04:08 AM Check out the Tennessee Folklore Society, Middle TN State College,Murfreesboro, TN. A few years ago I bought a VINTAGE Uncle Dave Macon songbook (small pamphlet size) for 35c. It was published and sold by him.I know it had Weevly Wheat and perhaps a dozen others. If it is no longer available, I will fax copies to those who request same. Larry Parish |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Uncle Dave Macon songs From: GUEST,fox4zero Date: 27 Feb 01 - 11:31 AM Correction to my previous message (what do you expect at 4 AM, perfection?) The booklet is entitled "Songs and Stories of Uncle Dave Macon" and the cost is $2. Membership in the TFS is $15 and worth every penny of it. There is NO S&H charge. Tennessee Forlklore Society MTSU-English Dept Box #70 Murfreesboro TN 37131 |
Subject: Lyr Add: GO LONG MULE (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 04 Mar 01 - 02:20 AM GO LONG MULE I've got a mule, he's such a fool He never pays no heed I built a fire right under him And then I made some speed Oh go 'long mule, don't you roll them eyes You can change a fool but a doggone mule Is a mule until he dies Oh Jerry Aches and Dottie Pain Got married on the train And now they'll say that Georgy woods Is full of Aches and Pains Oh go 'long mule, don't you roll them eyes You can change a fool but a doggone mule Is a mule until he dies He, he, hehe, ha, ha haha etc I drove right down to the graveyard once For to see those pals of mine But when that black man crossed my path I sure, lord, changed my mind Oh go 'long mule, don't you roll them eyes You can change a fool but a doggone mule Is a mule until he dies I bought some biscuits for my dog And I laid them on the shelf I slept so hard, I shot the dog And ate that bread myself Oh go 'long mule, don't you roll them eyes You can change a fool but a doggone mule Is a mule until he dies He, he, hehe … A man way down in Georgy Pulled his gun on me But when he fired that second shot I passed through Tennessee Oh go 'long mule, don't you roll them eyes You can change a fool but a doggone mule Is a mule until he dies Source: transcription of reissue on Uncle Dave Macon 'Go Long Mule' County CO-CD –3505. Recorded on 9 May 1927. This song was from the minstrel tradition. It was first recorded by Ukulele Bob Williams, a black songster, for Paramount in November 1924. Howard Odum reported that it was 'sung with remarkable effect at the Dayton, Tennessee, Scopes trial, with hundreds of whites and Negroes standing around the quartette of Negroes who came for the occasion'. John Thomas Scopes was a biology teacher who had defied the state law prohibiting the teaching of the theory of evolution. He was tried and found guilty. Ukelele Bob's version was recorded a year before the Scopes trial. His first stanza and chorus coincides with Uncle Dave's except that he sang in the chorus: 'You can't change a fool for a doggone mule/Is a mule until he dies'. Ukelele Bob also had the 'biscuits for the dog' stanza and the following: My mule refuse to work for me I know the reason for that He found out that I was a Re-publican And he's a Demo-crat Oh go 'long mule … The song permitted the easy addition of new verses. Odum collected one referring to a KKK gathering: They're gonna hold a meeting there Of some society There's 'leven sheets upon the line That's ten too much for me Uncle Dave could well have picked up the song at medicine or minstrel shows. [Above information from Paul Oliver 'Songsters & Saints: Vocal Traditions on Race Records' Cambridge Uni Press, 1984, pp 104-105] PS.
|
Subject: Lyr Add: NASHVILLE (Uncle Dave Macon) From: GUEST,murray@mpce.mq.edu.au Date: 04 Mar 01 - 04:32 AM Good thread. Art Thieme has a Uncle Dave Song called "Nashville" on his "The Older I get the Better I Was" CD. I am surprised that this is not in the DT. I wouldn't mind having the chords for it. The lyrics are: NASHVILLE They chew tobacco thin in Nashville, Oh potatoes they grow small in Nashville, The women dress knee high in Nashville, Herbert Hoover was elected in Nashville, If you want to get a drink in Nashville
It is a great song and Art does a good job of it with his own banjo accompanyment. Murray |
Subject: Lyr Add: SHALL WE GATHER AT THE RIVER (Lowry) From: Stewie Date: 04 Mar 01 - 06:21 PM Uncle Dave did a fine rendition of Robert Lowry's hymn 'Shall We Gather at the River' with his Fruit Jar Drinkers. They recorded it, and another 15 sides, in New York as the Dixie Sacred Singers. There's a version of 'Shall We Gather' in the DT, but it is somewhat truncated: With a few minor changes, Uncle Dave's is closest to the lyrics given in the Pentecostal Online hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal has a fifth stanza that neither the Pentecostal hymnal nor Uncle Dave use: Uncle Dave's version is as follows:
SHALL WE GATHER AT THE RIVER
|
Subject: Lyr Add: SHE'S GOT THE MONEY TOO (Lockwood/Wild) From: Stewie Date: 04 Mar 01 - 08:44 PM SHE'S GOT THE MONEY TOO (C.T. Lockwood/J. Wild) I am just as fond of beauty as anyone can be The rosy cheeks and pearly teeth I dearly love to see I know one that has them except me and you Oh she is the sweetest girlie, and she's got the money too Chorus: Now won't I love my honey (Lord, yes) And won't I spend her money (It is a sin (?)) I am as happy as a flower That sips the falling dew For I know a little girlie And she's got the money too She takes me out a-riding whenever I come down She owns the finest Cadillac and Buick in the town She tells me that she loves me, oh listen wouldn't you Oh she is the sweetest girlie, and she's got the money too Chorus I asked her the question, if she would be my bride She said, You are the sweetest boy that ever lived or died I told her that I meant it, she said she did too Oh she is the sweetest girlie, and she's got the money too Chorus Source: transcription of reissue on Uncle Dave Macon 'Travelin' Down the Road' County CCSCD-115. Recorded on 24 January 1938. PS. Uncle Dave garnered his material from a variety of sources. This is a vaudeville song from his youth (it comes from 1869). Charles Wolfe in his notes to the above CD attributes the words to C.T. Lockwood and the music to Johnny Wild. The original was 'And he's got the money too'. The Levy collection attributes both words and music to Lockwood. The direct link to the song at Levy wouldn't work, so you need to put 'And he's got the money too' in the search box at the Levy site: http://levysheetmusic.mse.jhu.edu/index.html The American memory collection attributes it to Lockwood/Wild: Whatever, as well as changing the sex of the protagonist, Macon and/or the folk process have expanded on the original considerably. There's a version in the Hunter collection from Mrs Virginia Morris of Springfield, Missouri.
|
Subject: Lyr Add: OLD TIES (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 05 Mar 01 - 06:37 PM OLD TIES Fare thee well old ties now we're over I had loved thee for many a year May the waters of time deeply cover All our feelings that once was so dear Chorus: Vain, vain are the vows we have plighted I would that we'd never had met Love's a flower that blooms to be blighted And the star of hope arose but to set Do not think of me then too unkindly Nor cherish one ill thought for me I had loved thee, but loved thee too blindly And now through my blindness I see Chorus Aye forever you give to another All the charms that were once fondly mine Will you think of me then as a brother And as a sister, the love shall be thine Chorus Source: transcription of reissue on Uncle Dave Macon 'Go Long Mule' County CO-CD-3505.
This sounds like a late 19th century tearjerker, but I have been unable to find anything at any of the sheet music sites. Uncle Dave's performance is simply delightful.
|
Subject: Lyr Add: WHOOP 'EM UP CINDY (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 05 Mar 01 - 07:13 PM WHOOP 'EM UP CINDY Went upon the mountain top, give my horn a blow Thought I heard Cindy say 'yonder comes my beau' Chorus: Whoop 'em up Cindy, lord, lord I love Cindy, lord, lord Whoop 'em up Cindy, lord, lord Gone forever more Went up to the mountain top, cut my sugar cane Every time I cut a stalk, thought about Cindy Jane Chorus Cindy she's a rattlin' girl, Cindy she's a rose How I love Cindy girl, God almighty knows Chorus I got a girl in Baltimore, got one in Savanah One in Baltimore named Lise, other little girl's named Hannah Chorus Higher up the mountain top, greener grow the cherries Sooner the boys court the girls, sooner they get married Chorus Cindy in the summertime, Cindy in the fall If I can't have Cindy all the time, don't want her at all Source: New Lost City Ramblers 'Volume II' Folkways LP FA2397. Uncle Dave Macon 'Whoop 'Em Up Cindy' Vocalion 15323. PS.
|
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: BanjoRay Date: 06 Mar 01 - 04:22 PM What a great thread this is - I've been after these lyrics for eons - lets have more, Stewie....please! Cheers |
Subject: Lyr Add: WRECK OF THE TENNESSEE GRAVY TRAIN (Macon From: Stewie Date: 07 Mar 01 - 07:21 PM WRECK OF THE TENNESSEE GRAVY TRAIN (Uncle Dave Macon) The people of Tennessee want to know who wrecked our gravy train The one we thought was run so well and now who can we blame They want to know who greased the track and started it down the road This same ol' train contained our money to build our highway roads Chorus: But now we're up against it and no use to raise a row But of all the times I've ever seen, we're sure up against it now The only thing that we can do is to do the best we can Follow me, good people, I'm bound for the promised land Now, I could be a banker without the least excuse But look at the treasurer of Tennessee and tell me what's the use We lately bonded Tennessee for just five million bucks The bonds were issued and the money tied up and now we're in tough luck Chorus Some lay it all on parties, some lay it on others you see But now that you can plainly see what happened to Tennessee For the engineer pulled the throttle, conductor rang the bell The brakeman hollered 'all aboard' and the banks all went to hell Source: transcription of reissue on Various Artists 'Hard Times Come Again No More Vol 2' Yazoo CD 2037. The original recording (17 December 1930?) was released as Okeh 45507. In this performance, Uncle Dave was accompanied by Sam McGee on banjo-guitar. Uncle Dave was very fond of topical songs and wrote many more than he actually recorded. This one related to a state scandal of the embezzlement of highway funds. The first 2 lines of the chorus had been used by him in an earlier topical song 'We're Up Against It Now' (Vocalion 15447, recorded 8 September 1926) – see link earlier in this thread to lyrics in forum. The chorus therein was: We're up against it now There's no use to raise a row But of all the times I've ever seen We're sure up against it now In his notes to 'Rich Man Poor Man: American Country Songs of Protest' (Rounder 1026), Mark Wilson suggested that the lyrical similarity of the choruses indicates Macon may have 'based both on some antecedent bit of minstrelsy'. PS.
|
Subject: Lyr Add: WHEN THE TRAIN COMES ALONG (Macon) From: Stewie Date: 08 Mar 01 - 11:08 PM WHEN THE TRAIN COMES ALONG Some comes walkin' and some comes lame Gonna meet you at the station when the train comes along Some comes walkin' in my Jesus' name Gonna meet you at the station when the train comes along Chorus: Oh, when the train comes along Oh, when the train comes along Oh lord, I'll meet you at the station When the train comes along Sins of years are washed away Gonna meet you at the station when the train comes along Darkest hour is changed to day Gonna meet you at the station when the train comes along Chorus Doubts and fears are borne along Gonna meet you at the station when the train comes along Sorrow changes into song Gonna meet you at the station when the train comes along Chorus Ease and wealth become as dross Gonna meet you at the station when the train comes along All my boast is in the cross Gonna meet you at the station when the train comes along Chorus Selfishness is lost in love Gonna meet you at the station when the train comes along All my treasures are above Gonna meet you at the station when the train comes along Source: transcription of reissue on Uncle Dave Macon 'The Country Music Hall of Fame Series' MCA MCAD-10546. Original recording released on Champion 16805, Champion 45105 and Decca 5373. Recorded in Richmond, Indiana, on 14 August 1934. Uncle Dave Macon, vocal and banjo, was accompanied by Kirk McGee on banjo and Sam McGee on guitar. One or both of the McGees sang in the choruses. Uncle Dave Macon's rendition of this song is the only evidence of its existence in white tradition. In his notes to the above cited CD on MCA, Charlie Seemann of the Country Music Foundation stated that this was a McGee Brothers (Sam and Kirk) composition. The McGees may have been responsible for some of the lines in this variant, but the concept and refrain were well-known in the black tradition. In his 'Long Steel Rail', Norm Cohen quoted from John W. Work's 'American Negro Songs and Spirituals' [New York, Bonanza Books, 1940, p94] the usual version that consisted of one chorus and two verses: I may be blind an' cannot see But I'll meet you at the station when the train comes along I may be lame an' cannot walk But I'll meet you at the station when the train comes along When the train comes along, when the train comes along I'll meet you at the station when the train comes along Norm Cohen commented that he had been unable to find anything in print relating to the origins of variants of the song, and no traces before 1925. The first recording was made in September 1926 by Odette and Ethel [Odette Jackson and Ethel Grainger] who accompanied Rev J. C. Burnette on many of his recordings. The black Texan songster, Henry Thomas, recorded the song in October 1927. Thomas' repertoire shared several pieces with Uncle Dave's - 'Arkansas', 'The Fox and the Hounds', 'Jonah in the Wilderness', 'Shanty Blues' and 'When the Train Comes Along'. However, as Tony Russell pointed out in his 'Blacks, Whites and Blues' [Studio Vista, 1970, p47], the songs concerned were 'so old that Thomas need not have learned them from, nor even heard, Macon's interpretations'. In this instance, Uncle Dave recorded after Thomas. It is, however, an interesting example of common stock in the black and white traditions.
For the purposes of comparison, I post Henry Thomas' version:
|
Subject: Lyr Add: GOVERNOR AL SMITH (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 11 Mar 01 - 08:12 PM GOVERNOR AL SMITH (Spoken) Getting' right now Al Smith nominated for president, darlin' Al Smith nominated for president, darlin' Al Smith nominated for president My vote to him I'm a-gonna present, darlin' Al Smith is a mighty fine man, darlin' Al Smith is a mighty fine man, darlin' Al Smith is a mighty fine man He wants to be president of our land, darlin' (Spoken) Hot dog! In Chicago, just from Tennessee and here's what the people say: Al Smith is a-getting on a boom, darlin' Al Smith is a-getting on a boom, darlin' Al Smith is a-getting on a boom He don't favour the open saloon, darlin' Smith wants everything to be just right, darlin' Smith wants everything to be just right, darlin' Smith wants everything to be just right The law's gonna get you if you get tight, darlin' I think I'll buy me a little camphor gum, my darlin' I think I'll buy me a little camphor gum, my darlin' I think I'll buy me a little camphor gum For then I think I can buy a little rum, my darlin' Moonshine's been here long enough, darlin' Moonshine's been here long enough,, darlin' Moonshine's been here long enough Let's all vote right and get rid of such, darlin' Many a good man's been poisoned to death, darlin' Many a good man's been poisoned to death, darlin' Many a good man's been poisoned to death And with a real drink was never blessed, darlin' Four dollar bills and a bottle of beer, darlin' Four dollar bills and a bottle of beer, darlin' Four dollar bills and a bottle of beer I wish to the lord my honey was here, darlin' Source: transcription of reissue on Uncle Dave Macon 'The Country Music Hall of Fame Series' MCA MCAD-10546. Original issue Brunswick 263, recorded in Chicago, Ill, 26 July 1928. This is another example of Uncle Dave's forays into social commentary. It was written during the 1928 presidential campaign when the Governor of New York, Al Smith, ran on the Democatic ticket against Herbert Hoover. Macon's support seems a little odd given that Smith was a Northerner and a catholic whose core constituency was immigrants groups in the larger cities. However, Smith was opposed to Prohibition and, by this stage, many country people were beginning to believe that Prohibition was doing more harm than good because of poor drink and general disregard for the law. Although he was a genuinely moral and religious man, Uncle Dave didn't mind a drop or two. As Charles Wolfe put it, there was a duality to Uncle Dave (and to many country singers), 'a curious combination of traditional morality (what man should be) and life-embracing gusto (what man is)'. [Quote from Charles Wolfe in 'Stars of Country Music' Ed Bill C. Malone and Judith McCulloh, Urbana, Uni of Illinois Press, 1975, p59]. PS.
|
Subject: Lyr Add: WALKING IN SUNLIGHT (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 12 Mar 01 - 09:49 PM WALKING IN SUNLIGHT (H.J. Zelley/G.H. Cook) (Spoken) Now, folks, when it comes to the scientifical parts of music, I know nothing about it, but I can play. And thank God a man who can't read the bible can pray. Listen, a man comes into this life naked and bare, he goes through life with troubles and cares, he departs this life and goes we don't know where, but he'll be all right there if he lives all right here. Walking in sunlight all of my journey Over the mountains, through the deep vale Jesus has said 'I'll never forsake thee' Promise divine that never can fail Chorus: Heavenly sunlight, heavenly sunlight Flooding my soul with glory divine Hallelujah, I am rejoicing Singing His praises, Jesus is mine Shadows around me, shadows above me Never conceal my saviour and guide He is the light, in Him there's no darkness Ever I'm walking close to his side Chorus Source: transcription of reissue of Uncle Dave Macon and His Fruit Jar Singers 'Walking in Sunlight' on Various Artists 'How Can I Keep From Singing: Early American Religious Music and Song' Vol 1' Yazoo CD 2020. The Cyber Hymnal site indicates the words to this hymn were written by Henry Jeffreys Zelley and the music by George Harrison Cook. It was published in 1899 in 'Gospel Praise' by William Kirkpatrick and Henry Gilmour. The inspiration for the hymn is from 1 John 1:5 'God is light; in Him there is no darkness at all'. The original has an additional stanza:
In the bright sunlight, ever rejoicing
|
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: CRANKY YANKEE Date: 13 Mar 01 - 12:18 AM You think you Brits have trouble understanding Uncle Dave? So Do Yankees. Just in case you are not aware of osit, "Yankees" only live in the 5 New England states. Rhode Island, which formally declared it's independence on MAY, 4Th 1776, (two months before the rest)Massachusetts,Connecticut, New Hampshire and Vermont. We don't object when Britons call all Americans, "Yanks", it's kind of a compliment, but, When Southern Americans refer to ALL Norherners as, "Yankees" we resent the Hell out of it, because they usually dont use it as a compliment and almost always add the prefix "Damned". Dasve Macon definitely did not have a yankee accent. Britts should have no trouble with with a Yankee accent, sounds a lot like a combination of Dorset, Devon and Cornwall. At least that's what their accents sounded like to me when I was stationed in England in the USAF. Leadbelly was just as hard to understand, except that I knew him when I was a Kid living in New York City in 1946 &47. I learned a lot of Leadbelly's songs right from the horses mouth, and did a lot of "Huh"?, "What was that"? (whuch you can't do with a recording) I remember that he was very patient with "chillun" and liked to perform for them and having them around. He even would change the words to some songs, (on the spot) rather than give them any bad advice. I'll give you one example. He was singing for a bunch of school kids and sang the last line of the last verse of "Irene" to "I'll run away and hide" instead of "I'll take morphine and die". While we're still on the subject, in spite of the TV movie about Leadbelly's life, he did not pronounce his name "Hew-dee", his name was Hudson Ledbetter, and he pronounced it "Huh-dy". Love and kisses |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 13 Mar 01 - 06:59 PM Hi CY, it's very difficult for us in Oz as well. However, it is not only his accent, but also his mumblings and poor enunciation at times. Mostly, he is reasonably easy to understand, but there are passages where he is impossible. If you note errors and mishearings in the transcriptions that I am posting, I would very much appreciate your drawing them to attention. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: I'LL KEEP MY SKILLET GOOD AND GREASY From: Stewie Date: 13 Mar 01 - 07:02 PM I'LL KEEP MY SKILLET GOOD AND GREASY I'se gwine down town for to buy me a sack of flour Gwine cook it every hour Keep my skillet good and greasy all the time, time, time Keep my skillet good and greasy all the time I'se chickens in my sack, bloodhounds on my track I'm pullin' for my shanty home, home, home I'm pullin' for my shanty home If they beat me to the door, I'll put 'em under the floor Keep my skillet good and greasy all the time, time, time Keep my skillet good and greasy all the time I'se a-walking down the street and I stoled a ham of meat Got my skillet good and greasy all the time, time, time Got my skillet good and greasy all the time I'se gwine to the hills for to buy me a jug of brandy Gwine give it all to Mandy Keep her good and drunk and boozy all the time, time, time Keep her good and drunk and boozy all the time Honey, if you say so, I'll never work-a no more I'll lay round your shanty all the time, time, time I'll lay round your shanty all the time There's a man on the log, finger on the trigger and eye on the hog Gun it went blip and the bullet it went zip Fell on the hog with all of his grip Got my skillet good and greasy all the time, time, time Got my skillet good and greasy all the time Source: transcription of reissue on Uncle Dave Macon 'Travelin' Down the Road' County CCS-CD-115. Original recording 22 January 1935. Uncle Dave first recorded this song acoustically in 1924 and it was his first 'hit'. It continued to be a favourite so it was redone in better sound in 1935. According to Charles Wolfe, Sid Harkreader always said Uncle Dave got it from 'an old coloured man' who worked at the Readyville mill near where Macon worked.
The song was part of that 'common stock' of banjo and fiddle tunes and songs in the black and white traditions – pieces that drew on a huge collection of couplets and quatrains that were nearly all interchangeable from one to another. The 'gwines' and 'I'ses' link it to the minstrel era and the last verse here betrays its connection to the large 'Some people say a nigger/preacher can't steal' / 'Mourner, You Shall Be Free' family. In Uncle Dave's version, it's 'a man' on the log. In his wonderful 'Screening the Blues: Aspects of Blues Tradition' [New York, Da Capo Press, 1968], Paul Oliver traces the history of 'Mourner' from the minstrel days where it was 'a nigger' on the log, through to 'the preacher' taking his place as a figure of derision. Frank Stokes, a medicine show performer from Memphis, recorded in his version of 'Mourner', the title of which was abbreviated to 'You Shall':
|
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Geoff the Duck Date: 14 Mar 01 - 11:42 AM When I started this thread / question, I hoped for some response. At first it was sparse, and I thought I was going to be disappointed. I still haven't got words for the two songs which originally sparked off my enquiry, but I would like to thank Stewie for his almost single handed determination to get Uncle Dave's lyrics down for us all to use. I've currently mislaid my partial transcriptions, but they were mostly holes and question marks anyway. If I can locate the folder with them in I will post them (with missing lines) so that others might be able to provide guesses and opinions about what he sang. Keep up the good work !!! Quack!!!! GtD. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Geoff the Duck Date: 14 Mar 01 - 11:43 AM When I started this thread / question, I hoped for some response. At first it was sparse, and I thought I was going to be disappointed. I still haven't got words for the two songs which originally sparked off my enquiry, but I would like to thank Stewie for his almost single handed determination to get Uncle Dave's lyrics down for us all to use. I've currently mislaid my partial transcriptions, but they were mostly holes and question marks anyway. If I can locate the folder with them in I will post them (with missing lines) so that others might be able to provide guesses and opinions about what he sang. Keep up the good work !!! Quack!!!! GtD. |
Subject: Lyr Add: GO ON NORA LEE (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 14 Mar 01 - 09:13 PM Geoff, the trouble is you asked for two real stinkers. I have been listening to them repeatedly and working on them, but 'Buddie' in particular is incredibly difficult. I will post my attempted transcription of 'Go on Nora'. I am not sure whether he has broken his 'neck' or 'leg', but most often it sounds like 'neck' to me. The way Uncle Dave sings it, it sounds like 'gwine', but I have opted for the 'Go on' from the title and I thought 'gwine' usually means 'I'm going to' rather than 'go on' (but I may be wrong). The bits in square brackets indicate that that is my best shot and it may be something quite different. I look forward to hearing your thoughts.
GO ON NORA LEE Source: Uncle Dave Macon 'Laugh Your Blues Away' Rounder LP 1028. Original recording made on 17 December 1930 (previously unissued).
|
Subject: Lyr Add: GO ON NORA LEE (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 17 Mar 01 - 01:10 AM I posted my transcription of 'Nora' on the old-time music newgroup and asked for help. Chris Berry gave his deciphering of the verse lines - sounds great to me. He confirms that it is the 'neck' that is broken and that Uncle Dave is singing 'Go on'. Chris also provided a transcription of 'Buddie' which I will post in a separate message - he has an amazing ear for Uncle Dave lyrics. CORRECTED VERSION OF 'GO ON, NORA LEE' FOLLOWS.
GO ON NORA LEE Source: Uncle Dave Macon 'Laugh Your Blues Away' Rounder LP 1028. Original recording made on 17 December 1930 (previously unissued).
|
Subject: Lyr Add: COME ON BUDDIE, DON'T YOU WANT TO GO From: Stewie Date: 17 Mar 01 - 01:19 AM COME ON BUDDIE, DON'T YOU WANT TO GO Who's been here since I been gone? Pretty little gal with the red dress on Roast beef, chicken and whisky too I'm so happy don't know what to do Chorus: I'm gettin' happy, don't you know Come (sometimes Run) along buddie don't you want to go? Set myself in a pan of grease Slipped and fell against the mantlepiece Chorus Left your booze and chucked your cider Lemon extract and old Budweiser Horsetail pills, a little oxtail tonic The good book says a little's good for the stomach Chorus Crank your Ford, I'll hold your baby Whisky's scarce and I don't mean maybe I have trusted to my sorrow Pay today and credit tomorrow Chorus Went myself in a Cadillac 8 Turned around the corner at a rapid rate Met a young lady passing by I throwed her a kiss and I heard her cry Chorus There is something that I know If you want to get to heaven get right and go Never get to heaven on a ballroom floor Satan gonna slide you right through the door Chorus There is something sure enough Never get to heaven with a nose full of snuff There is something sure in life Never go to heaven with another man's wife Source: original recording 17 December 1930. Issued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Laugh Your Blues Away' Rounder LP 1028 (previously unissued). The above transcription was kindly posted to the old-time music newsgroup by Chris Berry. Chris said that he is not sure of the 'pills' and 'tonic' stanza but I reckon that, if it is not right, it is as close as anyone is going to get.
|
Subject: Lyr Add: FROM JERUSALEM TO JERICHO (Macon) From: Stewie Date: 18 Mar 01 - 01:56 AM FROM JERUSALEM TO JERICHO (Rev W.M. Robertson) From Jerusalem to Jericho along that lonely road A certain man was set upon and robbed of all his gold They beat him and they stripped him and they left him there for dead Who was it then that came along and bathed the aching head? Chorus: Then who (then who), tell me who (tell me who) Tell me who was this neighbour kind and true From Jerusalem to Jericho we're travelling every day And many are the fallen ones that lie along the way From Jerusalem to Jericho a certain priest came by He heard the poor man crying but he heeded not the cry He gathered his robes about him and he quickly passed away Who was it then that came along and ministered that day? Chorus From Jerusalem to Jericho a Levi came along He heard the poor man crying that lie upon the ground He lifted his hands up to the heavens and he quickly passed him by Who was it then that came along and heeded that needy cry? Chorus From Jerusalem to Jericho when life was ebbing away Along came that Samaritan who was despised they say He ministered to the dying man, he carried him to an inn He paid his fare and told the host to take good care of him Chorus From Jerusalem to Jericho we're travelling every day And many are the fallen ones that lie along the way Oh some despise and some reject it, but it is no matter how they've been When everybody turns you down then Jesus takes you in Chorus Source: transcription from reissue on Uncle Dave Macon 'Travelin' Down the Road' County CCS-CD-115. Original recording made on 3 August 1937. According to Charles Wolfe, this hymn was from the pen of Rev W.M. Robertson in 1891 and appeared in several early hymn books. Uncle Dave first recorded it in 1925. I cannot find the original at any of the gospel and sheet music sites and no mention of Rev Robertson either. Can anyone post the original for purposes of comparison? The Cyber Hymnal site mentions a hymn with the same title by a Frederick Arthur Graves (1856-1927), but gives no text. Is this related or a totally discrete piece? Uncle Dave made another non-commercial recording of the hymn, with his son Dorris backing him on guitar, some time during 1946 (issued on Rounder LP 1028). In that recording, Uncle Dave inverts the last line of the final stanza to: 'When everybody takes you down, then Jesus turns you in'. Whether that was deliberate or accidental, as Charles Wolfe has pointed out, it does make 'a certain amount of Uncle Dave sense'. In my trawls across the net for information about this hymn, I came across an interesting article on the parable in Luke's gospel on which the hymn was based: Click here for parable article
|
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Wendy_ Date: 19 Mar 01 - 02:24 PM There is a discussion of 'Whoa Mule' in this thread . |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: CRANKY YANKEE Date: 03 Apr 01 - 06:00 PM Uncle Dave was a real social change advocate. Bearing in mind, that he was singing to rednecked Southern Farmers in the 20's and 30's, It's a wonder he didn't get lynched. He was one brave man. For instance second verse to "Take me Back to Tulsa"
LITTLE BEE SUCKS THE BLOSSOM, BIG BEE GETS THE HONEY.
Take me back to Tulsa, I'm too young to marry
His son "Dorris" recalled that one opf Uncle Dave's Black Farmhands was about to have his own little farm, and home, foreclosed on by a bank. Uncle Dave Bought the Mortgage AND GAVE IT TO HIS FARMHAND.
|
Subject: Lyr Add: JORDAN AM A HARD ROAD TO TRAVEL (Macon) From: Stewie Date: 04 Apr 01 - 09:06 PM JORDAN AM A HARD ROAD TO TRAVEL I'm a-gonna sing you a brand new song It is all the truth for certain We can't live high if we get by And get on the other side of Jordan Chorus: Oh pull off your overcoat and roll up your sleeves Jordan am a hard road to travel Pull off your overcoat and roll up your sleeves Jordan am a hard road to travel I believe The public schools and the highways Are raisin' quite an alarm Get a country man educated just a little And he ain't a-gonna work on the farm Chorus I don't know but I 'blieve I'm right The auto's ruined the country Let's go back to the horse and buggy And try to save some money Chorus I know a man that's an evangelist The tabernacle's always full People will come from miles around Just to hear him shoot the bull Chorus You may talk about your evangelistss You may talk about Mr Ford too With Henry really shakin' more hell out of folks Than all of the evangelists do Chorus It rained forty nights but it rained forty days Gonna rain on the Allegheny Mountains Gonna rain forty horses and dominecker mules Gonna take us on the other side of Jordan Chorus Source: transcription of reissue on Uncle Dave Macon 'Go Long Mule' County CO-CD-3505. Original recording made on 9 May 1927. This song originated with a ministrel tune by Daniel Decatur Emmett in the second half of the 19th century. Emmett's song can be found in the DT database: Emmett's Song. Sheet music for Emmett's song may be found at the American Memory site: American Memory. Information on Emmett may be found Here and also Here. The song became a vehicle for various parodies almost immediately. One of these may be found in the DT database: Richmond is a hard road to travel. In respect of this parody, I found on the net a short explanation by John R. Thompson:
Many Civil War songs were parodiessongs that set new, topical words to a familiar tune. In 1863 John R. Thompson, a famous southern editor, drafted the following song, based on the minstrel tune Jordan is a Hard Road to Travel, lampooning the Union army's many failures in Virginia in the first two years of the war. [The song refers] to Pope's defeat at Second Bull Run and Burnside's horrendous losses at Fredericksburg. The proclamation referred to was not Lincoln's famous emancipation edict, but Pope's arrogant announcement that his troops were to always advance and never retreat; the boastful Union commander soon found himself frantically racing back to Washington after Lee crushed him at Manassas Uncle Dave's parody reflects his love of writing songs that comment on current problems of his day and, once again, he takes the opportunity to have a go at the automobile. The Traditional Ballad Index refers to Uncle Dave's recording and gives to 2 citations under the title 'The Other Side of Jordan': Ballad index entry. The text in Silbur is taken directly from the Cohen/Seeger/Wood songbook ['Old-Time String Band Songbook' Oak Publications – former title was 'New Lost City Ramblers Songbook'].
My transcription differs in minor respects from the C/S/W songbook. Perhaps they were working from a different recording of Uncle Dave's, but their last stanza does not accord with what Uncle Dave is singing in his 1927 recording. Norman Blake [Rounder CD 11505] follows Uncle Dave more closely. C/S/W give 'Allegheny Mountains' in the last stanza and I have gone with that even though I can't hear it – it sounds more like 'Alligator' or 'Alligaty' to me. Like many old-time singers, Uncle Dave can be hard to decipher and mondegreens are almost inevitable. I saw a posting from Tom Paley in the banjo news list that the chorus of this song has been misheard as:
|
Subject: Lyr Add: I'LL RISE WHEN THE ROOSTER CROWS (Binkley From: Paul B Date: 29 May 01 - 04:11 PM I'll Rise When the Rooster Crows As recorded by the Binkley Brothers Dixie Clodhoppers on the CD "Nashville: the Early String Bands Vol. I,” County CD-3521. The song was recorded 10/2/1928. Stewie says that this is quite similar to the Uncle Dave version. Paul B.
Chorus:
Verses:
Don't let old Satan try to fool you
When Gabriel comes for to blow his horn
We'll have cider all the fall
Whatcha gonna do when the women all dead? |
Subject: Lyr Add: RISE WHEN THE ROOSTER CROWS (Macon) From: Stewie Date: 29 May 01 - 08:50 PM Hi Paul, thanks for posting the Binkleys version. Below is your transcription amended to what I hear Uncle Dave singing. His is more difficult to decipher than the Binkleys so, as always, it is open to correction. However, as you will note, there are only minor variations from the version you have posted - plus a spoken introduction. In the second stanza, unlike the Binkleys version, I don't hear Uncle Dave singing 'socks' but, if not, I don't know what it is. I was thinking 'spats', but it does not sound like that either. RISE WHEN THE ROOSTER CROWS
{Spoken} Now, good people, there's the little sweet golden daisies. Now I'm a-gonna give you something from the land hog and hominy, pumpkin and possum, and where whisky is made out of corn and women don't smell like talcum powders – let's go for it. Source: Uncle Dave Macon 'Same' RBF Records RF 51. Original recording Vocalion 15321. By virtue of the generosity of fox4zero (Larry), I have heaps of other Uncle Dave lyrics to post. It is a matter of searching for background stuff and finding a 'round tuit'. I will certainly post them in due course. --Stewie.
|
Subject: Lyr Add: DIXIE BEE LINE (Uncle Dave Macon) From: GUEST,Denise :^) Date: 09 Jul 01 - 01:38 PM Well, I had my request out everywhere, and it looks like the Cyberpluckers (Autoharp) came through. Here are "best guess" lyrics from Kathie--feel free to correct them if you know better! DIXIE BEE LINE
Well, some folks say that a Ford won't run,
CHORUS: On the Dixie, on the Dixie Bee Line,
Well, Henry Ford went to Muscle Shoals,
Well, that old Buick certainly treated me mean,
Well, I went to the mountains for to get some booze,
Well, everybody knows a Henry Ford car, |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,Denise:^) Date: 09 Jul 01 - 01:46 PM Aargh!! I want you all to know that I didn't type the lyrics in long lines like that! |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Geoff the Duck Date: 06 Sep 01 - 08:50 PM I think it is about time this thread re-surfaced! |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 14 Nov 01 - 09:10 PM Uncle Dave's 'Buddy, Won't You Roll Down the Line' is in the DT under the title 'Roll Down the Line': Buddy, Won't You Roll Down the Line Judging by own listening and transcriptions in Green's 'Only A Miner' and Seeger etc 'Old-Time String Band Songbook', there are several inaccuracies in the DT transcription. Here are some corrections - in square brackets: Stanza 1, line 1: 'Way [back] yonder' Stanza 1, line 2: 'against free labour [stout]' Stanza 2, line 1: '[Every] Monday morning, [they've got 'em out on time]' Stanza 2, line 2: '[March them] down ... [said] to look' Stanza 2, line 3: '[March] you ... [said] to look' Stanza 2, line 4: 'Very [last word] the captain [say], you better get your [coal] Stanza 3, line 2: 'The meat [it is burnt up]' - no 'all' Stanza 3, line 3: ' ... task done, [you're glad to come to call]' - Green has 'at all' instead of 'to call', but I agree with the Seeger transcription Stanza 4, line 4: 'Very next [time they call on you, you'll bet you'll have your coal]' For extensive background to this song and its relatives see Archie Green 'Only A Miner' Uni of Illinois Press, pp 195-239. --Stewie.
Stanza 3, line 4: '[For] anything ... [it tastes] good' |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Dicho (Frank Staplin) Date: 14 Nov 01 - 11:21 PM These wonderful songs not entered in the DT yet, I see. The Work and Henry Thomas versions of "When the Train Comes Along" should be placed under @religion, @spiritual and @gospel as well as @railroad when they get around to it. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Sir Roger de Beverley Date: 15 Nov 01 - 04:00 AM Geoff I've got a copy of that New Lost City Ramblers Songbook mentioned in an earlier response. Let me know if you want to borrow it - I have already lent it to Les from Hull and Oombanjo but have it back in my possession now. R |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Sir Roger de Beverley Date: 15 Nov 01 - 04:25 AM Geoff I also have the following Uncle Dave recordings which you are welcome to borrow too: Sail away Ladies Go Long mule Backwater Blues I'm goin' Away in the Morn Hold the Woodpile down Way Down the Old Plank Road Buddy Won't you Roll Down the Line R |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Lin in Kansas Date: 15 Nov 01 - 11:58 AM Stewie: Re; your comment above on "dominecker mule" in "Jordan Am a Hard Road to Travel"--I had always heard references to "dominecker hens" growing up in Texas. My Random House dictionary has this to say (which would at least agree with the coloration theory):
"Dom•i•nique So, a dominecker mule would be one with dark gray and light gray bars (stripes?) on its hide, I think. Lin |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 15 Nov 01 - 05:47 PM Thanks, Lin. That gives a bit of authority to the theory. Cheers, Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Geoff the Duck Date: 18 Nov 01 - 11:07 AM Sir Roger! - Many thanks for the offer of loans. I do have a copy of the Old-Time String Band Songbook (a.k.a .New Lost City Ramblers), and have Uncle Dave recordings of the songs on your list with the exception of Buddy Won't you Roll Down the Line. I would be interested in the track which I don't have. I do not recognise your Mudcat Name as being somebody I know from other circles. Do I know you personally by another name? (A P.M. would answer the question if the open forum is not suitable). By the way - I am pleased that a simple request for lyrics has turned into such a useful Dave Macon resource. In particular, many thanks to Stewie for being the Dave Macon Oracle! Quack!!!!! Geoff the Duck! HTML fixed. --JoeClone, 18-Nov-01.
|
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Geoff the Duck Date: 18 Nov 01 - 11:12 AM Whoops - forgot to close the Italics HTML! QUACK! |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Oversoul Date: 18 Nov 01 - 07:39 PM For a really fine little book about Uncle Dave's life, contact: Rutherford County Historical Society P.O. Box 906 Murfreesboro, TN 37133-0906 This the real stuff Macon-ites! Ask for Publication #35. |
Subject: Lyr Add: FROM EARTH TO HEAVEN (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 18 Jan 02 - 02:58 AM FROM EARTH TO HEAVEN [Spoken] Now good people I wagoned and farmed for over twenty years and the style on my wagoning firm was the Macon Midway Mule and Mitchell Wagon Transportation Company. Situated on the dividing line, operated by gentlemen on and up to time. Main office eight and a quarter mile East Main Street, Murfreesboro and ten and three-quarters West Main Street, Woodbury, Tennessee. Now here's my song! I remember the year when I began to haul, it was during the summer time Back in the those good old days, you could find whisky, beer and wine I'd walk right in to every saloon, I was strictly up to time Never was a night that I didn't drive home, wouldn't pull me the end of the line Chorus: Been a-wagoning for over twenty years, and living on the farm I'll bet a hundred dollars to a half a ginger cake, I'm here when the trucks is gone Gonna tell you now, said the bone-dry Tom, you can't find whisky that good Done quit all of my drinking, done gone to serving God I love to go to big meetings, and I'm a-gonna tell you why I love to sing and pray to God, sweet Heaven when I die Chorus An auto-truck has a guiding wheel, while I hold my lines Whoa when my feet and body gets cold, I'm walking half the time I speak right to my power, they understand my talk And when I holler, way get right, they know just how to walk. Chorus An auto-truck runs quick and fast, a wagon hasn't such speed Four good mules and a Mitchell wagon is the safest, oh yes indeed I'm on my way to Heaven, and I tell you just how I feel I'd druther ride a wagon and go to Heaven, than to Hell in an automobile Chorus Source: transcription from 'Uncle Dave Macon: Country Music Hall of Fame Series' MCA CD MCAD-10546. --Stewie.
|
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,n_kovars@hotmail.com Date: 03 Aug 02 - 05:33 PM If anyone can help with the lyrics to "BACKWATER BLUES" including the refrain that sounds like ("OH MY LOVE LONESOME ROAD, OH MY LOVE LONESOME ROAD") I would be eternally grateful. I love the song and would like to have any iformation available on it. There doesn't seem to be any real info from the Internet. Thanks alot |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Bee-dubya-ell Date: 03 Aug 02 - 05:57 PM This Link claims to have the lyrics to all of Uncle Dave's songs. However, I did not see "Backwater Blues", though it may be listed under something else. Be forewarned! This site is not very well organized. The songs are not in any kind of order that I can decipher. It's also all one big file. Don't try to print it unless you want the whole thing. For individual songs, you have to copy and paste to a word processing program and you may have to re-insert line breaks/carriage returns. Bruce |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,nina-kovars Date: 04 Aug 02 - 06:03 PM Bee-dubya-ell, Thanks for the link I've checked the whole list and oh course it's not on it... This seems to be a mystery song in regard to finding much on it. Let me know please if you have any other ideas on obtaining this info, thanks again.. Nina |
Subject: Lyr Add: BACKWATER BLUES (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 08 Aug 02 - 02:17 AM BACKWATER BLUES Spoken: Well good people, y'all know water will put out fire but, when water backs up, it makes you put out, right up the mountain, just like old wreck of the 97, goin' down the grade at 90 miles an hour. Now, I'm a-gonna give you a little imitation how that old train was a-goin'. Instrumental break ['Wreck of Old 97'] Spoken: Hot dog! I'm old but I'm round here! Backwater's up and the people are runnin' I'm a-goin' to the mountain, I'm a-goin' huntin' Fare you well, oh my little darlin' Lord, lord, ain't I gone Oh my love, lonesome road Oh my love, lonesome wood I love you and you can't help it You love me, but you won't confess it No you don't, oh my little darlin' Lord, lord, ain't I gone Oh my love, lonesome road Oh my love, lonesome wood Two little children lyin' in the bed The water was a-risin' over their head Their mother's up town, was never found Lord, lord, wasn't that sad Oh how bad, oh how sad I heard a man talkin' to a feller The water was a-risin' in his cellar Rise any more and a-comin' through the floor Lord, lord, open the door Oh my love, lonesome road Oh my love, lonesome wood Nashville is a favourite town The back water's got us a-runnin' around Lord have mercy, ain't I gone Lord, lord, fare you well Oh my love, lonesome road Oh my love, lonesome wood Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon (and Sam McGee) 'Backwater Blues', recorded 11 May 1927 in New York City. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Go Long Mule' County CO-CD3505. It seems to me that Uncle Dave is singing 'wood' in the second line of the refrain, but I am not certain. Any corrections? --Stewie.
|
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,Dale Date: 08 Aug 02 - 08:24 AM Have to add me to the list of skeptics/careless researchers. It raised no remembrance in my mind either, so much so that I didn't even bother to look ~~ worse yet. Stewie, I hear wood, just as you do, but it doesn't seem to make sense. But then, how much of that does make sense? For it to make any sense at all, it has to mean wood in the sense of woods, forest, etc. It's really quite minor, but it sounds to me like you cleaned up his grammar a bit, as I hear just like old wreck of 97, goin' down grade 90 miles an hour. ~~ minus two thes and an at. And of course, he is saying you cain't hep it. That's a pronunciation that you will still hear here in the South ~~ maybe not as much as years ago, but still common enough usage by people of all ages.
|
Subject: Lyr Add: I TICKLED NANCY (from Uncle Dave Macon) From: Jim Dixon Date: 09 Sep 02 - 12:53 PM I found this while searching for a different song about tickling. (See Lyr Req: Shotgun Tickle for the original request.) Transcribed from a RealAudio file at the Honking Duck site: http://www.honkingduck.com/BAZ/baz_side.php?meth=t&letter=i&title=I%2520Tickled%2520Nancy&cuid=20483A Click to play. There are a few words or phrases I'm uncertain about; these are marked with (?). I TICKLED NANCY (Uncle Dave Macon & His Fruit Jar Drinkers, 1926) Been living in the city, but I like the country life. A dear little country girl I'm going to call my wife. The first time that I met her, the night was very dark And you can bet I'm happy with the whole big (?) jolly lark. CHORUS: For I tickled Nancy and Nancy tickled me For when we are married how happy we will be. For we will sit together as happy as can be, For I'll tickle Nancy, and Nancy'll tickle me. Now Nancy is a lovely girl; to me she is a charm, And I can trust her without any alarm. As we were walking to the home, I placed my loving arm Around her waist so carefully (?) until we reached the farm. CHO: Then I'd tickle and Nancy'd tickle me... And now we are married, we invite you all to call To come around to ... (?) with us in the fall. In the winter by the fire, set Nancy on my knee. For I'll tickle Nancy and Nancy'll tickle me. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha, ... (etc. for an entire verse.) |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 09 Sep 02 - 06:55 PM Hi Jim, I think the missing bits are as follows: Stanza 1, line 4: 'And you can bet I'm happy as a holy [or perhaps wholly] jolly lark' Stanza 2, line 4: 'Round her waist she kep' it until I reached the farm' Stanza 3, line 2: 'Come around, pick apples with us in the fall' --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: OVER THE ROAD I'M BOUND TO GO (D Macon) From: Stewie Date: 27 Sep 02 - 05:02 AM OVER THE ROAD I'M BOUND TO GO Spoken: Let's go, over the road I'm bound Judge and jurymen can't you see I have murdered in the first degree Bound to go, bound to go Over the road I'm bound to go Every station I pass by I thought I heard little Ella cry Weep not, my dear honey I'm bound to go It may rain, it may snow But over the road I'm bound to go Fare you well I'm bound to go I rolled out to preach and call They looked at me: it was the law Bound to go, bound to go Over the road I'm bound to go Every station I pass by I thought I heard little Ella cry Bound to go, bound to go Over the road I'm bound to go It may rain, it may snow But over the road I'm bound to go I rolled out to preach and call They looked at me: it was the law Bound to go, bound to go Over the road I'm bound to go Every station I pass by I thought I heard little Ella cry Weep not, my dear honey I'm bound to go It may rain, it may snow But over the road I'm bound to go How them women, they did shout They looked at me, it was all about Bound to go, bound to go Over the road I'm bound to go It may rain, it may snow But over the road I'm bound to go Bound to go, bound to go Over the road I'm bound to go Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon 'Over the Road I'm Bound to Go' recorded on 25 July 1928 in Chicago and issued as Brunswick 329 in August 1929. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Go Long Mule' County CO-CD-3505.
|
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Geoff the Duck Date: 28 Sep 02 - 06:27 AM A couple of days back on Mudcat, there was a proposal that we use Mucat Resources to get together a file of lyrics to songs in the Honking Duck collection of recordings. It occurred to me that this thread probably contains a lot of the Dave Macon songs within that archive. I also suspect that someone will already have listed which of the lyrics posted in this thread belong to the songs on the Honking Duck website. Here is a link to that thread, if anyone wants to get the ball rolling with data they already have available. Mudcat Honkingduck Oldtime Project Proposal . I am not sure how the project has been visualised, but it sounds like a good idea. Quack! Geoff the Duck! |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Geoff the Duck Date: 28 Sep 02 - 06:35 AM Whoops - wrong clicky cut and pasted into the above posting. The clicky to Honking Duck should have been HONKING DUCK WEBSITE - OLDTIME MUSIC RECORDINGS ONLINE If any joeclones could correct the link and remove this post I might keep some reputation........ probably not! Quack! |
Subject: Lyr Add: WEEVILY WHEAT (from Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 29 Sep 02 - 04:26 AM 'Weevily Wheat' came up in a thread creep in the 'Ida Red' thread and I posted Kelly Harrell's version, titled 'Charley He's a Good Ol' Man' there. Uncle Dave's version of 'Weevily Wheat' was printed in his 1938 songbook, but I don't think he recorded it. I'm am indebted to sometime Mudcatter, Larry Parish, for kindly photocopying the Macon songbook for me. You can find the other thread HERE.
WEEVILY WHEAT --Stewie.
|
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Geoff the Duck Date: 18 Nov 02 - 11:08 AM I have just spotted this thread with another Uncle Dave lyric. Lyr Add: I Don't Reckon It'll Happen Again The lyrics are a composite of two sets transcribed from the Honking Duck. One by Dave Macon and the other version by Bill Chitwood. Quack! GtD |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,Gern Date: 19 Nov 02 - 10:43 AM I second the chicken connection,relative to 'domenicker' adjective. Refer to Minnie Pearl's spirited rendition of the Carter Family's "Jealous Hearted me:" "Take your domenicker rooster and your shanghai hen/ Get a fer piece away and don't you come again, I'm jealous..." |
Subject: Lyr Add: JUST FROM TENNESSEE (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 21 Nov 02 - 01:54 AM Here is how I hear Uncle Dave's 'Just From Tennessee' - subject, as usual, to confirmation by other ears. I'm not certain of the 'eats greens' stanza, but the remainder should be pretty accurate. JUST FROM TENNESSEE Spoken: Hello folks, just as soon as I get the epiglottis and diaphonics of my throat cleared up a little, I'm gonna sing you a song. Now I'm gonna give you (a little of) the variations of 'Cotton-eyed Joe'. Instrumental Spoken: Hot dog! Ready and rarin' to go! Listen, good people, to what I say Just from Tennessee in my weavin'(?) way Born(ed) in Warren County, raised in Tennessee If you don't like my looks, don't look at me Shout Lula, shout I say Shout Lula, I'm gwine away Whooo! Shout Lula, shout I say Shout Lula, I'm gwine away Been to Muscle Shoals and I been to Beaver Dam I've seen no place like Alabam Shout Lula, shout I say Shout Lula, I'm gwine away I got a girl, says she's so tall She sits in the parlour with her feet in the hall Shout Lula, shout I say Shout Lula, I'm gwine away I got a girl, says she eats some greens She shakes her wicked foot and she shakes it mean Shout Lula, shout I say Shout Lula, I'm gwine away Coffee in the pot, there's sugar in the bowl Papa won't eat without jelly roll Shout Lula, shout I say Shout Lula, I'm gwine away Just one thing, and I don't understand Why a bow-legged woman likes a pigeon-toed man Shout Lula, shout I say Shout Lula, I'm gwine away Just one thing that makes me unhappy I haven't got a daughter for to call me pappy Shout Lula, shout I say Shout Lula, I'm gwine away Whooo! Shout Lula, shout I say Shout Lula, I'm gwine away Whooo! Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon 'Just From Tennessee' recorded on 13 April 1925 in NYC and issued as Vo 5075 in February 1927. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Early Recordings 1924-1925' Old Homestead OHCD 4184. |
Subject: Lyr Add: SAVE MY MOTHER'S PICTURE FROM THE SALE From: Stewie Date: 04 Dec 02 - 01:44 AM SAVE MY MOTHER'S PICTURE FROM THE SALE I've been thinking of the day which has long since passed away When my mother through sickness drooped and died, In the quiet and silent room when they laid her in the tomb I remember then how bitterly I cried I, but a boy then, my age was scarcely ten, Through sorrow, I had grown thin and pale When the home had to be sold, I cried with grief untold, Oh, save my mother's picture from the sale The table where I played, the cot on which I laid All passed away like chaff before the gale But when the end came near, I cried with piteous fear, Oh, save my mother's picture from the sale My mother's face, that dear old face, Whose loss I ever shall bewail Don't break an orphan's heart, with this don't make me part Oh, save my mother's picture from the sale The picture round was passed, and questions they were asked. A price for it was bid just here and there. The tears streamed down my face, I could scarcely keep my place When I saw the picture pass without a care But an angel of a girl with a mass of golden curls Who was struck to see my face so sad and pale, Outbid them all, you see, and presented it to me And saved my mother's picture from the sale My mother's face, that dear old face, Whose loss I ever shall bewail Don't break an orphan's heart, with this don't make me part Oh, save my mother's picture from the sale Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon 'Save My Mother's Picture From the Sale' recorded on 16 April 1925 in NYC and issued as Vo 15100. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Fun In Life' Bear Family LP BF 15519. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: LONG JOHN GREEN (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 14 Dec 02 - 09:11 PM LONG JOHN GREEN Here we have the story of Long John Green An old bank robber from Bowling Green Put him in jail just the other day And late last night he made his getaway Long gone! Wasn't he lucky Long gone! From old Kentucky Long gone! That's what I mean He's done gone from Bowling Green Long John a-standing on a railroad tie Waitin' for a freight train to come by Here come the freight just a-puffin' and a-flyin' You oughta for to seen John catch that blind Long gone! Wasn't he lucky Long gone! From old Kentucky Long gone! That's what I mean He's done gone from Bowling Green Caught him in Bristol at Steven's Place Put him in jail one evening late Out on the house tops gonna escape The coppers forgot to lock the Golden Gate Long gone! Wasn't he lucky Long gone! From old Kentucky Long gone! That's what I mean He's done gone from Bowling Green Long John went to a burlesque show Got him a seat right in the front row The girl come out with a [high-flown?] dance They had to put a hole in an am-bu-lance Source: transcription from 'The Tennessee Folklore Society Presents Uncle Dave Macon At Home, His Last Recordings 1950' Davis Unlimited LP DU-TFS 101. For background information on this song, see the 'Long John/Lost John thread: Click Here --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,Over the Road Date: 15 Dec 02 - 01:41 AM Stewie posted Over the Road I'm Bound to Go in September. I think the first two lines are: Judge and Jury came to see I had murdered in the first degree rather than "J&J can't you see" etc. The lyric which puzzles me the most is the last line of the chorus to "I'm goin' away in the morn" With sorrow in our hearts????? Has inspiration struck anyone else? Great thread; only happened upon it yesterday |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 22 Dec 02 - 08:07 PM Hi Guest Thanks. I listened again to 'Over the Road I'm Bound to Go', but I am sure Uncle Dave is singing 'can't you see' - whoever did the transcription for the NLCR songbook also hears this. Your 'came to see' would certainly make more sense though. The last line of the chorus of 'I'm Goin' Away in the Morn' is also a complete mystery to me. I've seen it as 'with sorrow in her heart', but I can't hear that either. Sometimes I hear something like 'sounds of the dinner horn'. Whatever it is, it is probable that the final word would rhyme with 'morn'. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: SOURWOOD MOUNTAIN MEDLEY From: Stewie Date: 22 Dec 02 - 08:26 PM Richie posted the lyrics of 'Sourwood Mountain Medley' to 'Molly Put the Kettle On' thread: Click Here for 'Molly' thread SOURWOOD MOUNTAIN MEDLEY [Spoken] Hello folks, I was walking down the street with one of the ugliest men I ever saw in my life. We passed a really pretty girl, and the ugly fellow said, 'Did you see that girl smile at me?' ' Well', I said, 'Good Lord, man, that's nothing. First time I saw you, I laughed outright. Ha, ha, ha!' Asked that girl to be my wife, what'd you reckon she said, She would not have a poor boy, if everyone else was dead. Chorus: Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight, Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight. Oh, my don't tell, Oh my ring the bell, Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight, Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight. On my way to Sourwood Mountain, fare you well I'm a-going away, Fare you well I'm a-going away. Had a big boom in Florida, boys, we know it, we know it. Forty-nine banks in Georgia closed and that's the way they showed it. Oh, Jenny put the kettle on, Sally blow the dinner horn, Jenny put the kettle on, the banks have gone. Ain't gonna get no supper here tonight, Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight. On my way to Sourwood Mountain, Fare you well I'm a-going away, [Panic/Tax men] come the bank went broke, we know it, we know it. Twenty-eight thousand dollars lost, and just the figures to show it. Oh, Jenny put the kettle on, Sally blow the dinner horn, Jenny put the kettle on, the banks have gone. [spoken] I never was as hungry in my life, you know I hadn't had nothing to eat for three long days, hadn't had a thing but water. And folks I had had to drink so much water my stomach thought my throat was taking in washing, and then they come giving me this: Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight, Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight. On my way to Sourwood Mountain, fare you well I'm a-going away, Girls all sweet on Sourwood Mountain, fare you well I'm a-going away. Good pay isn't in one town, we know it, we know it, Three banks in the town went broke and the people's look do show it. Oh, Jenny put the kettle on, Sally blow the dinner horn, Jenny put the kettle on, the banks have gone. Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight, Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight. Source: Uncle Dave Macon "Sourwood Mountain Medley" Vo 5005, reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Country Music Hall of Fame Series' MCA MCAD-10546. Note: What is being sung in the square brackets in the first line of stanza 5 is a puzzle. Sounds something like 'panam' or 'panum'. 'Panic' and 'Tax men' are suggestions. See Richie's 'Molly' thread, linked at the beginning of this posting, for more discussion of this mystery. --Stewie. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Post - Top - Forum Home - Printer Friendly - Translate |
Subject: Lyr Add: WAY DOWN THE OLD PLANK ROAD From: Stewie Date: 22 Dec 02 - 09:14 PM Richie posted his transcription for 'Way Down The Old Plank Road'. I believe it is more accurate than the transcription already in the DT and linked to earlier in this thread. See Richie's 'My Wife Died On A Sat. Night' thread for associated songs: CLICK HERE WAY DOWN THE OLD PLANK ROAD [Spoken] Hot dog, buddy let's go Rather be in Richmond, midst all the hail and rain, Than for to be in Georgia boys, wearing that ball and chain. Chorus: Won't get drunk no more, won't get drunk no more, Won't get drunk no more, way down the old plank road. I went down to Mobile for to get on the gravel train, Very next thing heard of me, had on a ball and chain. Chorus Doney, oh dear Doney, what makes you treat me so? Caused me to wear the bail and chain, now my ankle's sore. Chorus [spoken] Glory halelujah there! Knoxville is a pretty place, Memphis is a beauty, Want to see them pretty girls, hop to Chattanoogie. Chorus [Spoken] Glory halelujah there! Fare thee well I'm gone! I'm gwine to build me a scaffold on some mountain high, So I can see my Dora girl, she goes riding by. Chorus My wife died Friday night, Saturday she was buried, Sunday was my courting day, Monday I got married. Chorus [Spoken] Gee horse there! Eighteen pounds of meat a week, whiskey here to sell, How can a young man stay at home, pretty girls look so well. Chorus [spoken] Fare thee well! Source: Uncle Dave Macon (with Sam McGee) 'Way Down The Old Plank Road' recorded on 14 April 1926 in NYC and issued as Vocalion 15321 in June 1926 and as Vocalion 5097 in February 1927. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Go Long Mule' County CO-CD-3505. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: OLD DAN TUCKER (from Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 30 Dec 02 - 09:10 PM Here is Uncle Dave's take on 'Old Dan Tucker'. Words I am not sure about are in square brackets. The word in square brackets in the second spoken passage is an Uncle Dave creation of some sort. OLD DAN TUCKER Spoken: Hello folks, you know I been a-pickin' and tryin' to pick a banjer for forty years or more. I used to just play the imitations, but now I'm a-gonna give you a little of the variations of 'Casey Jones'. Instrumental Spoken: Gentlemen – now folks, I'm a-gonna give you a little of 'Old Dan Tucker' containing more heterogeneous, [ 'constapolicies ?'], double flavour and unknown quality than usual. Old Dan Tucker was a fine old man, Washed his face in the frying pan Combed his hair with a wagon wheel Died with a toothache in his heel Git out of the way, Old Dan Tucker You come too late to get your supper Tucker was a horrid sinner Never said grace over his dinner The old hog squealed, the pig did squall [Held ?] the whole hog with the tail and all Git out of the way, Old Dan Tucker You come too late to get your supper Old Tom Wilson got on a drunk Fell in the fire and kicked up a chunk Charcoal got inside the shoe I'll bet you, honey, how the ashes flew Git out of the way, Old Dan Tucker You come too late to get your supper Here's to booze and Choctaw batter Lemon extract and old Budweiser [Horse ?] tastes bitterer'n the doctor's tonic The good book says a little good for the stomach Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon 'Old Dan Tucker' recorded on 13 April 1925 in NYC and issued as Vocalion 15033 in August 1925. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Fun In Life' Bear Family LP 15519. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: WOULDN'T GIVE ME SUGAR IN MY COFFEE From: Stewie Date: 21 Jan 03 - 01:58 AM Here is a transcription of 'Wouldn't Give Me Sugar In My Coffee'. Any corrections? WOULDN'T GIVE ME SUGAR IN MY COFFEE Instrumental [banjo] introduction. [Spoken] Hot dog! People, you know, a gentleman asked me last night what I was doing. I said, 'Well, sir, on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, I don't do anything'. He says, 'Well, what do you do on Thursday, Friday and Saturday?' I says, 'Why, I rest'. He says, 'You do anything on Sunday?' 'Oh, yes sir, that's my busiest day'. He says, 'What are you doing on Sunday?' I says, 'Getting ready to do nothing on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday'. Ha! Ha! I'll be dogged if I can see, How my little honey got away from me, Been there once, I'm going home, Wouldn't give me sugar in my coffee-o Just one thing that bothers my mind, A world full of women and none of 'em mine Been there once, I'm going home, Wouldn't give me sugar in my coffee-o Well try to look for a needle in the sand, Try to find a woman that's got no man Been there once, I'm going home, Wouldn't give me sugar in my coffee-o Jaybird sitting on a hickory limb, Picked up brickbat took him on the chin - hi-ho mister don't you do that again, Brother, you'll kick the bark off a seasoned hickory limb Been there once, I'm going home, Wouldn't give me sugar in my coffee-o Preacher went to Florida, the truth to tell, he went to Miami at a big hotel, He went to the beach and the bathing was fine, Sued for divorce in an hour's time Been there once, I'm going home, Wouldn't give me sugar in my coffee-o Never you mind what your mammy say, Shake your little foot and sail away, Been there once, I'm going home, Wouldn't give me sugar in my coffee-o Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon 'Wouldn't Give Me Sugar In My Coffee' recorded on 8 September 1926 and issued as Vocalion 15440 in December 1926 [also as Vocalion 5002 in February 1927]. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Wait 'Till The Clouds Roll By 1926-1939' Historical LP HLP-8006 [1975]. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: PEEK-A-BOO (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 31 Mar 03 - 10:10 PM PEEK-A-BOO On a cold winter's eve when business is done And to your home you return, What a pleasure it is to have a bright, bouncing boy, One that you love to admire You'll hug him, you'll kiss him, you'll press him to your heart, what joy to the bosom it will bring, Then you'll place him on the carpet and hide behind the chair, And to please him you'll commence to sing. Chorus: Oh, peek-a-boo, coochee coochee coo Come from behind the chair, Oh, peek-a-boo, you rascal you, I see you hiding there. Repeat chorus When I am away from my home and at work, He's at home with his mama's care so dear, All the whole day long, you can hear his little song, Echoing so calm and so clear, His playthings on the floor, he's happy evermore, What joy to his mama's heart he brings, Then you'll find him on the carpet and watching at the door, For me when I come home to sing Oh, peek-a-boo, you rascal you Come from behind the chair, Oh, peek-a-boo, I see you, I see you hiding there Chorus Source: Uncle Dave Macon & Smoky Mountain Glen 'Peek-A-Boo' recorded on 24 January 1938 in Charlotte, NC, and issued as Bluebird B7779 in October 1938. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 04 Apr 03 - 01:45 AM Further to the matter of 'dominecker' chooks, Gershon Legman in his notes to Randolph's 'Unprintable Ozark Folksongs and Folklore' gives this delightful quatrain: Said the dominecker rooster to the bow-legged hen I ain't had any since the Lord knows when So rustle up your feathers and h'ist up your tail 'Cause I'm goin' to have a little if I have to go to jail Legman also confirms Lin's definition above, stating that 'Dominecker' refers literally to 'gray-barred, rose-combed Dominique chickens'. He notes also that 'bow-legged', when referring to a girl or woman, almost always means having had extensive sexual experience. [Vance Randolph, Ed G. Legman 'Blow the Candle Out: Unprintable Ozark Folksongs and Folklore Vol II' Uni Arkansas Press 1992, p 599]. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 06 May 03 - 08:05 PM Abby Sale posted to the Ballad-L list a link to some wonderful photos of plank roads. Worth a look. Plank Roads --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: CAP'N TOM RYMAN From: Stewie Date: 14 May 03 - 08:49 PM The transcription of 'Rock about my Saro Jane' in the DT - CLICK - is missing a line in the chorus. There should be an extra 'Oh, rock about my Saro Jane' line; it should read: Chorus: Oh, there's nothing to do but to sit down and sing And rock about, my Saro Jane Oh, rock about my Saro Jane Oh, rock about my Saro Jane Oh, there's nothing to do but to sit down and sing And rock about, my Saro Jane In his book on the birth of the Grand Ole Opry, Charles Wolfe gives some fascinating information on how Uncle Dave came by this piece:
--Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: BAKE THAT CHICKEN PIE (Uncle Dave Macon) From: GUEST,Q Date: 12 Jul 03 - 08:07 PM BAKE THAT CHICKEN PIE As recorded by Uncle Dave Macon, 1927. Whoa, if you want to see a darky made happy, I'll tell you what you do: Slip over to the neighbor's yard, there take down a chicken or two. Why, you slip around a dark night, when the chickens cannot see, Want see that the bulldog's tied up, then sneak up to the tree, For you take a pole just to knock 'im off, then slap him like a goat. Well, if he hollers loudly, want to shove 'im up under your coat. CHORUS: Bake that chicken pie, oh, put on lots of spice, Oh, Lord how I'd like to have just a piece of that chicken pie. Well, the pullets that flop their wings and crow, when the darky passes by, Seems to say that they can't be caught, and there ain't no use for to try, And worse than all that's happened, yes, did you ever hear the like before? Whenever you go to travel you'll find, there's a lock on the chicken coop door. CHORUS This country am a-gwine to the dogs at last, when the farmers sit and watch, Big bull dog and a big steel trap in the watermelon patch, And worse than all that's happened, yes, did you ever hear the like before? Whenever you hear that er-er-er-er-er, there's a lock on the chicken coop door. CHORUS TWICE See thread 61157, Bake that chicken pie, for comments: Chicken Pie |
Subject: Lyr Add: ARCADE BLUES (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Jim Dixon Date: 01 Sep 03 - 11:48 PM Transcribed by me from www.honkingduck.com: ARCADE BLUES (1926) [Spoken:] "Hot dog! Sung especially for Mr. Charlie Keys and Mr. Hyde in the Arcade who will play your records on both sides." They got the arcade blues. (2x) They got the arcade blues so bad. Got the arcade blues. (2x) That's a trouble I never had. (2x) These silk-dressed women (2x) This arcade's always had. These silk-dressed women (2x) Make a married man feel bad. (2x) If you got a good woman, (2x) I'd advise you to leave her at home. These arcade boys (2x) Won't let a good woman alone. (2x) If you got a good woman, (2x) Don't never bring her to town. But a red-headed woman (2x) Make a gray rabbit love a hound. (2x) Gonna lay my head (2x) Up on some railroad track. It'll carry me away (2x) But it will not bring me back. (2x) A rubber-tired hearse (2x) Like a great big Cadillac Carry you over to the graveyard, boys, (2x) That man won't bring you back. (2x) |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Jim Dixon Date: 01 Sep 03 - 11:55 PM Regarding FROM EARTH TO HEAVEN, which Stewie posted back at 18 Jan 02 - 02:58 AM: I hear the first line of the second verse differently: "I'll tell you now, since the bone-dry's come, you can't find whiskey that's good." I take the "bone-dry" to mean Prohibition. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 02 Sep 03 - 02:35 AM Jim, after another listen, I reckon you are quite right. Thanks for the correction. Cheers, Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: CARVE THAT POSSUM (from Uncle Dave Macon) From: Jim Dixon Date: 07 Sep 03 - 01:19 PM A version of CARVE THAT POSSUM has been posted here, but it's not Uncle Dave Macon's version. Following is my transcription from The Record Lady's All-Time Country Favorites, on "Requests Page Five". (Actually, I started by copying other transcriptions from the Internet--specifically, here and here--and then making a few corrections based on my own hearing.) I must admit some serious doubts about the word "on" in the phrase "On, children, on!" and the word "come" in the chorus. I have left them the way I found them. Logically, it would make sense to use the same word in both places. It would also make sense for that word to be "carve," but I'm not convinced that that's what they're singing. Based on hearing alone, and disregarding logic, it sounds equally like "hard" or "horn" or "harm." It's possible that different singers sing different words. It seems that Uncle Dave sings the verse, two or more other singers sing the refrain "On, children, on" and all of them together sing the chorus. My dog treed. I went to see. (On, children, on!) There was a possum up that tree, (On, children, on!) And that possum began to grin. (On, children, on!) I reached up and took him in. (On, children, on!) CHORUS: Oh, carve that possum. Carve that possum, children. Carve that possum, children. Oh, come, children come. Carried him home and dressed him off. (On, children, on!) Hung him out that night to frost. (On, children, on!) One way to cook the possum sound, (On, children, on!) First parboil, then bake him brown. (On, children, on!) CHORUS Possum meat am good to eat. (On, children, on!) Always fat and good and sweet. (On, children, on!) Three [or "grease" or "sweet"] potatoes in the pan, (On, children, on!) Greatest eating in the land. (On, children, on!) CHORUS Some eat early and some eat soon. (On, children, on!) Some like possum and some like coon. (On, children, on!) That possum's just the thing for me. (On, children, on!) Old Rattler's got another'n up a tree. (On, children, on!) CHORUS |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 07 Sep 03 - 09:01 PM Hi Jim, I agree with you - there seems to be a 'h' sound rather than 'on', but I can't think what it might be. In fact, I am not sure the word is even 'children' - it sounds like it begins with a 'd' sound to me. However, I believe Uncle Dave is singing 'oh, carve, children, carve' in the last part of the chorus and this is clearest in the very last chorus. I can't hear 'grease' or 'sweet'; it seems to me he is simply singing 'Three or four potatoes in the pan'. Meade indicates that Uncle Dave Macon & The Fruit Jar Drinkers was the only old-time group to record this. It was recorded on 7 May 1927 in New York City and issued as Vocalion 5151 in August 1927. It has been reissued on CD: Uncle Dave Macon 'Go Long Mule' County CO-CD-3505. Earliest attribution in Meade is to Sam Lucas ca 1875. The Fiddler's Companion entry for this is:
--Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: CARVE 'IM TO DE HEART (Odum & Johnson) From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 07 Sep 03 - 09:38 PM The version from Thede, above, is very similar to the one in Odum and Johnson, 1925 (1976), "Carve 'Im To De Heart." Apparently a very common song. Last three verses; the first two are almost identical: I went up dar to fetch 'im down, Carve 'im to de heart. I bus' him open agin de groun', Carve 'im to de heart. De way ter cook de 'possum nice, Carve 'im to de heart, Fust parbile 'im, stir 'im twice, Carve 'im to de heart. Den lay sweet taters in de pan, Carve 'im to de heart; Nuthin' beats dat in de lan', Carve 'im to de heart. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Jim Dixon Date: 08 Sep 03 - 09:19 AM Re: CARVE THAT POSSUM There aren't enough syllables for "three or four potatoes" (although that might be the intended meaning). It could be "three-fo' 'tatoes" or "three potatoes." Either way, it sounds odd to me. I would expect him to say either "potatoes" or "taters" but not "'tatoes." On the other hand, why would it be exactly three? Anyway, I decided "three potatoes" was most likely. And since I was uncertain, I decided to document the fact that I had found "grease" and "sweet" in other versions or other people's transcriptions, but I don't hear those words either. I probably should have shown it differently, e.g. Three potatoes [or "Three-fo' 'tatoes"] in the pan |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 08 Sep 03 - 11:50 AM In the first verse second line, I hear "Sky wus barkin' up that tree," I agree with the "three-fo tatoes" Now I can't get the song out of my head--- |
Subject: RE: ADD: From: Stewie Date: 08 Sep 03 - 07:23 PM |
Subject: Lyr Add: CARVE THAT POSSUM (Corrected) From: Stewie Date: 08 Sep 03 - 07:42 PM Hi, Jim and Q, deciphering this song was also annoying the hell out of me so I emailed Lyle Lofgren and asked if he would consult Uncle Willie's wordbooks. Uncle Willie [Willard Johnson] was an original member of Lyle's group which began in the 1960s as Uncle Willie and the Brandy Snifters. Uncle Willie was a master of deciphering the mutterings of old-time recording artists. Lyle kindly sent me Uncle Willie's transcription with which he agrees totally, as no doubt you will too. It is bloody amazing that once you know what it should be, you can hear it clearly! From the African-American songs, we should have guessed 'carve him to his heart'. I knew it wasn't 'on children' at the end of the verse lines, but I could have sworn it was 'carve, children, carve' at the end of the chorus. There you go. Have another listen with Uncle Willie's transcription in front of you and reckon that, like me, you will agree he was spot on: CARVE THAT POSSUM My dog treed, I went to see (carve him to his heart) There was a possum up that tree (carve him to his heart) And that possum began to grin (carve him to his heart) I reached up and took him in (carve him to his heart) Chorus A: Oh, carve that possum, Carve that possum, children, Carve that possum, children, Oh, carve him to his heart Carried him home and dressed him off (carve him to his heart) Hung him out that night to frost (carve him to his heart) Well, the way to cook the possum sound (carve him to his heart) Cook, fry, boil, and bake it brown (carve him to his heart) Repeat Chorus A Possum meat am good to eat (carve him to his heart.) Always fat and good and sweet (carve him to his heart) Sweet potatoes in the pan (carve him to his heart.) Sweetest eating in the land (carve him to his heart.) Chorus B: Oh, carve that possum, Carve that possum, children, Carve that possum, children, How? Carve him to his heart Some eat early and some eat soon (carve him to his heart) Some like possum and some like coon (carve him to his heart) That possum's just the thing for me (carve him to his heart) Old Rattler's got another'n up a tree (carve him to his heart) Repeat Chorus B Thanks to Lyle Lofgren, --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 08 Sep 03 - 08:37 PM Gee! Someone changed the words on the recording before the last post! Yep, you're right. |
Subject: Lyr Add: HOLD ON TO THE SLEIGH (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Jim Dixon Date: 09 Sep 03 - 09:40 AM Here's another one I transcribed from Honking Duck. Several words and phrases are highly doubtful; corrections are welcome. HOLD ON TO THE SLEIGH [Spoken:] All right, you can go get a little Sweet Marie now. [Banjo solo] 1. Just as the rain was over and the snow was a-falling fast, Got my mule harnessed, boys, and got him hitched to that. 2. Drove up to Miss Lizy's all for to take a sleigh. Would not tell I bobbed that mule. I's scared he'd run away. CHORUS: Whoa, I tell you. Whoa, I say. Whoa, I tell you. Hold on to the sleigh. 3. We're off down ... all for to take a ride. Never felt better in the world with Liza by my side. 4. Said, "Hold tight, Miss Lizy. Sleigh's not very stout. Watch this mule I backed in here. I'm scared he'll kick us out." CHORUS 5. The mule was fairly prancing, all so innocent. While I's a-making love to Lizy, he run us in the fence. [Shouted:] I declare! 6. Just where you gwine, my darling? You act just like a fool. Hold your lovesick talk to me and try to hold the mule. CHORUS 7. Gwine down to the parson's. Now, Liza, you keep cool, For I ain't got time to kiss you now. I'm busy with the mule. CHORUS |
Subject: Lyr Add: HOLD ON TO THE SLEIGH (Corrected) From: Stewie Date: 09 Sep 03 - 08:06 PM Hi Jim, Lyle posted Uncle Willie's transcription to this one in the old-time music newsgroup last year. I don't think the recording has made it to CD yet. In his note to the reissue on a Vetco LP, Bob Hyland explained the spoken bit: 'The song is given a prelude on the banjo of an old ballad 'Sweet Marie' written in 1893'. This is how Uncle Willie heard it: HOLD ON TO THE SLEIGH (Spoken): All right, people, gonna give you a little 'Sweet Marie' now. Just as the rain was over And the snow was a-fallin' fast Got my mule harnessed, boys, And got him hitched at last Drove up to Miss Lizy's All for to take a sleigh Would not tell about that mule I'se scared he'd run away Chorus: Whoa, I tell you Whoa, I say Whoa, I tell you Hold on to the sleigh Well, off to town we went All for to take a ride Never felt better in the world With Liza by my side Said, 'Hold tight, Miss Lizy 'Sleigh's not very stout, 'Watch this mule lie back his ears 'I'm scared he'll kick us out' Chorus The mule was very fancy And all so innocent While I was a-makin' love to Liza He run us in the fence (I declare!) She says, 'Where you gwine, my darlin' 'You act just like a fool 'Hush your lovesick talk to me 'And try to hold your mule' Chorus 'Gwine down to the parson's 'Now, Liza, you keep cool 'For I ain't got time to kiss you now I'm busy with my mule' Chorus Source: transcription posted to rec.music.country.old-time newsgroup Click Here. Uncle Dave Macon 'Hold On To The Sleigh' recorded on 9 September 1926 and issued in NYC and issued as Brunswick 114[E21926-27]. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'The Dixie Dewdrop' Vetco LP 101. See Meade et alia 'Country Music Sources' pp524-525 for numerous related old-time recordings under the generic title 'Whoa Mule'. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: SINCE BABY'S LEARNED TO TALK (Macon) From: Jim Dixon Date: 09 Sep 03 - 10:55 PM Here's another one I transcribed from Honking Duck. The audio quality was much better on this recording, so I think I got it nailed, except for one part where Uncle Dave seems to stumble over the words. I think the line that begins "Spill the ..." was supposed to end with "silk" in order to rhyme with "milk," but he mistakenly began the line "Spill the silk" which caused him to mumble the end of the line. The tune reminds me of "Keep on the Sunny Side." SINCE BABY'S LEARNED TO TALK I'm a real contented dad. See me smile. I'm awful glad. I have news to tell you all. 'Twill make you laugh. First, we'll call the neighbors in, let the jollities begin, And after that, we'll kill the fatted calf. When our baby got his tooth, we adored the little youth. In ecstasy, we saw the darling walk. 'Twas our reg'lar jubilee between the baby's ma and me, When first our little cherub learned to talk. Oh, it's pleasant since the baby learned to talk. Very agreeable since the baby learned to talk. It was fun to see him walk, better still to hear him talk. Oh, it's pleasant since the baby learned to walk and talk. Oh, at dinner on my knee, oh, it really pleases me To see that kid dissect a plate of hash, Jam the fork into his eye, pour the vinegar on the pie, And on his plate to mix a lot of trash. Drop molasses on the cat, pour the mustard in my hat, Spill the silk (?) upon his mama's nice ..., Throw the pepper in the fire, tell his papa he's a liar, And slyly mix the ketchup with the milk. Oh, it's diff'rent since the baby learned to talk. Very agreeable since the baby learned to talk. It was fun to see him walk, better still to hear him talk. Oh, it's pleasant since the baby learned to walk and talk. As a moral, I suggest: of all things it is the best To bring your children up as they should go. Never let them stray behind. Always treat them good and kind. To appease their ev'ry want, do not be slow. And when you're old and gray, in the corner hid away, With the rheumatics you're crippled, cannot walk, I tell you what they'll do: kick the rheumatics out of you. Oh, it's diff'rent since the baby learned to walk and talk. Oh, it's diff'rent since the baby learned to walk. Very diff'rent since the baby learned to talk. Get so full it makes him stammer, slugs the old folks with the hammer. Oh, it's diff'rent since the baby learned to walk and talk. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 10 Sep 03 - 01:59 AM Jim, I agree he sings 'silk' when he should have sung 'milk', but I reckon the line was meant to be 'Spill the milk upon his mother's nicest silk'. What do you think? 'Since Baby's ...' was recorded on 21 June 1929 in Chicago and issued as Brunswick 362 in December 1929. According to Meade, words and music were by Barney Fagin 1883 and was printed in his 'Dashing Drum Major Songster' 1883. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Jim Dixon Date: 10 Sep 03 - 09:29 AM Both The Lester S. Levy Collection of Sheet Music and The Library of Congress American Memory Collection have several songs by Barney Fagan (note spelling) but not this one, I'm afraid. I have a slight bias against mentioning milk twice in the same song. I think it would be funnier if he spilled something else on his mother's finest silk. I notice the song lists practically every condiment that is commonly kept on a southern dinner table: vinegar, molasses, mustard, pepper, ketchup. Only salt is missing, but salt wouldn't do much damage to silk. How about "Spills the coffee on his mama's nicest silk"? |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: wysiwyg Date: 10 Sep 03 - 10:06 AM I hope y'all found the thread from last year where I had looked up and listed the ones already posted here.... I was never able to get back to the project due to health and data management issues, but I did find a lot of stuff. Glad to see a "team" of you working on this. ~Susan |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 10 Sep 03 - 11:02 AM Jim, in that stanza, there are rhymes within the lines - knee/me, eye/pie, cat/hat, fire/liar - and that's why I would opt for milk/silk even if milk occurs twice. The 'Fagin' was probably a missprint in Meade. That is what he had in the song entry at page 266 and I went with that. However, it is spelled 'Fagan' at the songster reference at page 914. Looks like I opted for the wrong one. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Jim Dixon Date: 10 Sep 03 - 03:53 PM Yes, but... the internal rhymes all occur on the odd-numbered lines, which are longer than the even-numbered lines. |
Subject: Lyr Add: JUST TELL THEM THAT YOU SAW ME (P Dresser From: Jim Dixon Date: 10 Sep 03 - 09:29 PM Here's another one that you can hear at Honking Duck. Macon's words are practically identical to those in the sheet music at The Lester S. Levy Collection. JUST TELL THEM THAT YOU SAW ME (Paul Dresser, 1895.) [Spoken:] Now, people, I'm gonna sing you a beautiful sympathetic song. While strolling down the street one eve upon mere pleasure bent-- 'Twas after business worries of the day-- I met a girl who shrank from me, in whom I recognized My schoolmate in a village far away. "Is that you, Madge?" I said to her. She quickly turned away. "Don't turn away, Madge. I am still your friend. Next week I'm going back to see the old folks, and I thought Perhaps a message you would like to send." CHORUS: "Just tell them that you saw me," she said. "They'll know the rest. Tell them I was looking well, you know. Just whisper, if you get a chance, to Mother dear and say I love her as I did long, long ago." "Your cheeks are pale. Your face is thin. Come tell me, were you ill? When last we met, your eye shone clear and bright. Come home with me when I go, Madge. The change will do you good. Your mother wonders where you are tonight." "I long to see them all again, but not just yet," she said. "'Tis pride alone that's keeping me away. Just tell them not to worry, for I'm all right, don't you know. Tell mother I am coming home someday." CHORUS * * * Uncle Dave Macon recorded this in May, 1926; it was issued as Vocalion 15324. It is also sung by Red Smiley and the Bluegrass Cut-Ups on "20 Old-Time Favorites," Rural Rhythm CD 211, 1997; and by Dan W. Quinn on the compilation album "The 1890's, Vol. 2: Wear Yer Bran' New Gown," Original Cast Record CD 9239, 2002. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 10 Sep 03 - 10:40 PM According to Meade, Uncle Dave recorded 'Just Tell Them That You Saw Me' in April 1926 in NYC and it was issued in May. There were 2 earlier recordings, both by Vernon Dalhart, in August and September 1925. Recordings by other old-time artists included Buell Kazee [1927], John Ryan [1927], Andrew Jenkins & Carson Robison [1928], Frank & James McGravy [1931] and Clayton McMichen & His Georgia Wildcats [1939]. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: GIVE ME BACK MY FIVE DOLLARS (from Macon) From: Stewie Date: 10 Sep 03 - 11:30 PM GIVE ME BACK MY FIVE DOLLARS [Spoken]: Well, friends, I'm mighty sorry to tell you, but mens are gettin' mighty sorry in my state, in Tennessee. Now I'm going to sing you a song of a young man that's married three weeks and got a divorce and wanted the poor old Methodist preacher to give him his five dollars back. But you must remember King David and King Solomon lived merry, merry lives for they had many, many wives but, when old age overtook them, they became very calm – King Solomon wrote the proverbs and David wrote the psalms. We decided to get married, my little girl and I The day I bought the licence, I let my freedom fly We walked up to the preacher, said yes to all he said And if I had to do it again, I'd shoot myself instead Chorus: Oh, give me back my five dollars I paid for a wife I was a fool to pay someone to sentence me for life The first month she was sweet as a melon on the vine I thought it was my lucky day when I asked her to be mine She looked so doggone pretty she like to've took my breath But when I saw my mother-in-law, I darn nigh choked to death Chorus I took her to our home up east, I told her to see the sights She'd come in about daylight, oh 'Where did you spend your nights?' She bought out half the city, silk dresses and gold braid I could have bought the Brooklyn bridge with all the bills I paid Chorus So now, young men, stay single for married life's baloney It would break a millionaire to pay her alimony Oh, single men, stay single don't marry you a wife A bachelor's life is heaven compared to married life Chorus Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon 'Give Me Back My Five Dollars' recorded in Charlotte, NC, on 26 January 1938 and issued as Bluebird B8325. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Travelin' Down the Road' County CCS-CD-115. This is an Uncle Dave original composition. Text checked against Uncle Dave's little songbook reissued by the Tennessee Folklore Society. It is now out of print, but fox4zero kindly made a photocopy for me. For a song in a similar vein see this thread: 'Give Me Back My Fifteen Cents' (Binkley Bros) --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: WHEN THE HARVEST DAYS ARE OVER (Macon) From: Stewie Date: 11 Sep 03 - 02:45 AM WHEN THE HARVEST DAYS ARE OVER When the harvest days are over and the chaffs of wheat and clover Have been gathered from the field and stored away We'll be sorted in the morning for the bible gives us warning That accounts shall all be rendered on that day If we've laid up heavenly treasures, we'll receive unstinted measures In that land of crown and mansions in the sky If we've blown an earthly bubble, it will burst and burn like stubble When the harvest days are over by and by Chorus: When the harvest days are over, by and by (by and by) And we stand around the judgment throne on high We shall know what we have known, we shall reap what we have sown When the harvest days are over by and by (by and by) Day by day the seed we're sowing is increasing while it's growing Wheat or tares, what shall the final harvest be? What a wailing, what a weeping, what a sad eternal reaping When the wicked hear his voice, 'Depart from me' Let me love the righteous rather, hear ye blessed of the father 'For a kingdom I've prepared on high for you' And in mansions up in glory we will shout redemption's story When the harvest days are over by and by Chorus When the summer days are ended and the crops have all been tended And we gather for the final harvest home We'll receive our increased measures, endless drought or heavenly treasures For we'll reap the kind of seed our lives have sown To the spirit let us labour, love our self less than our neighbour Then we'll reap eternal life and never die We will drink of life's pure river, on its banks we'll rest forever (Hear me brother!) When the harvest days are over by and by (by and by) Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon & The Delmore Brothers 'When the Harvest Days Are Over' recorded on 22 January 1935 in New Orleans and issued as Bluebird B5842 in April 1935. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Fun In Life' Bear Family LP 15519. Note: Meade groups this in with the 1900 love song 'When the Harvest Days Are Over, Jessie Dear' by H.Graham/Harry Von Tilzer which may be found on the Levy sheet music site linked by Jim above. The tune may be the same - I don't know - but the content is totally different. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: ONLY AS FAR AS THE GATE, DEAR MA From: Stewie Date: 13 Sep 03 - 10:31 PM ONLY AS FAR AS THE GATE, DEAR MA (G.Williams/J.P. Skelly) My sweetheart's a sly little fairy, her age it is just seventeen Her parents think she is too airy, but a sweeter girl never was seen At night she steals out of the cottage, her mother cries after Kate She answers, Dear Ma, I'm not going far Just a-going as far as the gate Chorus A: Only as far as the gate, dear Ma, just down to the old garden gate Oh, the night is so warm and there's no sign of storm I love to stand by the gate Of course, at the gate I am waiting, and sweet are the words that we say While inside the old folks are debating the price of the next load of hay Sometimes I call gently for Katy, she answers, Dear Ma, 'tis not late The night is so warm and there's no sign of storm I love to stand by the gate Chorus B: Only as far as the gate, dear Ma, just down to the old garden gate Oh, the moon is so bright and it's such a fine night I love to stand by the gate They say she's too young to be married, but with them I cannot agree Love's message I've carried to Katy, and a kiss was her answer for me We'll wander way by the moonlight, much longer I'm sure we can't wait Some night, by and by, to the parson's we'll fly When Katy comes down to the gate Repeat chorus A. Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon 'Only As Far As the Gate, Dear Ma' recorded on 16 April 1926 and issued in June 1926 as Vocalion 15323. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Fun In Life' Bear Family LP 15519. Note: words by Gus Williams and music by J. Plumber Skelly 1882. Other old-time recordings: (Sid) Harkreader and (Grady) Moore 'Only As Far As the Gate' ca June 1926, Pmt 3035; Red Patterson's Piedmont Log Rollers 'My Sweetheart's A Shy Little Fairy' March 1927, Vi 21187; and Vernon Dalhart 'I'm Just Going Down to the Gate, Dear Ma' May 1929, Harmony 946-H. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 13 Sep 03 - 11:18 PM Jim posted the 1926 recording of 'I tickled Nancy' Here Uncle Dave recorded it twice, and the recording that I have under the title 'I'll Tickle Nancy' must be the one recorded 22 January 1935 in New Orleans and issued as Bluebird BB 5873. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Fun In Life' Bear Family LP 15519. It has an extra stanza before the last stanza that Jim posted: The next night that I met her, and the next night after that We kissed one another and then she told me flat 'Of course, that means you'll take me to church'. Of course, I answered 'Yes' In about a week we'll married be and the rest why you can guess --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: COUNTRY HAM AND RED GRAVY (Corrected) From: Stewie Date: 29 Jan 04 - 08:59 PM Someone was seeking 'Country Ham and Red Gravy' in another thread. I posted an attempted transcription before this Uncle Dave thread was started. There is a link to it above in message 26 Feb 01 - 9.08. There are several inaccuracies in that transcription. Below is a transcription that I am pretty happy with now - corrections and disagreements are still welcomed though. Uncle Dave seems unphased by mixed tenses in the refrain - 'yell', 'heard', 'smell'. COUNTRY HAM AND RED GRAVY Talk about your old cow meat Your mutton and your lamb Come for to see them people's eyes shine Show 'em that good sweet ham Oh how them darkies yell When they heard that dinner bell Oh how that ham meat smell Three miles away Rich folk gone to market house Buy'd that mutton and lamb I'm goin' back to (the) butcher's shop To get that good sweet ham Oh how them people yell When they heard that dinner bell Oh how them onions smell Three miles away Talk about your fried chicken It's nothing but a sham If you want a real meal Call for country ham Oh how them boarders yell When they heard that dinner bell Oh how them onions smell Three miles away Talk about your red snapper fish Hotcakes from the pan I'm going back to farm smoke house To get that good sweet ham Oh how them poor did yell When they heard that dinner bell Oh how that ham meat smell Three miles away Talk about your fried chicken You think you're livin' easy That ain't nothin' to compare With the country ham and gravy Oh how them darkies yell When they heard that dinner bell Oh how them onions smell Three miles away Of all the meat I ever eat Ain't gwine to tell you no sham Bake it high, stew or fry Still, it's good sweet ham Oh how them boarders yell When they heard that dinner bell Oh how them onions smell Three miles away Source: Uncle Dave Macon 'Country Ham and Red Gravy' Recorded 24 January 1938. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Travelin' Down the Road' County CCS-CD-115. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: SHOO FLY, DON'T YOU BOTHER ME (D Macon) From: Stewie Date: 31 Jan 04 - 02:42 AM SHOO FLY, DON'T YOU BOTHER ME Long banjo intro Spoken: Hot dog! Get around here! I went up to New York I'se walkin' down Broadway All them pretty girls lookin' at me You oughta heard me say Chorus: Shoo fly, don't you bother me (x3) For I belong to Tennessee George Washington was a great man A lie he'd never tell But when he got the hatchet Give that cherry tree hallelujah Chorus Trouble in the kitchen It's worse up over head Me love she said she'd have me, boys She'd like to kill me dead Chorus Instrumental break Chorus An old man come mopin' in, He's tired out of life A young man comes skippin' in, 'Run kiss me, my dear wife' Chorus Snow up on the mountain Sunshine on the lake Hard times never get this child He's too wide awake Chorus Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon 'Shoo Fly, Don't You Bother Me' recorded 9 Sept 1926 in NYC and issued as Vocalion 15448 in December 1926 and as Vocalion 5010 in February 1927. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Fun In Life' Bear Family LP 15519. See the SHOO FLY thread for information on this song. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: I'SE GWINE BACK TO DIXIE From: Jim Dixon Date: 16 Apr 04 - 08:20 AM I don't know whether these are the same words Uncle Dave sang. There's a version of this in the DT called GOING BACK TO DIXIE. It has had its dialect deleted, and has a different 3rd verse, and no date or attribution. The following lyrics are transcribed from The Lester S. Levy Collection of Sheet Music; The Library of Congress American Memory Collection also has several copies. I'SE GWINE BACK TO DIXIE "Companion to 'Old Home Ain't What it Used to Be' " C. A. White. 1874. 1. I'se gwine back to Dixie. No more I'se gwine to wander. My heart's turned back to Dixie. I can't stay here no longer. I miss de ole plantation, my home and my relation. My heart's turned back to Dixie and I must go. CHORUS: I'se gwine back to Dixie. I'se gwine back to Dixie. I'se gwine where the orange blossoms grow. For I hear the children calling. I see their sad tears falling. My heart's turned back to Dixie and I must go. 2. I've hoed in fields of cotton. I've worked upon the river. I used to think if I got off, I'd go back there, no, never. But time has changed the old man. His head is bending low. His heart's turned back to Dixie and he must go. 3. I'm trav'ling back to Dixie. My step is slow and feeble. I pray the Lord to help me and lead me from all evil. And should my strength forsake me, then, kind friends, come and take me. My heart's turned back to Dixie and I must go. [The Virtual Gramophone has 4 recordings of this song, made between 1902 and 1926, by Harry Macdonough, Henry Burr, and Florence Easton. [Also recorded by Uncle Dave Macon, The Leake Country Revelers, and The Edison Quartet.] |
Subject: Lyr Add: I'VE GOT THE MOURNING BLUES (Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 02 Mar 05 - 06:56 PM WARNING: some lyrics in this song may offend. In the square brackets is what I hear differently from the transcription in the Bear Family box set. I'VE GOT THE MOURNING BLUES Been in business and I've been in love I used to fly high like a turtle dove Had the blues a-many a time There's just a woman on a poor man's mind Chorus: I've got the mourning blues, oh so bad Honey, come and kiss me, they're the worst I've ever had Ashes to ashes and it's dust to dust Show me a woman that a man can trust Nickel's worth of grease and a dime's worth of lard I would buy more but the times is so hard Chorus There ain't no use me a-workin' so hard For I've got a woman in the white folk's yard She brings me meat and she brings me pie I'm eatin' something of everything the white folks buy Chorus She brings me chicken and she brings me cake You just ought to see me lick that plate A big honey biscuit and a mutton[s] chop Will make a nigger's lips go flippity flop Chorus There stands a fellow right over there [Like there's a fellow …] He's got blue eyes and he's got black hair Talking to his sweetheart, she looks so neat She calls him honey and he calls her sweet Chorus There stands a fellow right over yonder He looks like he wants to founder [ponder] Look at that hair all around his mouth Like he swallered a mule and left the tail a-hangin' out Chorus Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon 'I've got the mourning blues' at page 67 of the book accompanying Uncle Dave Macon box set [Bear Family BCD 15978 JM]. Uncle Dave Macon 'I've got the mourning blues' recorded in New York City on 14 April 1926 and issued as Vo 15349, 5095. Uncle Dave accompanied by Sam McGee on guitar. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: KISSIN' ON THE SLY (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 03 Mar 05 - 01:15 AM KISSIN' ON THE SLY Spoken: Now people listen, a kiss is nothing divided by two. Now you kiss an old maid once, she'll scream out with delight. You kiss her twice, she'll set up all night. You kiss her three times, she'll holler for more because she knows how the old thing works – she's been there before. When a man falls in love with his little turtle dove He will linger all around under her jaw He will kiss her for a mother, a sister or a brother Till her father comes and kicks him from the door Pulls a pistol from his pocket and vows he will cock it And blow away his giddy brain His duckie says he mustn't , 'tisn't loaded and he doesn't So they're kissin' one another each again For the old maids love it, the widows are above it They've all got a finger in the pie Some girls think it haughty as it is so very naughty But you can bet they're all a-kissin' on the sly When a girl is seventeen, she'll think it rather mean If she don't get on to something for a smash She will pucker up her mouth with a pretty little pout As she fumbles underneath a big moustache She will make a fellow shrivel, she'll make him jump the river And stick as close as granulated glue You had better never tell her you're some other girl's feller She will masticate your smeller if you do If you want to kiss her neatly, kiss her sweetly and completely If you want to kiss her so's to kiss her twice When you get a chance to kiss her, make a dodge or two and miss her Then slap it on and kiss her once or twice Banjo instrumental Hot dog! Source: transcription at page 74 of book accompanying Bear Family Uncle Dave Macon box set [BCD 15978 JM]. Uncle Dave Macon 'Kissin' on the sly' recorded in New York City on 9 September 1926 and issued as Vo 15452, 5013. Uncle Dave solo, acc by own banjo. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: wysiwyg Date: 17 Apr 05 - 05:55 PM I would love to index any of these that were based on spirituals (not minstrel-show stuff), if anyone has time to check them out by either the details that were posted above, or by any additional knowledge you might have. If you find any, can you drop me a PM or list the titles AND THIS THREAD NUMBER in the African American Spiritulas permathread, please? Thanks! ~Susan |
Subject: Lyr Add: SHOUT MOURNER, YOU SHALL BE FREE From: Stewie Date: 18 Apr 05 - 10:49 PM SHOUT MOURNER, YOU SHALL BE FREE [Spoken] Now folks, talk about your gentle in-folks I'm going to give you the genteel Banjo instrumental Hot dog! I saw Sal when she went out, I saw Sal pick out her route Seen her lock the door, and I seen her hide the key She's a mighty sharp nigger, but she can't fool me Chorus: Shout mourner, you shall be free Shout mourner, you shall be free When the good Lord sets you free Did you have a song, baby, did you have a song Oh, Miss Doe said you treated me mean I'm a-tired of livin' on your pork and beans You [she] may be warm, but I don't know She ain't so warm 'til she melts the snow Did you have a song, baby, did you have a song Chorus [Oh my little honey what happened in the lot Keep out running in the buzzard trot] The big mule throwed so the little mule kicks That big nigger throwed the little in a ditch Did you have a song, baby, did you have a song Chorus Me and my partner and two or three more Hanging around Sam LaFevre's door Buying whiskey and buying gin Just a-getting right to go again Gotta have a song, baby, gotta have a song Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon 'Shout mourner, you shall be free' recorded in NYC on 8 September 1926 and issued as Vocalion 15445 in December 1926 and as Vocalion 5007 in February 1927. Reissued on CD 3 in the Bear Family box set of Uncle Dave Macon recordings – BCD 15978 JM. Note: what I have given in square brackets for the first 2 lines of stanza 3 is from the transcription on page 71 of the book accompanying the Bear Family box set. I don't think it is right, but I have no better idea of what he is singing. Any suggestions? For information on this song, refer to this thread: CLICK HERE. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,ntnelson1@aol.com Date: 13 May 05 - 10:20 AM i was wonderin if yall have the lyrics for cumberland mountain deer race |
Subject: Lyr Add: CUMBERLAND MOUNTAIN DEER RACE From: Stewie Date: 14 May 05 - 09:09 PM CUMBERLAND MOUNTAIN DEER RACE Away and away we're bound for the mountain Bound for the mountain, bound for the mountain Over the mountain and the wild steed's a-bounding Away to the chase, away, away We'll heed not the cold, the tempest nor the danger For over the mountain away goes the ranger Over the mountain, the hills and the fountain Away to the chase, away, away Oh, Rover, Rover, see him, see him Rover, Rover [it's] catch him, catch him Over the mountain the hills and the fountain Away to the chase, away, away Oh, listen to the hound bells, sweetly ringing Over the mountain, the wild deer springing Over the mountain, the hills and the fountain Away to the chase, away, away See there the wild deers, trembling, panting Trembling, panting, trembling, panting One moment pausing, no longer standing Away to the chase, away, away Oh, Rover, Rover, see him, see him Rover, Rover [it's] catch him, catch him Over the mountain the hills and the fountain Away to the chase, away, away Now we're set just right for the race With the hounds and the horses right in the chase The deer is a-bouncing, and the hound is a-sounding Right on the trail that leads o'er the mountain Over the mountain the hills and the fountain Away to the chase away, away Oh listen to the hound bells heavy bay sounding tide o'er the way All night long till the break of dawn merrily the chase goes on Over the mountain, the hills and the fountain Away to the chase, away, away Oh, Rover, Rover, see him, see him Rover, Rover [it's] catch him, catch him Over the mountain the hills and the fountain Away to the chase, away, away Listen to old Rockwood fall in there, will you – getting on a hot trail now Hear ol' Flyin' Mule step in – Whee – Listen to the cricket – Whee – Whee Source: Uncle Dave Macon 'Cumberland Mountain Deer Race' recorded on 26 January 1938 in Charlotte, NC, and issued as Bluebird B7951 in February 1939. Reissued on Uncle Dave Macon 'Travelin' Down the Road' County CCS-CD-115 and also in the Bear Family box set. The above is the transcription at page 116 of the book accompanying the Bear Family Uncle Dave box set. I can't hear any 'it's' in the Rover stanza and I think Uncle Dave is singing the plural 'Rovers, Rovers', which would be more logical, but I couldn't swear to it. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,OTP Date: 01 Jun 05 - 12:44 AM Hi folks, I wrote the final transcription for the Bear Family complete UDM. I learned a lot of Uncle Dave's songs personally from Mr. Kirk McGee who helped me sort out lyrics that I couldn't hear at the time. I lived around Nashille for 20 odd years and played old-time music for ten years with The Stillhouse Reelers a fine four-piece string band. I am a two-time National Old-Time Banjo Champeen (Uncle Dave Macon Days) and still play Macon and McGee tune every day. I spent several months on the record project and believe it to be about as complete as it can be (bar the typos from Bear Family). It certainly made a difference that I lived there and knew well that part of the country, as well as having the fabulous opportunity to met and play with a number of Opry old-timers (Herman Crook and Lewis Crook, Sid Harkreader, Deford Bailey, Omer Forrster, Blythe Poteete and many others of that generation). It didn't hurt as well that I married a girl whose family first settled that part of Tennessee in the 1790s. Some of the tunes I listened to 3 or 4 hours a day for a solid week to try and understand the meaning of the lyrics, but I got 'em! I hope now that there is a compendium of Uncle Dave's songs that you all sing 'em loud and often. That is how to keep their memories alive. Sorry for buttin' in, Paul Ritscher |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: BanjoRay Date: 01 Jun 05 - 06:09 AM Great to have you on board, Paul. We have a good few Uncle Dave fans here in the UK, mostly members of FOAOTMAD Cheers Ray |
Subject: Lyr Add: OVER THE MOUNTAIN (Uncle Dave Macon) From: GUEST,tarheel Date: 01 Jun 05 - 03:21 PM I searched all through the threads here and did not see my favorite Uncle Dave Macon song, OVER THE MOUNTAIN. .................................................................. 1. I'm always lighthearted and easy. Not a care in this world have I, Because I am loved by an Ollie And I wouldn't forget if I tried. She lives far away o'er the mountain Where the little birds sing in the trees, And the cabin's all covered with ivy, And my Ollie, she's waiting for me. CHORUS: It's over, it's over the mountain Where the little birds sing in the trees, And the cabin's all covered with ivy, And my Ollie, she's waiting for me 2. Now the day I said goodbye to Ollie, That day I shall never forget, For my tears bubbled up from their slumber, And I fancy I see them yet. They looked like the curls on the ocean As she told her tale of love, And she said, "My dear boy, don't forget me 'Til we meet here again or above." CHORUS |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Geoff the Duck Date: 01 Jun 05 - 07:09 PM Pleased that people are still "Butting In". OTP - if you have extra information are you interested in sharing it with us here - or elsewhere? Let us know! Thanks! Quack!! Geoff the Duck. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: OTP Date: 01 Jun 05 - 10:50 PM I'd be glad to help with any lyric questions I can. After listening to Uncle Dave for 33 years I'd be remiss in not sharing. When Mr. Kirk taught me songs and tunes and I'd finally "get it" he would say to me, "now that song is yours and you have to pass it along to someone else". So here goes... Over the Mountain: The name of the girl is Annalee or as UDM says Ann i lee or 'ilee They looked like the 'pearls' in the ocean Hope that helps, Paul |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: tarheel Date: 02 Jun 05 - 07:45 PM thank you OTP...dang ,learn something new in here all the time...never knew those word existed foir the song...i listen to it msany times and it seemed like OLLIE to me...but again,thanks for the correct words! the " curls in the ocean" i thought represented the white foam as the waves break at the beach... but thanks again and now..i'll be singing it right!!!! you're terrific OTP!!!! |
Subject: Lyr Add: WALKING IN SUNLIGHT (HJ Zelley/GH Cook) From: GUEST Date: 02 Jun 05 - 08:43 PM I am so glad I saw this thread. First of all, the lyrics of "WALKING IN SUNLIGHT" (H.J. Zelley/G.H. Cook) Walking in sunlight all of my journey Over the mountains, through the deep vale Jesus has said 'I'll never forsake thee' Promise divine that never can fail Chorus: Heavenly sunlight, heavenly sunlight Flooding my soul with glory divine Hallelujah, I am rejoicing Singing His praises, Jesus is mine Shadows around me, shadows above me Never conceal my saviour and guide He is the light, in Him, there's no darkness Ever I'm walking close to his side seem to me to be very similar to a song I heard in a Hollywood movie on TV some years ago, but I think it was "Beautiful Sunlight, Beautiful Sunlight", etc. A nice tune that I can still remember even though I only heard it once. Can't remember the name of the film, who acted in it, or what it was about; can anyone help (I think it was set in more or less modern days in the USA)? One scene might have involved a mental patient impersonating a doctor called Dr. Baird leading to the real Doctor Baird being mistaken for the mental patient and put in a padded cell or straightjacket, but possibly this is a completely different film. Clearly, Uncle Dave Macon was some influence on my favourite band, the Incredible String Band (Original members Robin Williamson has recorded "Jordan is a Hard Road to Travel" and Clive Palmer has recorded "Rise When the Rooster Crows" though uses some different lyrics to the ones given above. Several of the other songs recorded by Macon were recorded by The Holy Modal Rounders, another of my favourites (eg Sail Away Ladies). No doubt some of my other favourite artists have recorded some songs UDM wrote or performed. I also have several Uncle Dave Macon songs on a CD called Hard Times in the Country (or something similar - there is a song with that title on it) which I got from Roots and Rhythm records several months ago. It includes The Wreck of the Tennessee Gravy Train, From Earth to Heaven, etc. It is a very enjoyable album (with good songs by others also) but unfortunately has developed a fault with some tracks jumping so needs replaced). I think this thread will run and run! |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: OTP Date: 02 Jun 05 - 11:31 PM Something to muse upon: Until I worked on the Bear Family project I hadn't realized just how autobiographical Uncle Dave's songs were. There are lots of local references and even a mention about him working for the railroad when he was younger. In the Tennessee Mountain Fox Chase he refers to his dogs, Rockwood, Old Fly, Old Mule and Limber. In Walk Tom Wilson the first verse refers to the game of Rolleyhole, an elaborate form of the game of marbles still played in Middle Tennessee. He lived much of what he sang about and deliberately chose songs for his repertoire the he could personally relate to. I also was struck by the use of antiquated terms like Billie (comrade or companion) and Doney (girl friend or sweetheart). Hillbillie used to mean something different. And we don't even have to mention The Gayest Old Dude That's Out or the New Dude In Town who's a regular la, la la (the girls all say). Some things never change. Anybody remember the old tune - Head for the Roundhouse Jenny! (The Boys Cain't Corner You There)? Paul |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Geoff the Duck Date: 03 Jun 05 - 05:13 PM Guest - A good source for a lot of old-time music and song recordings is the Honking Duck. It is a collection taken from original recordings and can be listened to online or tracks can be downloaded to your own computer. Check it out if you haven't already been there. Quack! GtD. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Andrez Date: 05 Jul 05 - 10:50 AM Hi, What a cool thread. I'd appreciate it if someone could provide some details as to what is available recording wise of Uncle Dave's output. Are there any digitally remastered reissues? If so is there a link that someone could post so I can buy a CD or CD set? I wasnyt able to find anything on Amazon a few days ago so any info would be appreciated as I'm a long way in the land of OZ. Cheers, Andrez |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Jim Dixon Date: 05 Jul 05 - 07:29 PM Andrez: If you want to learn about current or recent recordings, try allmusic.com. Practically every CD ever issued by a major label is listed there, and quite a few LPs and minor labels are there, too--at least for US labels. I don't know about Australia, though. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST Date: 05 Jul 05 - 07:41 PM Check cduniverse, deepdiscountcd and Camsco! http://www.cduniverse.com/sresult.asp?HT_Search_Info=uncle+dave+macon&HT_Search=ARTIST&image.x=0&image.y=0&cart=257360652&style=music&altsearch=yes |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 05 Jul 05 - 08:03 PM Amazon has the complete works box set from Bear Family: CLICK County sales also has the box set plus some on County and Old Homestead. The two on County are great, but I would avoid Old Homestead - my personal experience with them is that they are shoddily done and the painted surface of the disk on my copy of 'Early Recordings' lifted completely! Put Uncle Dave Macon into the quick search box on the home page of County Sales: CLICK. If you don't want to purchase online, telephone Denys Williams at Hound Dog's Bop Shop in Melbourne. He can supply the box set and the Countys. His shop only opens on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Alternatively, you could contact Steve Reid at Yesterday and Today Records in Paramatta who can supply any Bear Family records. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,Bob Coltman Date: 06 Jul 05 - 09:16 AM Tarheel, I've puzzled over that "Ollie" too. Close as I can come, it sounds like "Amalie," accent on the second sylLAble. Fits the first verse reference better, and it is a popular 19th century girl's name. Note he seems to slip in a quick first syllable before the "Ollie" in the second verse, that's what gave me a tipoff. Gus Meade's Country Music Sources says it was written 1882 by William Scanlon. If anyone can turn up the original sheet music, we could clear this one up. Meade cites a few printed references but there's no way of knowing whether THEY are accurate. I love it too. One of the prettiest ever. Bob |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,Bob Coltman Date: 06 Jul 05 - 09:19 AM Oops, I missed the "Annalee" ref above & I'll defer to that, though because of the distortion of accent, for my money "Amalie" still sounds better when sung. Bob |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Andrez Date: 07 Jul 05 - 10:19 AM Thanks for the info on recordings I'll spend some time on the weekend and go thru the links. My god though.........Hound Dogs Bop shop is actually still going strong after all these years? Next time I'm in sunny Melb I'll definitely look that shop up. Great thread here! Cheers, Andrez |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: OTP Date: 12 Jul 05 - 01:18 PM Anna Lee or Annie Lee or Annie Lea is a name used in many songs of the later 19th century, such as "Carry Me Back to Tennessee" recorded by the Blue Sky Boys. Uncle Dave tended to slur syllabels and even drop tenses in order to keep the meter and to avoid grouping (for example) words ending in 's' next to words beginning with 's'. His word breaks tend to be rather sophisticated, but coupled with the Middle Tennesse linguistic tendency to slur and understate words (to say nothing of his beloved 'lemonade') it makes it difficult to hear. Part of listening to his songs is looking at the context of each particular word or phrase. Amalee is not a name I have ever heard, and in the larger context of Uncle Dave's work obscure names don't appear. Paul |
Subject: Lyr Add: OVER THE MOUNTAIN (William Scanlon) From: OTP Date: 12 Jul 05 - 03:16 PM ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Subj: Over the Mountain I thought this might clarify the current thread, but it doesn't. I will alter my reading of Uncle Dave's version to "an Eily." It's kind of like passing a sentence around a table, it just comes out a little different each time. Plus, look - another verse! Paul Dear Mr. Ritscher: Shirley Wall forwarded your research request concerning the lyrics to "Over the Mountain" by William Scanlon. I have pulled the sheet music in our collection, which is in a bound volume. It is dated 1882 and here are the lyrics: 1. I'm always light hearted and aisy, Not a care in the world have I, Because I am lov'd by a Colleen, I couldn't forget if I try. She lives far away o'er the mountain, Where I know she's still thinking of me, Arrah! Cushla McChree were I with you, This moment how happy I'd be. CHORUS: Its over, yes, over the mountain, Where the little thrush sings on the tree; In a cabin all covered with ivy, There my Eily is waiting for me! 2. The day I bid good-bye to Eily, That day I will ne'er forget, How the tears bubbled up from their slumber, I fancy I see them yet. They look'd like the pearls in the ocean, As she wept the tears of love, Says she, "Teddy my boy, don't forget me, 'Till we meet again here or above. CHORUS 3. Oh, water and land may divide us, Friends like the flow'rs come and go; The face of my Eily will cheer me, For in that dear face I well know. The imprint of love and devotion. Surrounded by thoughts chaste and pure, Will serve as the star to the sailor, Whilst plodding the wold raging moor. CHORUS Hope this helps. The name in this version is Eily, no where does it say Anna Lee. Let me know if there is something else we can help with. Lucinda Cockrell -- Lucinda Poole Cockrell, C.A. Coordinator of Research Collections The Center for Popular Music MTSU Box 41 Murfreesboro, TN 37132 615/898-5884 615/898-5829 (FAX) http://popmusic.mtsu.edu 2 of 48 |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Ferrara Date: 13 Jul 05 - 12:07 AM Re: Over the Mountains. Thank you, Mrs. Cockrell, and OTP, too! So useful to get this information. Still not absolutely sure what Uncle Dave actually sang; it almost seemed he changed it from verse to verse, but "my Eily" works well in most places. Maybe the song had been "folk processed" by the time he learned it, or maybe he was singing it from memory and changed a few things here and there. For myself I'm going to let it all sift itself out, and listen to the recording until I just decide how I want to sing it. All the above guesses and information are great, thanks everyone. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: The Fooles Troupe Date: 13 Jul 05 - 11:24 PM Maybe he had more than one girlfriend and kept getting them confused... :-) |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Gern Date: 12 Jan 06 - 05:07 PM Does anyone have the words to "Poor Sinner Fare Thee Well" and "Railroading and Gambling"? |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Jim Dixon Date: 16 Jan 06 - 05:49 PM From The Traditional Ballad Index:
Railroadin' and Gamblin'DESCRIPTION: Uncle Dave Macon surrealism. Singer has been in the state house and the court house; he is broke from gambling. Chorus: "Railroadin' and gamblin'/Pickin' up chips for mammy/Lawd, lawd, lawd/Take your feet out the sand, stick 'em in the mud."AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST DATE: 1940 (recording, Uncle Dave Macon) LONG DESCRIPTION: More Uncle Dave Macon surrealism. Singer has been in the state house (prison?) and the court house, and is broke from gambling despite his mother's advice. "Lawd, that preacher got, ain't that a sin/Johnny get your whiskers cut, here comes the wind." Chorus: "Railroadin' and gamblin'/Pickin' up chips for mammy/Lawd, lawd, lawd/Take your feet out the sand, stick 'em in the mud." You figure it out. KEYWORDS: prison gambling railroading nonballad nonsense FOUND IN: US(SE) RECORDINGS: Uncle Dave Macon, "Railroadin' and Gamblin'" (Bluebird 8325, 1940; on RoughWays2) Notes: Almost certainly of minstrel origin; a few lines are in dialect. While I use the keyword "nonsense," I suspect there was meaning in the song once. - PJS File: RcUDRaG |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Ferrara Date: 16 Jan 06 - 07:33 PM Does anyone have the words to "Me and My Henry," I think that's the title, it's in praise of his Ford auto. |
Subject: Lyr Add: RAILROADIN' AND GAMBLIN' (Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 16 Jan 06 - 09:48 PM 'Railroadin' and Gamblin' seems to have been a source of contention for people who attempt to decipher Uncle Dave's lyrics. The main areas of dispute are the chorus and the 'Johnny get' verse. For all manner of mondegreens on the 'pickin' up chips' line do a search of the old-time music newsgroup archives. Lyle Lofgren of the Brandy Snifters reported that his group had discussed the song with Kirk McGee in the sixties. Although Kirk hadn't seen a text, he was close to Uncle Dave when he sang the song. As Lyle remembered Kirk's take, the chorus was: Oh, railroadin' and gamblin' Pickin' up chips for a mammy Lord, lord, lord Get your feet outa the sand And put 'em in the mud Get your feet outa the sand And put 'em in the mud Personally, I cannot hear an 'a' before 'mammy' and I agree with what is in the ballad index entry posted above by Jim: Take your feet outa the sand Stick 'em in the mud For the 'Johnny get' verse the New Lost City Ramblers went with: Says that preacher, 'golly ain't it a sin? Johnny get your britches 'cause here comes the wind' Lyle and the Brandy Snifters went with: 'Johnny get your wood cut, 'cause here comes the wind' Lyle wrote to the oldtimey newsgroup: 'When we asked Kirk about what he thought the verse might mean, he looked at us as if we were daft. He said something like, "They were just words. Uncle Dave sang quite a few verses like that". My interpretation would be that it's a sin to not provide fuel for the cold weather ahead. It might be something else, though. This sounds like a "floating" verse, but I've never heard it in any other song'. However, once again, my hearing concurs with that of the writer of the ballad index entry quoted above: 'Johnny get your whiskers cut, here comes the wind'. Below is what I hear after consideration of various interpretations. To paraphrase the immortal lines of 'The Open Book' poem: Now that I've opened the ledger on Uncle Dave interpreters just as they be Some half-assed bronc stomper or free holy chomper Will kick all the shit out of me RAILROADIN' AND GAMBLIN' What your mammy am told you, six months ago Keep on your coat and hat, be ready to go Chorus: Oh railroadin' and gamblin' Pickin' up chips for mammy Lord, lord, lord Take your feet outa the sand, stick 'em in the mud Take your feet outa the sand, stick 'em in the mud Been in the statehouse, been in that hall Been in that courthouse, the worst place of all Chorus Says that preacher, 'God ain't that a sin' 'Johnny get your whiskers cut, here comes the wind' Lord that preacher, 'God ain't that a sin 'Johnny get your whiskers cut, here comes the wind' Cars on the roadside, cars on the track Spent all my money, no way to get back Chorus Take your feet outa the sand, stick 'em in the mud Take your feet outa the sand, stick 'em in the mud Source: transcription of Uncle Dave Macon 'Railroadin' and Gamblin' recorded on 26 January 1938 in Charlotte, NC, and issued as Bb B8325. Reissued on County CD 115 and in Bear Family Uncle Dave Macon box set BCD 15978 JM. --Stewie. |
Subject: Lyr Add: POOR SINNERS, FARE YOU WELL (Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 16 Jan 06 - 11:24 PM Here is the transcription from book accompanying the Bear Family box set. I don't think what is in the square brackets is accurate, but I don't know what it should be either. POOR SINNERS, FARE YOU WELL Spoken: Now people I'm going to analyse myself to you. You know I'm Methodist. And the last time I was home, I went to the colored church because there wasn't no white meeting going on. And the parson was very clever, he invited me in, and I heard him take his text from the two two verse of [the sixteenth epostle (sic) who took the epistle and fired at John]. And he got up and said: 'Now this is contribution day and I'm going to have the contribution box passed, and bear in mind there's one man in this house been goin' around with another man's wife, and if he don't put in five dollars in that box today, I'm a-gwine expose him. So I stayed there 'til the box went around and she come in with seventeen five dollar bills and one two-dollar bill with a note written plainly, pinned to it, saying, 'Brother, forever hold your peace, you'll get your other three dollars before the sun goes down'. Now I'm going to sing one of their favorite songs. Gwine down on the river, down on Jordan's stream All those children crying, Lord, Lord, I've been redeemed Chorus: Crying, mmmm, mmmm Them-a golden slippers I'm bound to wear Them-a golden slippers I'm bound to wear Them-a golden slippers I'm bound to wear Poor sinners fare thee well Jews didn't believe in Jesus, not a word was said Then he went down to Lazarus' grave, Raised him from the dead Chorus Shout if you are happy! Just come out of the water, ain't got fairly dry If you don't mind old Satan make you tell a lie Chorus When I get to heaven, know I'm gonna smile Sit down by my Saviour's side, be one welcome child Chorus Recorded by Uncle Dave Macon on 16 April 1926 and issued as Vocalion 15324 in June 1926. Meade ('Country Music Sources') notes that the text at page 153 of Anthony J. Showalter 'The National Singer' (Dalton, Ga, A.J. Showalter Co, ca 1885) is a close approximation of the Macon recording. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 16 Jan 06 - 11:37 PM Ferrara, if what you are after is 'On the Dixie Bee-Line (In that Henry Ford of Mine)', the lyrics have been posted to the forum in this thread: CLICK. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Ferrara Date: 17 Jan 06 - 08:33 PM Yes!!! Thanks, Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,OTP Date: 07 Mar 06 - 09:35 PM I John 3:22 reads: And whatsoever we ask, we receive of him, because we keep his commandments, and do those things that are pleasing in his sight. Oldtimers I knew said that Uncle Dave could and would preach impromptu sermons whenever he felt the need. If one relates this chapter and verse (there are only 2 books of John with 22+ verses) to the intro of 'Poor Sinners Fare Thee Well' it is easy to see that this is what he was referring to. I have found that there is very little hidden meaning in Uncle Dave's singing and speaking, and altho he took liberties with the language (such as alliteration and ostentatious word-play) he 'said what he meant and meant what he said'. Best, OTP |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,Jim Date: 19 Jun 06 - 09:57 AM I love that song too, thanks for workin on the lyrics now i can play it. the whole theme of the flood is so cool. Sry i cant be of much help i have a hard time understanding the old dude myself. Tennessee jubilee is another tough one to crack, if anyone knows about it post it up sometime |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Bill D Date: 19 Jun 06 - 11:25 AM Uncle Dave could incorporate the preachin' right into the song. I'm still working on a detailed transcription of this: (He could sing it to open meetings for the Kansas School Board) The Bible's True |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 19 Jun 06 - 06:33 PM "Poor Sinners, Fare You (thee?) Well"- I didn't find it here. Anyone have Macon's lyrics? |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Artful Codger Date: 19 Jun 06 - 09:10 PM If you start listening to the clip above and think "Huh?" when you hear "Will There Be Any Stars", don't worry: it IS the right clip; "The Bible's True" follows a little later. This song, despite Uncle Dave's intentions, has always struck me as a satire of creationism, rather than support for it. It may be because of the spirited rendition I heard by The Lazy Aces (on The Young Fogies compilation.) I like to tack on a reprise of the "God made the world" verse this-a-way: God made the world, Then he made man, Woman for to read his beads And beat him with a fryin' pan. This infectious tune just begs for more verses. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Stewie Date: 19 Jun 06 - 09:35 PM Q, I posted the Bear Family box set transcription of Macon's 'Poor Sinners ...' above: Date: 16 Jan 06 - 11:24 PM. Do an edit 'find' on this page. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: GUEST,gumpuddin Date: 23 Jun 06 - 04:41 AM Re: Cumberland Mountain Deer Chase Oh, Rover, Rover, see him, see him Rover, Rover [it's] catch him, catch him Over the mountain the hills and the fountain Away to the chase, away, away Stewie earlier in this thread says: "I can't hear any 'it's' in the Rover stanza and I think Uncle Dave is singing the plural 'Rovers, Rovers', which would be more logical, but I couldn't swear to it." 50 years ago, when I was growing up and visiting my cousins who lived in rural NC and loved to hunt ... I used to hear them talk to their dogs ... and it sounded something like this: "skit him, skit him" What they were slurring was ... "Let's get him; Let's get him." Perhaps this "Rover" stanza is "sketch him, ketch him" or "'s catch him, catch him" from "Let'd catch him, catch him." gp |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Geoff the Duck Date: 23 Jun 06 - 05:16 AM That would certainly make some sense. Quack! GtD. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Uncle Dave Macon Lyrics From: Artful Codger Date: 23 Jun 06 - 10:29 PM The Red Clay Ramblers also recorded "Cumberland Deer Chase", so you might find their take on the lyrics helpful. |
Subject: Lyr Add: ALL GO HUNGRY HASH HOUSE (Dave Macon) From: Stewie Date: 07 Sep 08 - 07:31 PM ALL GO HUNGRY HASH HOUSE Banjo riff. Spoken: Hello folks, I'm in New York and from the country, but you can't tell me roastin' ears ain't corn. There's a hotel in the city as we climb the golden stairs And they serve the hash up on the second floor There's a graveyard in the cellar, doctor's office in the parlour And the undertaker keeps his shop next door 'Touch Me Not' was on the teacups, skeleton crossbones on the plates 'Carve Me Right' is on that turkey you could spell Oh the biscuits they are named, and I'm going to have them framed At that all go hungry hash house where I dwell Oh the donuts they are wooden, and we have Limburger puddin' We kneel in prayer before we go to grub If you chance to get a breeze of that ambologneous cheese You'd have swore somebody'd hit you with a club That hotel where I stay, it is turning my hair gray For the landlord is always full of beer All the beds our bugs have rented, and the air was sweetly scented By an old-fashioned tanyard in the rear All the sausages they are marked, if you touch them they will bark It's a relic sent from Bingen on the Rhine All the boarders have the croup, caught from drinking frozen soup At that all go hungry hash house where I dine They have India rubber pickles, exercises on bicycles And a dinner bell and gong they can't afford When they open up the gates, we'll come skippin' on roller skates At that all go hungry hash house where I board There's a woman called the duchess, brings the coffee in on crutches And the cake looks like a sponge that's petrified Oh the pies are old and grey, they were tackled by a jay Who went right out and committed suicide Oh the molasses made of paint, if you smell them you will faint They are yellow and dished up in a gourd Oh the eggs are made to match, if you touch them they will hatch At that all go hungry hash house where I board Source: Transcription of Uncle Dave Macon (vcl/bjo) 'All go hungry hash house' recorded 14 April 1925 in New York City and issued September 1925 as Vo 15076 and in January 1927 as Vo 5076. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: Bill D Date: 08 Sep 08 - 08:45 AM I've replaced "The Bible's True" (noted above) on my storage site. I have some others if anyone wants to hear Uncle Dave's recordings. I can't leave them up permanently, but will try to respond to requests. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: Bill D Date: 08 Sep 08 - 08:58 AM By the way! Here is a link to a text file for most of the Uncle Dave lyrics. (as heard by the poster) http://departments.umw.edu/hipr/www/206/songtext/uncle_dave_macon.txt |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: Bill D Date: 08 Sep 08 - 09:08 AM It seems those lyrics were posted by a folklorist at Mary Washington College. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 26 Dec 08 - 03:26 PM "Rise When the Rooster Crows," transcribed from a Macon recording, in thread 8269: Rise when the Rooster Crows |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon - Mule Song From: GUEST,Kelly Date: 24 Sep 09 - 07:22 AM Oh Thank You, Thank You for posting lyrics to the "So Long Mule" song. My grandpa (farmer born 1899 in Knox County Indiana) used to sing it to me but all I could recall was the refrain. As I remembered him singing it was "Get a'long mule, quit a'rollin them eyes. . .you can change a fool, but a doggone mule. . .is a mule until he dies." I've searched by the refrain for a long time without success until today. Again, many thanks! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: Stewie Date: 24 Nov 09 - 03:36 AM Richie has posted the lyrics to Uncle Dave's 'Hill Billie Blues' in this thread: Hill Billie Blues. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: Jim Dixon Date: 23 Sep 10 - 11:25 PM Corrections to the lyrics of OLD DAN TUCKER that Stewie posted 30 Dec 02 - 09:10 PM: VERSE 1 LINE 3: Combed his head with a wagon wheel VERSE 3 LINE 4: Lord bless you, honey, how the ashes flew VERSE 4 LINE 1: ... booze and Choctaw cider VERSE 4 LINE 3: Hostetter's bitters* and the doctor's tonic * an actual brand name. I looked it up! |
Subject: Lyr Add: TENNESSEE JUBILEE (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Jim Dixon Date: 24 Sep 10 - 08:11 AM You can find an mp3 file of this song here. There are gaps in my transcription: TENNESSEE JUBILEE As recorded by Uncle Dave Macon, June, 1929, Brunswick 355. SPEAKING: Well, well, folks, I'm feeling fine. Just eat a hearty dinner. Now I'm going to give you something that's round here: An old Tennessee jubilee. But before I sing you the piece, I have a cousin lives down in Rutherford County, Tennessee. She's a woman. And her brother was telling me about her swappin' a dry cow for an old second-hand Ford car last summer, and she learned to run it pretty well in the wheat fields after they got done thrashing, and she decided she'd go into the city on Saturday, but she drove out to the highway and the traffic was so thick, she backed out, and decided to go in at night. So when she did drive in, the first thing she done, she run over the signal line. And the traffic officer stopped her. And there she was, and she stuck her head out the window and said, "What's the matter?" The traffic gentleman says, "Why, you haven't got your dimmers on." She says, "Lord, Lord! I reckon I have. I put on ever'thing Mam laid out for me to wear 'fore I left home." And she says, "Who is you, anyhow?" He says, "I'm the traffic jam man, ma'am." Says, "Well, I'm mighty glad you told me. Mam told me to fetch her a quart. Have it ready for me as I go out, will you, please?" Ha-ha-ha-ha! SINGING: Well, it's me and my doney was a-ridin' of a pony, She in front and me behind the ... ... she'd always ... She thinks I'm workin' but I ain't doin' nothin'. Turkey in the hay, ha-ha! ha-ha-ha! ...a tune called Turkey in the straw. Well as I went down the old state field, A black snake grabbed me by my heel. Said I started runnin' but I do my best To run my head in a hornet's nest Turkey in the hay, ah-ha-ha ... ...a tune called Turkey in the straw. UNKNOWN VOICE, SPEAKING: Uncle Dave, you a awful old man to be a-cuttin' up that-a-way. DAVE, SPEAKING: Yes, but listen, Bud— SINGING: It's nobody's business, nobody's business Nobody's business what I do. Backbone, that's sausage meat, Hog head and pickled feet, Nobody's business what I eat. No! Nobody's business, nobody's business, Nobody's business what I do. She buys the gasoline. I crank the old machine. Nobody's business what I do. |
Subject: Lyr Add: THE BIBLE'S TRUE (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Jim Dixon Date: 24 Sep 10 - 09:04 AM You can find an mp3 of this song on this page (or click to play). There's a version of this in the DT, but it contains a few errors. THE BIBLE'S TRUE As recorded by Uncle Dave Macon, April, 1926, Vocalion 5098 and 15322. 1. Evolution teaches man came from a monkey. I don't believe no such a thing on the days of the week or Sunday. CHORUS: Well, the Bible's true; oh, yes, I believe it. I've seen enough and I can prove it. What you say, what you say, It's bound to be that way. God made the world and everything that's in it. He made man perfect and the monkey wasn't in it. What you say, what you say, It's bound to be that way. 2. I'm no evolutionist that wants the world to see. Ain't no man from anywhere, boys, make a monkey out of me. CHORUS 3. God made the world and then he made man, Woman for his helpmate. Beat that if you can. CHORUS |
Subject: Lyr Add: FARM RELIEF (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Jim Dixon Date: 24 Sep 10 - 11:36 AM You can find an mp3 file of this song here. FARM RELIEF As recorded by Dave Macon & Sid Harkreader, June, 1929, Vocalion 5341. [SPOKEN:] Howdy do! Well, folks, you've heard about the farm relief, read about it, heard them talk about it. Well, it's finally got here. They've just about relieved the farmer of everything he's got. Now I'm telling you right. Now I'll sing you about it after I play you a pretty little prelude on the banjo. 1. Farmer just lately moved to town, Trying every way to cut expenses down. He lost his job and he didn't do well, And everybody believes he's gone back to the farm, Gone back to the farm, gone back to the farm. 2. Hoover was elected president. Al Smith went right down in defeat. Majority voted for the high, high chief, But show me a farmer who's got relief, Who's got relief, who's got relief. 3. What farmer has to buy is too high yet. What he has to sell's too low to make a hit. Bust up your corporations and your trusts, For if you don't, then the farmer's gonna bust. Yes, the farmer's gonna bust. Yes, the farmer's gonna bust. 4. Went in a store for to buy the other day. Here's just what the merchant had to say: Nothing a-doing on fall terms.* Without their money, said the wheels won't turn, Said the wheels won't turn, said the wheels won't turn. 5. Used to go to church for to hear them shout, Telling the good Lord what 'twas all about. Now the congregation is all so far Riding around in new Ford cars, Them new Ford cars, them new Ford cars. 6. Washington is the law-making place. The poor old farmer has[n't] enough to say grace. If there ain't something done for to help his grace, The poor old farmer's gonna lose his place, Gonna lose his place, gonna lose his place. [* on fall terms, that is, on credit, to be repaid in the fall when crops are sold.] |
Subject: Lyr Add: TAKE ME BACK TO MY OLD CAROLINA HOME From: Jim Dixon Date: 25 Sep 10 - 04:15 PM At YouTube you can see an excerpt from the 1940 Hollywood film "Grand Ole Opry" in which Uncle Dave Macon and his son Dorris sing TAKE ME BACK TO MY OLD CAROLINA HOME. He never recorded this song. (I did, however find that several other artists recorded songs called CARRY ME BACK TO MY CAROLINA HOME or MY CAROLINA HOME, which I assume are related.) The film shows Uncle Dave performing various acrobatic tricks, even dancing, with his banjo. I think I can hear banjo chords being played during these acrobatics. Am I being fooled by an off-camera musician, or is Uncle Dave really doing this? The story told by the song seems rather disjointed, making me wonder if we aren't hearing mere excerpts from a longer song. TAKE ME BACK TO MY OLD CAROLINA HOME As sung by Uncle Dave Macon (on banjo) and Dorris Macon (on guitar) 1. Me an' my buddy(?) started out the other day, Studyin' a plan how to get away. Light come on an' it caught us in the dark, Waitin' for the Chesterfield train to start. 2. Conductor was a-standin' right nigh the rope(?) An' he hollered to his passengers, "All aboa'd!" Then he reached up and he pulled the string. Bang-a-bang-a-bang-a went the banjer string. CHORUS: Take-a me back. (Take-a me back.) Take-a me back. (Take-a me back.) Take-a me back to that ol' Car'lina home. (Oh, yes!) Take-a me back. (Take-a me back.) Take-a me back. (Take-a me back.) Take-a me back to that ol' Car'lina home. 3. Well, the train pulled on to the very next stop. I looked around, about seventeen cops. 'Cross the hill you oughta seen me run. Bang-a-bang-a-bang-a went my Gat-a-ling gun. CHORUS |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: GUEST,jack Warshaw Date: 06 Jan 11 - 12:00 PM Colleagues, I've been singing this for over 30 years and transcribed it slightly differently - corrections in CAPS below: FROM EARTH TO HEAVEN [Spoken] Now good people I wagoned and farmed for over twenty years and the style on my wagoning firm IS the Macon Midway Mule and Mitchell Wagon Transportation Company. Situated on the dividing line, operated by gentlemen on and up to time. Main office eight and a quarter mile East Main Street, Murfreesboro and ten and three-quarters West Main Street, Woodbury, Tennessee. Now here's my song! I remember the year when I begIn to haul, it was during the summer time Back in the those good old days, you could find whisky, beer and wine I'd walk right in to every saloon, I was strictly up to time THERE Never was a night that I didn't drive home, wASN'T pullING the end of A line Chorus: Been wagoning for over twenty years, and living on the farm I'll bet a hundred dollars to a half a ginger cake, I'LL BE here when the trucks is gone I'LL tell you now, THAT THE bone-dry'S COME, you can't find whisky that'S good Done quit all of my drinking, done gone to serving God I love to go to big meetings, and I'm a-gonna tell you why I love to sing and pray to God, sweet Heaven when I die Chorus An auto-truck has a DRIVING wheel, while I hold my line OH when my feet and body gets cold, I'm walking half the time I speak right to my power, they understand my talk And when I holler, WAGON RIGHT, they know just WHERE to walk. Chorus An auto-truck runs quick and fast, a wagon hasn't THE speed Four good mules and a Mitchell wagon is the safest, LOAD yes indeed I'm on my way to Heaven, and I'LL tell you just how I feel I'd druther ride a wagon and go to Heaven, than to Hell in an automobile FINAL CHORUS NOTE: The 'bone dry' refers to the Federal Prohibition of Alcohol Act in force from 1920 to 1933. So Uncle Dave was taking a swipe at bad bootleg whiskey. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: GUEST,Minneapolis Date: 24 Sep 12 - 10:47 PM Hello, I'm looking for lyrics to "The Station Will Be Changed After Awhile." If anyone's able to help, that's great. A lot of these old links seem to have expired. Thank you. |
Subject: Lyr Add: STATION WILL BE CHANGED AFTER A WHILE From: Jim Dixon Date: 24 Sep 12 - 11:30 PM Here's my transcription from a recording which I found on Spotify. It appears on several albums: STATION WILL BE CHANGED AFTER A WHILE As sung by Uncle Dave Macon SPOKEN: Now, good people, I'm gonna try to play you a pretty little instrumental piece and sing you a beautiful sentimental song. [INSTRUMENTAL PIECE] SPOKEN: Now this is a song that is sung by a colored preacher. And he told the congregation that he's a-gonna preach to 'em from the one-eyed chapter of the two-eyed verse of the three who failed to see Peter in the four-corner of the Corinthians. And remember, people, the station will be changed after while. 1. There are people in this world who will try to pull you down, But I's a-gwine to glory to wear the starry crown. It's no matter what they do and say, Gwine to fall on my knees and pray That the station will changed after while. CHORUS: Oh, the station will be changed after while. When the Lord himself shall come, And the work on earth is done, Why, the station will be changed after while. 2. Oh, the Bible plainly tells you of that awful judgment day. That awful day am comin' an' no matter where I be. You may bury me in the ocean. You may bury me in the sea, But the station will be changed after while. CHORUS 3. Oh, the gospel train am comin' an' she's runnin' through the land. King Jesus is the conductor and she always makes her time. When she makes the station blow, You'd better be ready to go. Why, the station will be changed after while. |
Subject: Lyr Add: OYSTER STEW (parody of "Just Tell Them... From: Jim Dixon Date: 31 Jul 13 - 08:44 PM Uncle Dave Macon didn't sing this. I'm posting this here only so that the lyrics of the parody will be in the same thread as the lyrics of the original. A guest requested this song in the thread 'Mother Songs' of the tear-jerker variety but it isn't really appropriate for that thread either. From The Alabama Folk Lyric: A Study in Origins and Media of Dissemination edited by Ray Broadus Browne (Bowling Green: Bowling Green University Popular Press, 1979), page 391: 154 Oyster Stew Parody of "Just Tell Them That You Saw Me" Spaeth (History of Popular Music, p. 277) says there were many parodies of "Just Tell Them That You Saw Me." This one, however, is the only one I have collected. It shows a vigorous reaction against the sentiment of the song. "Oyster Stew," sung by Mrs. Ruth Clements, Holt, Tuscaloosa County, 1952. A man happened to an accident upon a railroad train, A-trying to ride and would not pay his fee. The doctors they consulted, examined him, and said: "We'll have to saw his leg off at the knee." They tried to give him chloroform but he wouldn't take the stuff, Said, "Go ahead while I'm brave and strong. And while you're sawing off the leg, oh, please, sir, let me sing." They did, and then he started up this song: CHORUS: Just tell them that you saw me and I was losing flesh, To ups and downs will always be a slave. Just whisper to mother dear if you get a chance, Her darling boy has one foot in the grave. I went to a church festival about three weeks ago, Was just because I had nothing else to do. Of course I stayed for supper, which was fifty cents a chair. The waiter brought me in some oyster stew. I dipped my spoon into the stuff and found it was all milk. I swore I'd never go there any more. At last one lonely oyster came strolling up the top. He looked me in the face and bravely said: CHORUS: Just tell them that you saw me and I was in the soup. I've been brought here just sixteen times alone. Please, mister, don't you eat me; I'm the only one they have. Remember you have children all your own. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: GUEST Date: 10 Jan 14 - 08:53 PM I have a version of "Keep My Skillet Good and Greasy" where it sounds like Uncle Dave Macon says "nigger on the log, finger on the trigger and eye on the hog". Does anyone else believe that's what it is? Sorry if the question has already been answered, I only skimmed most of the thread. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: Jim Dixon Date: 11 Jan 14 - 06:25 PM To our last guest: You're right. As it explains above, Macon recorded KEEP MY SKILLET GOOD AND GREASY twice. He made the first recording in June 1924, and it was released on the Vocalion label; the second, made in January 1935, was released on the Bluebird label. I believe I have listened to both versions on Spotify. One version, which I suppose is the first, is 2:32 in length, and he sings "There's a nigger on the log." On the other, which is 2:44 in length, he sings "There's a man on the log." If you want to sing this, please use the "man" version. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: GUEST Date: 15 Jan 14 - 07:38 PM I agree, I would definitely use the "man" version if I were to sing it aloud. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: GUEST Date: 30 Nov 16 - 06:03 PM I have an original recording of the song. I is on one of those ols thick original record. If interested please contact me @ cuyan21@yahoo.com |
Subject: Lyr Add: HILL BILLIE BLUES (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Jim Dixon Date: 15 Dec 16 - 07:04 PM I have spelled a few words phonetically, as Macon pronounces them. HILL BILLIE BLUES As recorded by Uncle Dave Macon 1. I am a Billie and I live in the hills. I can whistle an' sing like a whooperwill. Come across the mountain right down in the holler To see my little doney just as purty's she can waller. CHORUS: Oh, tell me how long must I wait? Lord, I get you now or, Lord, I hesitate. 2. Hello central; what's the matter with the line? I can't talk to that girl of mine. Storm last night blew all the phones down. I can't talk to my Saro Brown. 3. As long as bacon is thirty cents a pound, I'm goin' to eat a rabbit if I have to run 'im down. Ice cream cone, bevo(?) steak, You want to win a woman, get a daddy like a ape(?). 4. I been in the city 'n' I been in the town. I been in the mountain with the blues rollin' down. Jumped in the river an' I thought I would drown. I spied a red-headed woman and I couldn't go down. 5. Whiskey, whiskey, I'm gonna let you be. The bone-dry law made a Christian out o' me. Goin' to Oklyhoma to marry me a squaw, And have a big chief for a daddy-in-law. 6. Got water in the ocean; there's water in the sea. Since the bone-dry, it's been water for me. Been on the Southern, the Seaboard, too. It takes a Henry Ford for to shake me an' you. 7. Oh, me and my partner we both ran to bed, The jug o' white lightning right under my head. When I woke up, my supper was cold. My jug it was empty; Lord, my partner was told(?). |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: GUEST,cnd Date: 15 Dec 16 - 11:33 PM 3: bevo(?) steak is T-Bone steak daddy like a ape(?) is Cadillac eight 7 my partner was told(?). is my partner was full https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnVqlsBlBNc |
Subject: Lyr Add: DOWN BY THE RIVERSIDE (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Levana Taylor Date: 14 Jul 21 - 11:10 PM DOWN BY THE RIVERSIDE As sung by Uncle Dave Macon I'm gonna sing you about my girl Down by the river Sweetest little girl in this world Down by the riverside Come my love and go with me Down by the river We'll go back to Tennessee Down by the riverside Oh lover, love me Down by the river Oh lover, love me Down by the riverside She dressed so neat and she looked so sweet Down by the river Shoes and hat and dressed complete Down by the riverside Talk about a pretty girl you oughta see mine Down by the river She ain't so good looking but she dress so fine Down by the riverside Oh lover, love me Down by the river Oh love tell me Down by the riverside She walked out late and she walked out sooner Down by the river You just ought to see her dressed in bloomers Down by the riverside I've been all around this whole round world Down by the river I hate the old man, but I love that girl Down by the riverside Oh lover, love me Down by the river Oh lover, love me Down by the riverside She walked so cute, she walked so stout Down by the river She walked so fast till she came plumb out Down by the riverside She sat down on a bumblebee Down by the river It raised a blister on her sister Down by the riverside Oh lover, love me Down by the river Oh lover, love me Down by the riverside Chew my tobacco, spit my juice Down by the river Love my doney but it ain't no use Down by the riverside I had a letter from the Shiloh town Down by the river Big St Louis was a-burning down Down by the riverside Oh lover, love me Down by the river Oh lover, love me Down by the riverside ------------------ This is a somewhat naughty song by the standards of its recorded contemporaries. The non-rhyming couplet has me puzzled: "She sat down on a bumblebee/It raised a blister on her sister." What taboo word would rhyme with "bumblebee"? |
Subject: Lyr Add: PAPA’S BILLIE GOAT (Uncle Dave Macon) From: Jim Dixon Date: 13 Feb 22 - 11:30 PM You can hear this recording at the Internet Archive. However, Spotify has a clearer copy; it is on the Uncle Dave Macon album “Anthology: The Deluxe Collection (Remastered)” (2020). My transcription: there are a few gaps, marked by ellipses […]. Note that verse 6 seems to be a precursor to “I’m My Own Grandpa.” PAPA’S BILLIE GOAT As recorded by Uncle Dave Macon on Vocalion B 14848 (1924) 1. Papa bought him a great big billy goat. Mama she washed most every day, Hung her clothes out on the line. That darned old goat he come that way. 2. He pulled down the red flannel shirt. He did sorta yank; them buttons crack, But I'll get even with the son of a gun: Gonna tie him across the railroad track. 3. Tied him across the railroad track. Then a train was a-comin’ at a powerful rate. He belched up that old red shirt And then flagged down that darned old freight. 4. Went to the depot and I bought me a ticket. I walked right in there; I sat down, Stuck my ticket in the brim of my hat, And the doggone wind blowed it out on the ground. 5. Conductor come around, says: "Gi’ me a ticket." I had to pay again or be left on the track, But I'll get even with the son of a gun. I got a round-trip ticket and I ain't a-comin' back. 6. … an old fool, married me a widow. The widow had a daughter by the name of Maud. Father bein’ a widower, married her daughter And now my daddy is my own son-in-law. 7. Had a little roll, laid it on the board. … sugar in a gourd. Sugar in a gourd, you want to get it out The way to get sugar out,... 8. Come to town the other night. I heard a little noise and I seed a little fight. A police watchin’ an’ a-runnin’ all around, But a load o’ white lightnin’ done come to town. 9. Had a little hen; she had a wooden leg, The best durn hen that ever laid a egg. … hen around the barn, And another little wrinkle wouldn’t do me any harm. 10. I went down the old sage field. A black snake grabbed me by my heel. Soon I turned around; I’m gonna do my best, And I run my head in a hornet’s nest. 11. Went right out upon the steeple To look right down on the colored people. Some were black and some were blacker, And some were the color of a chew of tobacca. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: cnd Date: 14 Feb 22 - 08:32 AM The first word of stanza 6 is "Acted" The first questionable line in stanza 7 is "Tune up the fiddle with the" The second questionable line in stanza 7 is "Only way to get sugar out [is] to roll the gourd about" (assistance here thanks to the UArk Folk Song Collection) The questionable line from stanza 9 is "She laid more eggs than any", and on the last line of that stanza it's "another little drink a-wouldn't do me any harm" rather than wrinkle Otherwise, Jim, your ear is golden as ever! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: songs by Uncle Dave Macon From: GUEST,Frank Hamilton Date: 17 Feb 22 - 07:38 AM I'd like to call your attention to a CD by friend Peter Feldmann of Santa Barbara called "Grey Cat on a Tennessee Farm" featuring topflight folk country performers doing the music of Uncle Dave. Peter has been singing and playing bluegrass and old-time music for years and in my opinion, a great player and performer. Byron Berline plays his ass off. Love this CD. A spammer has decided to try to occupy this thread. If you wish to post musical content, as a moderator to reopen it for you. ---mudelf |
Share Thread: |