Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: Jim Dixon Date: 02 Jun 06 - 04:27 PM Here's NAVY COFFEE. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: M.Ted Date: 08 Nov 05 - 06:43 PM Thanks for posting these, especially, "Coffee in a Cardboard Cup", which ought to be a lot better known than it is-- |
Subject: Lyr Add: SAINT CAFFEINE (John Gorka) From: Jim Dixon Date: 08 Nov 05 - 09:24 AM SAINT CAFFEINE John Gorka I've seen the light. Oh, the light I've seen, Seen the light of Saint Caffeine. Of other drugs, oh, I am clean, But I pray to you, Saint Caffeine. Yes, I am a legal (?) fiend. My high ... (?) mean routines. Cold or not, O coffee bean, I pray to you, Saint Caffeine. Stayed away as a teen. Hormones filled up my jeans. Ever since my sleep got mean, I took to you, Saint Caffeine. BRIDGE: Help me through the morning. Help me to the afternoon. Bean count is boring. I'd be snoring without you. I wear your ring around my cup. I pour you down. I drink you up. When I'm running out of steam, I pray to you, Saint Caffeine. REPEAT FIRST VERSE [As sung by John Gorka on "After Yesterday," Red House CD 121, 1998. [You can hear this song as part of an archived radio program. Go to the page Minnesota Public Radio's Morning Show, for June 20- June 26, 2005. Then, under "Monday, June 20, 2005," click "Listen 5 - 7 a.m." The song begins 1 hour, 45 minutes, 50 seconds from the beginning of the program.] |
Subject: Lyr Add: COFFEE IN A CARDBOARD CUP (Ebb, Kander) From: Jim Dixon Date: 08 Nov 05 - 01:05 AM Lyrics copied from http://www.carlinamerica.com/titles/titles.cgi?MODULE=LYRICS&ID=488&terms=___terms___ COFFEE IN A CARDBOARD CUP (Fred Ebb, John Kander) The trouble with the world today, it seems to me, Is coffee in a cardboard cup. The trouble with the affluent society Is coffee in a cardboard cup. No one's ever casual and nonchalant. No one wastes a minute in a restaurant. No one wants a waitress passing pleasantries Like "Hiya, miss. Hiya, sir. May I take your order, please?" The trouble with the world today, it's plain to see, Is ev'rything is hurry up. It's rush it through, don't be slow, B.L.T. on rye to go, And coffee (I think she said), coffee (I know she said), Coffee in a cardboard cup. The trouble with the helter-skelter life we lead Is coffee in a cardboard cup. The trouble, the psychologists have all agreed, Is coffee in a cardboard cup. Tell me, what could possibly be drearier, Than seafood from the Belnord Cafeteria? Seems to me a gentleman would much prefer "Good afternoon! How you been? Would you like the special, sir?" The trouble with the world today is plain to see. It's ev'rything is hurry up. There's ready whip, instant tea, Minute rice and my-oh-me, There's coffee (I think she said), coffee (I know she said), Coffee in a cardboard cup. The trouble with the world today, beyond a doubt, Is coffee in a cardboard cup. The trouble is the way we like to take things out, Like coffee in a cardboard cup. No one knows the meaning of Utopia Is dining at your corner cornucopia. Seems to me we wouldn't be such nervous wrecks With "Hello there! Be right back! Would you care for separate checks?" The trouble with the world today, it's plain to see, Is ev'rything is hurry up. It's all become Loony Tunes With sugar packs and plastic spoons And coffee (I think she said) Coffee (I know she said) Coffee (I'm sure she said) Coffee (She must have said) Coffee in a cardboard cup. (SPOKEN): Hurry up! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: Jim Dixon Date: 08 Feb 05 - 08:48 AM Here's a few I missed the first time around: SUNDAY MORNIN', recorded by Spanky and Our Gang, has a chorus that begins "I'll put the coffee on to brew." COFFEE BLUES by Mississippi John Hurt. It's the song that gave us the phrase "lovin' spoonful." I'D RATHER MAKE COFFEE THAN LOVE in the DT, author unknown. I'D RATHER MAKE COFFEE THAN LOVE - extended version by Dave Oesterreich. COLD COFFEE MORNING (And a Warm Beer Afternoon) from Jon Randall. Hey, guys! I think we got enough songs to make an album. Can you imagine selling these in every Starbuck's across America? One o' these days I'm gonna stumble on an idea that's gonna make somebody rich—probably not me. Right now I'm toying with the idea of making theme albums and matching them to the right retail outlet—not record stores. |
Subject: Lyr Add: COWBOY COFFEE (Joni Harms) From: GUEST,Dale Date: 08 Feb 05 - 03:26 AM Let's see, is it early November yet? :) I guess the thread slipped away, and I forgot all about it. Anyway, here are the Cowboy Coffee lyrics by Joni Harms I promised back on 22 Oct 04 - 01:52 AM. The soundfile link I gave still works. Check it out. COWBOY COFFEE Joni Harms from her album, After All, 2001 Not available everywhere, but worth looking for The first thing that one does When you wake before the sun does Get the fire goin' Won't be long till you feel the heat Find a spot and take a seat Till the coals start glowin' Then pull out the granite pot Poor old thing's been used a lot Don't look like much But just you wait and see Pour some grounds from a leather poke Add a little taste of old wood smoke Man, that's Cowboy Coffee Everyday we all get up Find our favorite old tin cup Pour a taste of Heaven Plenty grub for all the crew Throw it down with a cup or two Saddle up by seven Get on up, there's work to do Ropin' ridin' brandin' too Every day's as tough as it can be Chasin' strays and hangin' wire Work all day and you still ain't tired Man, that's Cowboy Coffee Don't ask these boys 'bout a latte Cowboy Coffee comes just one way Strong enough to make you stand up straight And talk about flavor now just you wait After supper time is done Still got time for a little fun Take it slow and easy Sittin' 'round the fireside Singin' songs and tellin' lies One more pot of coffee Then some young bucks start to nag Joe, go under your saddle bag Pull out that bottle everybody's seen Pour in some of that 90 proof Warm us up down to our boots Man, that's Cowboy Coffee Man, that's Cowboy Coffee! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: Kaleea Date: 08 Feb 05 - 01:32 AM I love coffe & Java songs/tunes. It is quite common to find Jazz titles with "Java" in there somewhere. They seem to be quite popular with college Jazz ensembles these days. I have on occasion heard Musicians do complete sets with the coffee theme. Me oulde born in Arkansas-lived in Eastern Oklahoma-Irish Granny used to sing to me: Put on the skillet; put on the lid; Granny's gonna make a little shortnin' bread. That ain't all she's gonna do; Granny's gonna perk a little coffee too. |
Subject: Lyr Add: SECOND CUP OF COFFEE (Gordon Lightfoot) From: GUEST,Walter Corey Date: 07 Feb 05 - 09:46 PM SECOND CUP OF COFFEE by Gordon Lightfoot (D) (Em) (G) (D) (A) (D) I'm on my second cup of coffee and I (G) still can't face the (D) day I'm thinking of the (F#m) lady who got (G) lost along the (A) way And if (D) I don't stop this trembling hand from (Em) reaching for the (G) phone I'll be (D) reaching for the bottle Lord, be(A)fore this day is (D) done I'm on my second cup of coffee and I still can't face the day The room was filled with laughs as we danced the night away But my sleep was filled with dreaming of the wrongs that I had done And the gentle sweet reminder of a daughter and a son (G) Sitting alone, my (D) friends have all gone home You never know when they'll come dropping (A) in (G) Thinking of girls with their (D) fingers in my curls Too young to understand how love be(A)gins I'm on my second cup of coffee and I still can't face the dawn The radio is playing a soft country song And if I don't stop this trembling hand from reaching for the phone I'll be reaching for the bottle Lord, before this day is done Sitting alone, my friends have all gone home They never were around when I needed them Thinking of girls with their fingers in my curls Too young to understand how love begins I'm on my second cup of coffee and I still can't face the day I'm thinking of the lady who got lost along the way And if I don't stop this trembling hand from reaching for the phone I'll be reaching for the bottle Lord, before this day is done And if I don't stop this trembling hand from reaching for the phone I'll be reaching for the bottle Lord, before this day is done at http://www.lightfoot.ca/secndcup.htm |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: GUEST,Barrie Roberts Date: 07 Feb 05 - 03:21 PM Don't forget THE FROZEN LOGGER who stirred his coffee with his thumb. He's in the DT. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: chris nightbird childs Date: 07 Feb 05 - 01:54 PM "One More Cup of Coffee" by Bob Dylan........ |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: open mike Date: 07 Feb 05 - 02:22 AM There is one that seems like it takes place in a truck stop? Or is sung by a trucker? "Pour me another cup of coffee." It might be the same song that has a line "Put another nickel in the juke box." Greg Brown has a couple of coffee related songs. One mentions him being more of a tea type of guy, as coffee is a bitter brew made for a bitter world. Another one is: GOOD MORNING COFFEE I will bring you your good mornin' coffee, will you smile If not now then have a sip or two and maybe in a while I love you I love you in the good mornin' and in the night Every day I wait with you wherever we are, it's all right Here's your coffee, it may still be too hot, it is freshly brewed I'll just pour myself a cup and then I will crawl in with you. SMALL DARK MOVIE How are things going in the small dark movie of your life? Late at night you call your girlfriend in the morning you call your wife In the morning you go for coffee leave town by the underpass Leave whatever happened last night cigarette in a champagne glass The road used to go someplace you never been before Now it's just a racetrack and the only prize is more The only off-ramp is up ahead and just where ain't too clear And change is a semi with smoking wheels filling the rear view mirror You could really use a raincoat and a pair of cool shoes You could really use some idea of what you're gonna do But the road keeps coming at you and you find no place to rest And in these small dark movies no-one knows what's best So how are things going in the small dark movie of your life? Late at night you call your girlfriend in the morning you call your wife In the morning you go for coffee leave town by the underpass Leave whatever happened last night cigarette in the champagne glass How are things going how are things going how are things going? Then there is this one: (For a guy who claims not to drink coffee, he sure writes about it a lot!) SMELL OF COFFEE Bouffant hairdo, ne'er-do-well Warm the car up, perfume smell Work is there when love is gone Smell of coffee, crack of dawn Pheasant clucking, ice cold dew Backseat shotgun, frosty slough Chevy coughing, let's move on Smell of coffee, crack of dawn Hey there, Benny, is this your home? Railroad cinders, Styrofoam Train a-comin', where's lost john? Smell of coffee, crack of dawn Blue, blue window, factory Big bad boss man can't find me Boxes piled up, paycheck gone Smell of coffee, crack of dawn Woman works and man does too Yellow paper, same old news Forty years to cross the lawn Smell of coffee, crack of dawn |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: M.Ted Date: 07 Feb 05 - 12:31 AM Jim--Thanks so much for posting the Nick Lucas page--I didn't know it was there, and he is one of my favorite guitarists--"Painting the Clouds with Sunshine" will make you cry-- |
Subject: Lyr Add: CIGARETTES AND COFFEE BLUES From: Jim Dixon Date: 07 Feb 05 - 12:01 AM CIGARETTES AND COFFEE BLUES Marty Robbins I guess I'll take a walk tonight. I know that I can't sleep. An' I won't go to bed at all. I'd just lay there and weep. Instead, I'll make our favorite spot. That's what I think I'll do. I got those smokin' cigarettes an' drinkin' coffee blues. CHORUS: Smokin' cigarettes an' drinkin' coffee all night long, Wond'rin' how a love so right could suddenly go wrong, I'd take the next bus out o' town, but I gotta be near you. I got those smokin' cigarettes an' drinkin' coffee blues. Sittin' at the table where I call my baby's name, Wonderin' where our love went wrong, wonderin' who's to blame, List'nin' while the jukebox plays the songs that make me blue. Another cup of coffee and a cigarette or two. CHORUS: Smokin' cigarettes an' drinkin' coffee all night long, Wond'rin' how a love so right could suddenly go wrong, There's a lot of other people know the mis'ry I go through. I got those smokin' cigarettes an' drinkin' coffee blues. [You can hear Lefty Frizzell's recording at The Record Lady's All-Time Country Favorites, Requests Page 7. It was also recorded by David Frizzell, Marty Robbins, Sleepy LaBeef, and Jean Shepard.] |
Subject: Lyr Add: I'LL JUST HAVE A CUP OF COFFEE From: Jim Dixon Date: 06 Feb 05 - 11:55 PM I'LL JUST HAVE A CUP OF COFFEE (THEN I'LL GO) Billie Brock I'll just have a cup of coffee, then I'll go. Thought that I'd just drop by and let you know That I'm leaving time tomorrow. I'll cause you no more sorrow. I'll just have a cup of coffee, then I'll go. I brought the money like the lawyer said to do. It won't replace all the heartaches I've caused you. It won't take the place of loving you, I know. I'll just have a cup of coffee, then I'll go. Tell the kids I came by awhile last night, And I kissed them while they slept so tight. Make my cup of coffee sweet and make it warm, Just the way you used to be inside my arms. I'll have another half a cup and then I'll go. [Sung by Claude Gray. You can hear his recording at The Record Lady's All-Time Country Favorites, Real Country Archives Page 6. It appears on a couple of various-artists compilations: "Home on the Road," and "Classic Country: The '60s Treasures." It was also recorded by Ernest Tubb under the title I'LL JUST HAVE ANOTHER CUP OF COFFEE.] |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 06 Feb 05 - 11:39 PM "I'd Like to Dunk You in My Coffee" is an old one that should be here. Copy at Levy but not shown (copyright 1934). |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: Jim Dixon Date: 06 Feb 05 - 08:56 PM The lyrics to COFFEE GRINDIN' BLUES, by Lucille Bogan, have been posted here. You can hear Lucille Bogan's 1927 recording at The Red Hot Jazz Archive. |
Subject: Lyr Add: AIN'T GOT NOBODY TO GRIND MY COFFEE From: Jim Dixon Date: 06 Feb 05 - 08:46 PM AIN'T GOT NOBODY TO GRIND MY COFFEE Once I had a loving daddy, just as good as he could be, But my ever-loving daddy, he's done gone away from me. And since he left me behind, here's what's on my mind, I find: Ain't got nobody to grind my coffee in the morning. Ain't got nobody to serve my breakfast in bed. My daddy went away A week ago today. How'm I gonna find a 'Nother coffee grinda Who could do my grindin' like my sweet man could? Ain't got nobody to light my brand-new percolator. Ain't got nobody to heat my oven, you see. When my daddy was around, he was oh so good, Even haul my ashes, chop my kindling wood. Ain't got nobody else to love me like my daddy could, And grind my coffee for me, I mean, And grind my coffee for me. Ain't got nobody to grind my coffee in the morning. Ain't got nobody to serve my breakfast in bed. My daddy went away A week ago today. How'm I gonna find a 'Nother coffee grinda Who could do my grindin' like my sweet man could? Ain't got nobody to light my brand-new percolator. Ain't got nobody to heat my oven, you see. Oh, my daddy used to love me pretty, I'll confess. Believe me, he could do it diff'rent from the rest. Ain't got other who could really put me to a test, And grind my coffee for me, I mean, And grind my coffee for me. [As sung by Mary Stafford, 1926. See The Red Hot Jazz Archive. Clara Smith's 1928 recording, also at The Red Hot Jazz Archive, is very similar, except she ends each chorus with "And do my grinding for me."] |
Subject: Lyr Add: A CUP OF COFFEE, A SANDWICH AND YOU From: Jim Dixon Date: 06 Feb 05 - 08:42 PM A CUP OF COFFEE, A SANDWICH AND YOU (Words by Billy Rose & Al Dubin. Music by Joseph Meyer, 1925) In the movie plays of nowadays, a romance always must begin in June. Tales in magazines have all their scenes of love laid in a garden 'neath the moon. But I don't miss that kind of bliss. What I want is this: CHORUS: A cup of coffee, a sandwich, and you, A cozy corner, a table for two, A chance to whisper, cuddle and coo, With lots of huggin' and kissin' in view. I don't need music, lobster, or wine As long as your eyes look into mine. The things I long for are simple and few: A cup of coffee, a sandwich, and you. [A recording made by Nick Lucas in 1926 can be heard at The Red Hot Jazz Archive. Another recording by Mike Speciale and His Hotel Carlton Terrace Orchestra can be heard at Aardvark Mastering.] |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: GUEST,Dale Date: 22 Oct 04 - 01:52 AM One that seems not to have been collected here yet is Cowboy Coffee by Joni Harms. I have the words somewhere, but can't get to them until probably early November. I say that now in the hope that my mentioning the song might jog someone else's memory, and that they are saying even as they read this, "Hey, I know THAT one!" (No, they are NOT the lyrics credited to the Bosstones.) Sound sample on this page Just about anything by Joni Harms is highly recommended by me, by the way. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: PoppaGator Date: 21 Oct 04 - 10:06 AM (Thread-drift alert) Speaking of the INKSPOTS: Lloyd Washington, who joined the group in 1941 as the lead singer, lived in New Orleans after retirement and passed away almost a year ago. I just learned that he will finally be buried (reburied?) this coming Saturday, 10/3/04, in a newly dedicated Musician's Tomb in St. Louis Cemetary #1, with all the attendant jazz-funeral ritual and celebration. The memorial Mass will be held at St. Augustine's Church on St. Claude St. in the Treme neighborhood at 11 am. I'll be two blocks away, at the WWOZ radio studio taking membership pledges over the phone, from 10 to 11:30 during Sean O'Meara's Irish music program. When I leave the studio at 11:30, I should be right on time for the end of Mass and the start of the second-line parade to the cemetary. Wish y'all (some of y'all, anyway) could be there! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: GUEST,T-boy Date: 21 Oct 04 - 07:43 AM Then ther's 'Java Blues' by the late great Rick Danko. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: Flash Company Date: 21 Oct 04 - 07:15 AM I remember my large, eccentric boss walking away from an argument with a colleague singing 'You're the fly in my ointment!'. On a more (or less) serious note , how about Slim Gaillard's 'Dunkin' Bagel', (Splash in the coffee!) FC |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: GUEST,celtaddict at work Date: 21 Oct 04 - 01:09 AM The Flying Fish Sailors, in Texas, have amongst their assorted (and pretty wild) "modern-day shanties" a coffee shanty: "Cuppa Joe, gimme Cuppa Joe" is all I recall offhand but I can look it up at home to add to the coffee song store. (Greg Henkel and the Flying Fish Sailors have brought us such other gems as the moving shanty ("Haul, U-Haul, Haul"), a bouncy upbeat song about the influenza pandemic of 1918, and songs about such fearsome issues as the Loch Ness monster, the Roswell incident, and lima beans.) |
Subject: Lyr Add: BLACK COFFEE (Burke, Webster) From: Jim Dixon Date: 20 Oct 04 - 11:41 PM Lyrics copied from http://www.theguitarguy.com/blackcof.htm (That page also has chords.) BLACK COFFEE Words & Music by Sonny Burke & Paul Francis Webster, 1948. I'm feelin' mighty lonesome, haven't slept a wink. I walk the floor from nine to four. In between, I drink Black coffee. Love's a hand-me-down brew. I'll never know a Sunday in this weekday room. I'm talkin' to the shadow, one o'clock till four, And Lord, how slow the moments go when all I do is pour Black coffee since the blues caught my eye. I'm hangin' out on Monday, my Sunday dreams to dry. BRIDGE: Now, man is born to come a-lovin', And a woman's born to weep and fret, To stay at home and tend her oven, And down her past regrets in coffee and cigarettes. I'm moonin' all the mornin', moanin' all the night, And in between, it's nicotine, and not much heart to fight. Black coffee -- feelin' low as the ground. It's drivin' me crazy, this waitin' for my baby 'Til he come around, 'til he come around. [Recorded by Ella Fitzgerald, 1948; Peggy Lee, 1956; Julie London, 1960; Rosemary Clooney, 1963; K. D. Lang, 1988; Sinéad O'Connor, 1992; Sarah Vaughan, and many others.] |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive (and other coffee songs) From: GUEST,robinia@eskimo.com Date: 20 Oct 04 - 06:55 AM Oops, I just wanted to say that the Seattle Labor Chorus has adapted Java Jive to a pitch for "fair trade coffee" -- great fun to sing, and audiences like it too. |
Subject: Lyr Add: LET'S HAVE ANOTHER CUP O' COFFEE (Berlin) From: Jim Dixon Date: 19 Oct 04 - 10:04 PM Lyrics copied from http://www.thepeaches.com/music/composers/berlin/1932.html LET'S HAVE ANOTHER CUP O' COFFEE Words and music by Irving Berlin, 1932. [VERSE:] Why worry when skies are gray? Why should we complain? Let's laugh at the cloudy day. Let's sing in the rain. Songwriters say the storm quickly passes. That's their philosophy. They see the world through rose-colored glasses. Why shouldn't we? [REFRAIN:] Just around the corner, There's a rainbow in the sky; So let's have another cup o' coffee, And let's have another piece o' pie! Trouble's just a bubble, And the clouds will soon roll by; So let's have another cup o' coffee, And let's have another piece o' pie! Let a smile be your umbrella, For it's just an April show'r. Even John D. Rockefeller Is looking for the silver lining. Mister Herbert Hoover Says that now's the time to buy; So let's have another cup o' coffee, And let's have another piece o' pie! [Alternate lines:] Things that really matter Are the things that gold can't buy. [Recorded by Glenn Miller & His Orchestra, Joan Morris, Fred Waring & His Pennsylvanians, and others.] |
Subject: Lyr Add: YOU'RE THE CREAM IN MY COFFEE From: Jim Dixon Date: 19 Oct 04 - 09:47 PM Lyrics copied from http://www.midnitesun.co.uk/lyrics/lyrics03/wb03p136.txt YOU'RE THE CREAM IN MY COFFEE Words and Music by B. G. De Sylva, Lew Brown and Ray Henderson. 1928. VERSE: I'm not a poet. How well I know it! I've never been a raver, But when I speak of you, I rave a bit, it's true. I'm wild about you. I'm lost without you. You give my life its flavor. What sugar does for tea, That's what you do for me. CHORUS: You're the cream in my coffee. You're the salt in my stew. You will always be my necessity. I'd be lost without you. You're the starch in my collar. You're the lace in my shoe. You will always be my necessity. I'd be lost without you. Most men tell love tales, And each phrase dove-tails. You've heard each known way. This way is my own way. You're the sail of my love boat. You're the captain and crew. You will always be my necessity. I'd be lost without you. VERSE: You have a great way, An up-to-date way, Of telling me you love me. It gives me such a thrill! I know it always will. My head is turning, And just from learning Your estimation of me; And as for you, I'll say, I feel the self-same way. CHORUS: You're the cream in my coffee. You're the salt in my stew. You will always be my necessity. I'd be lost without you. You're the starch in my collar. You're the lace in my shoe. You will always be my necessity. I'd be lost without you. You give life savor, Bring out its flavor; So this is clear, dear: You're my Worcestershire, dear. You're the sail of my love boat. You're the captain and crew. You will always be my necessity. I'd be lost without you. [Recorded by Les Brown, Nat King Cole, Ray Conniff, Marlene Dietrich, Ruth Etting, Stephane Grappelli, Jack Hylton, Mel Tormé, Ted Weems, and others.] |
Subject: Lyr Add: THE COFFEE SONG From: Jim Dixon Date: 19 Oct 04 - 09:15 PM Lyrics copied from http://www.strictlysinatra.com/Lyrics/CoffeeSong.txt THE COFFEE SONG Dick Miles, Bob Hilliard. 1946. Way down among Brazilians, Coffee beans grow by the billions, So they've got to find those extra cups to fill. They've got an awful lot of coffee in Brazil. You can't get cherry soda, 'Cause they've got to fill that quota, And the way things are I'll bet they never will. They've got a zillion tons of coffee in Brazil. No tea or tomato juice, You'll see no potato juice, 'Cause the planters down in Santos all say "No, no, no." The politician's daughter Was accused of drinkin' water, And was fined a great big fifty-dollar bill. They've got an awful lot of coffee in Brazil. You date a girl and find out later She smells just like a percolator. Her perfume was made right on the grill. Why, they could percolate the ocean in Brazil. And when their ham and eggs need savor, Coffee ketchup gives 'em flavor. Coffee pickles way outsell the dill. Why, they put coffee in the coffee in Brazil. No tea, no tomato juice, You'll see no potato juice. The planters down in Santos all say "No, no, no." So you'll add to the local color Serving coffee with a cruller. Dunkin' doesn't take a lot of skill. They've got an awful lot of coffee, An awful lot of coffee, Man, they got a gang of coffee in Brazil! [Recorded by Frank Sinatra, The Andrews Sisters, Rosemary Clooney, Erroll Garner, Osibisa, Edmundo Ros, Sarah Vaughan, and others.] |
Subject: Lyr Add: YOU'RE THE CREAM IN MY COFFEE From: kbraun Date: 18 Oct 04 - 02:18 PM From: http://www.cherylspelts.com/ruthetting/songs/youre_the_cream_in_my_coffee.htm YOU'RE THE CREAM IN MY COFFEE Lyrics and Music by B.G. De Sylva, Lew Brown and Ray Henderson Originally published in 1923. Recorded by the Ben Selvin Orchestra, and singer Ruth Etting in 1929. From the films Hold Everything and The Cockeyed World. You're the cream in my coffee, You're the salt in my stew You will always be my necessity, I'd be lost without you. You're the starch in my collar, You're the lace in my shoe You will always be my necessity, I'd be lost without you. Most men tell love tales, And each phrase dovetails You've heard each known way, This way is my own way: You're the sail in my loveboat, You're the captain and crew, You will always be my necessity I'd be lost without you. You're the cream in my coffee, You're the salt in my stew You will always be my necessity, I'd be lost without you. You're the starch in my collar, You're the lace in my shoe You will always be my necessity, I'd be lost without you. You give life savor, Bring out its flavor, So this is clear, dear, You're my worcestershire, dear! You're the sail in my loveboat, You're the captain and crew, You will always be my necessity, I'd be lost without you. You will always be my necessity I'd be lost without you. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive From: Genie Date: 17 Oct 04 - 09:18 PM You're the Cream in My Coffee © 1928 "You're the cream in my coffee, You're the sugar in my tea. You will always be My necessity. I'd be lost without you." Anybody got the rest of it? |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive From: Azizi Date: 17 Oct 04 - 06:50 PM Sorry for the typos. I neglected to say that "Sugar in the Coffee-o" is also found in Talley's Negro Folk Rhymes. Also with regard to sugar nicknames: "Shug" is a Southern African American nickname given to males. Shug=Sugar |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive From: Azizi Date: 17 Oct 04 - 06:43 PM Thanks for the information about the 1940s song. I'm writing a book on the sources for contemporary African American children's rhymes and have found the following information: The first couplet in the song/poem "Vinie" found in Thomas W Talley's "Negro Folk Rhymes" {1922}is: I loves coffee,an' I loves tea. I loves you, Vinie, does you love me? The rhyme "I love coffee/I love tea/I love a {Black} boy/and he loves me" can still be found in African American children's handclap rhymes. The next verse is "So step back {White} boy/you don't shine/I'm goin to get a Black boy {another boy} to whip {kick} your behind. --- "Sugar in the coffee" is the title of another secular slave song {post-Civil War African American song}: Sheep's in de meader a-mowin' o' de hay. De honey's in de bee-gum, so de all say. My head's up an' I'se boun' to go. Who'll take sugar in de coffee-o? I'se de prettiest liddle girl in de county-o. My mummy an' daddy, de bofe say so. I looks in de glass, it don't say "No"; So I'll take sugar in de coffe-o. -- Some brief editorial comments: This "I'm the prettiest girl etc" rhyme is included in a number of books on children's rhymes without any reference to possible {probable?}African American origin. I find it significant that way back then this Black girl had high self-esteem compared to nowadays when quite a few African Americans still consider dark skin a stigma. Also people might want to note that the large number of references to food in secular African American slave songs {chickens; chicken pie, shorten bread etc,as well as lyrics about loving coffee and tea and sugar and candy, were probably to a large part a result of slaves' lack of ample food and drinks. Cofee, tea, and sugar in any form were luxuries. The desire for sugar and the high esteem given to it is also reflected in African American secular slave rhymes by the use of affectionate nicknames and complimentary referents for females such as "Candy", "Peaches", "Sugar", and Sugar Lump" {the form sugar came in before grandulated sugar}. With the exception of "Sugar Lump" these nicknames are still very much in use in African American communities. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 04 Oct 04 - 03:47 PM Stewie posted "Wouldn't Give Me Sugar...", Macon, in thread 31041: Wouldn't In "The Word on the Street," the broadsides posted by the National Library of Scotland, there is a song, "Things I'd Like to See," with the verse (ca. 1880-1900): Now the ports are thrown open, I'd like for to see, The duty all taken off coffee and tea, I should like to see bread at a penny a pound, And beef twopence-halfpenny the country round, etc. www.nls.uk/broadsides/broadside.cfm/id/15058/criteria/coffee |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 04 Oct 04 - 02:03 PM A few more- The Coffee Song. 1946. Sung by Sinatra Coffee, Cheese and Crackers. Before 1923 You're the Cream in My Coffee. 1928 A Cup of Coffee, a Sandwich and You. 1925 I'd Like to Dunk You in My Coffee. 1934 I Love Coffee, I Love Tea. 1943 Let's Have Another Cup o' Coffee. 1932 You and I. 1941. Maxwell House Theme Song. Wouldn't Give Me Sugar in My Coffee, listed by Dixon, was recorded by Uncle Dave Macon. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive From: Jim Dixon Date: 04 Oct 04 - 08:32 AM Amazing that this song has never been posted at Mudcat before. With all the folkies playing in coffeehouses nowadays, you'd think there'd be a big demand for coffee (and tea) songs. Here are a few more: A PROPER CUP OF COFFEE COFFEE IN THE MORNING AND KISSES IN THE NIGHT WOULDN'T GIVE ME SUGAR IN MY COFFEE COLD COFFEE MORNING |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive From: The Fooles Troupe Date: 30 Sep 04 - 11:22 PM Or a whole raw egg. But the practice of using just the whites to coagulate solids out of a liquid to form a clear consomme is a fairly common technique in French Cooking. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 30 Sep 04 - 11:14 PM Putting the breakfast eggshells into the camp coffee pot to settle the grounds is an old practice. Never heard of a raw onion being used. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive From: Mudlark Date: 30 Sep 04 - 09:27 PM Gray... "A slice of onion and a raw one" may be from the street slang of the 40's.... A slice of onion and/or a raw egg were often thrown into a boiled pot to settle the grounds, as I understand it. Maybe throwing a nickel in would do the same? I've loved this song...and coffee...ever since I was a little kid. Go InkSpots! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 30 Sep 04 - 08:19 PM Guest, I would appreciate seeing the rest of it. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Java Jive From: GUEST Date: 30 Sep 04 - 04:58 PM Actually the verse to the coffee-o song here I learned it as part of What'll we do withthe Baby-o "the wind blows high, the wind blows low the winds blows sugar in my coffee oh how in the hell do the old folks know that I like sugar in my coffee-o. this one's not in Rise up...strange. I can give you the rest of the song if you like......it's one of three things I can play on the Banjo |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: JAVA JIVE From: Genie Date: 15 Sep 04 - 10:55 PM If you have a copy of Rise Up Singing, it has the lyrics as well as the chords.* The chords I use are D, then one of those "demented" chords (3rd & 4th fret), G, A, Emin, D7, G7, and Gm. Pretty easy, actually. . . . . . *Come to think of it, RUS has the lyrics and chords even if you don't have a copy. §;-D |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: JAVA JIVE From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 15 Sep 04 - 08:32 PM Now will someone come up with the rest of- I went thar once bu I'll go no more, They never put no sugar in my coffee O, How in Hell does the old folks know That I allus take sugar in my coffee O! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: JAVA JIVE From: Gray D Date: 15 Sep 04 - 06:58 PM This is starting to get spooky. First of all a Kate and Anna McGarrigle thread about "Talk to Me of Mendocino" about a week after I buy the CD for the first time just to learn that song and sing it 'n' now a thread about a song that our little group has just learned and sung in public for the first time about a week ago. You're not watching me are you...? If so your cameras are running slow ... by about a week. Vague feelings of paranoia aside, I suspect that the phrase "A slice of onion and a raw one" may be from the street slang of the 40's but this is the only place I've heard it. Anyone know the derivation or what context it was used in? Gray D (you ain't seen me, roight? [UK comedy reference]) |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: JAVA JIVE From: Herga Kitty Date: 15 Sep 04 - 02:51 PM There's a recent (and nice) recording of this by Dangerous Curves! Kitty |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: JAVA JIVE From: M.Ted Date: 15 Sep 04 - 12:34 PM thanks for the lyrics, Q--Inkspots did it in F, Manhattan Transfer in G-- |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: JAVA JIVE From: The Fooles Troupe Date: 15 Sep 04 - 02:59 AM 'Java' is of course a derivative slang name for coffee, just as 'China' & 'India' are for tea, having to do with locaton of origin. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: JAVA JIVE From: BanjoRay Date: 15 Sep 04 - 02:50 AM Lovely! |
Subject: Lyr Add: JAVA JIVE (Oakland & Drake) From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 14 Sep 04 - 02:30 PM
JAVA JIVE |
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