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Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?

14 Sep 00 - 01:38 PM (#297266)
Subject: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: The Shambles

Is Old Joe Clark the complete and typical example of a folk song/tune?

I have heard it played and sung many times. I don't think I have ever heard it played exactly the same twice. As for the words, there appears to be so many different ones, that it is a surprise if you hear ones you know. You don't really expect to hear a familiar version.

Why is it so popular and is it the song/tune with the most versions?


14 Sep 00 - 01:42 PM (#297270)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Dale Rose

I have info in a Bradley Kincaid songbook from c.1930. I will look it up, probably this weekend.


14 Sep 00 - 02:27 PM (#297311)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Mary in Kentucky

...just my opinion...but

Old Joe Clark is extremely easy to play (with a noter) on the dulcimer. I suspect it is the quintessential beginners song. Thus, with all of us beginners playing it and feeling like we are really keeping up with the real players/performers, it probably gets bastardized a lot.

That's just my opinion, I could be wrong!

Mary


14 Sep 00 - 06:30 PM (#297502)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: MAG (inactive)

Ironic, since it was actually written (I don't know about composed) in 1843. (Having just done this for Oregon Trail, I have it at my fingertips.)

It's a "zipper song" format, so you can zip in as many verses as you want. There are several about dancing

(Old Joe Clark and I fell out
Know the reason why
He stepped on and broke my toe
So I kicked him in the thigh


14 Sep 00 - 08:13 PM (#297576)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: The Shambles

Old Joe Clark 1839-1886


14 Sep 00 - 08:33 PM (#297591)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Bud Savoie

The basic melody is not difficult, but interesting because of the jump down to G (when playing in A). When you have the basic melody down, the possibilities for variation are endless.

Pete Seeger once wrote that if he were to be allowed to sing one song before dying, that would be it.

Bud


15 Sep 00 - 02:24 PM (#298067)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: The Shambles

It would be interesting to hear how you play it? What key and what words?


15 Sep 00 - 08:09 PM (#298336)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Bud Savoie

Don't know if you're talking to me, Sham, but I play it in A. AT a jam, that's what people will probably use, since it works well on the fiddle there. On the banjo, I use G tuning capoed two and drop-thumb frail. When you go down to the G chord on the banjo, try leaving the first string open. I have no idea what this chord is called, but it's a sort of combination G and E7.

As far as verses, they have no end. I could give you a few samples if you are interested.


16 Sep 00 - 01:52 AM (#298523)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: The Shambles

Thank you Bud yes.

The more the merrier.

A is the key I use mostly and would seem to to be the standard, if there is such a thing.


16 Sep 00 - 03:22 AM (#298552)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Jon Freeman

Shambles, I haven't a clue what the "standard" is but I think that A is a great key for this one for those of us who use GDAE tunings as you can take advantage of the open A and E strings while playing much of the melody on the other one of this pair. D could also be used that way.

Jon


16 Sep 00 - 07:23 AM (#298581)
Subject: Lyr Add: OLD JOE CLARK (from Bradley Kincaid)
From: GUEST

OLD JOE CLARK
from Bradley Kincaid's Favorite Old-Time Songs and Mountain Ballads, Book 3, 1930

Now I've got no money
Got no place to stay
I've got no place to lay my head
And the chickens a crowin' for day

.

Chorus:
Fare you well, old Joe Clark,
Fare you well I say
Fare you well, old Joe Clark,
I'm goin' away to stay.

I wish I had a nickel
I wish I had a dime
I wish I had a pretty little girl
To kiss her and call her mine.

I don't like that old Joe Clark
I'll tell you the reason why.
Ha goes about the country
A stealin' good men's wives.

I went down to old Joe Clark's
I did not mean no harm
He grabbed his old forty four
And shot me thru the arm.

Old Joe Clark's a mean old dog
I'll tell you the reason why
He tore down my old rail fence
So his cattle could eat my rye.

I went down to old Joe Clark's
I found old Joe in bed
I stuck my finger in old Joe's eye
And killed old Joe stone dead.

I wouldn't marry that old maid
I'll tell you the reason why
Her neck's so long and-stringy
I'm afraid she'll never die.

I went down to Dinah's house
She was standin' in the door
With her shoes and stocking in her hand
And her feet all over the floor.

Yonder sits a turtle dove
Sitting on yonder pine
You may weep for your true love
And I shall weep for mine.

Old Joe Clark's a mighty man
What will it take to please him
A good old bottle of apple jack
And Betty Brown to squeeze him.

Photograph caption from the book: Bradley on the Swaying Bridge near the Home of "Old Joe Clark"

Quote from the book: "Old Joe Clark," who is immortalized in one of the ballads in this collection, was a notorious character in Clay county, Kentucky. As with many mountain ballads, the song tells something of his character. they will tell you in Manchester that he was a hard, rough-and-ready bully, who was shot to death by his own son, in a fight over some hogs. the boy was exonerated by the jury--and commended by the community where he still lives. When the fiddlers strike up "Old Joe Clark," every foot in Manchester beats time.

MY THOUGHTS: A few weeks ago, I made a brief study of OJC, including the story linked by The Shambles. The Clay County part is the same, but not much else other than Old Joe Clark's general character, or lack of it. At least Bradley's story has the benefit of being written a good many years earlier. I don't think I would place any bets on either one, but it is a fact that Bradley went back to Kentucky frequently on song gathering/research trips and tried to get the stories as well as the songs. I would imagine that the lyrics as he gives them was at the very least a version sung by people in the Manchester, Clay County, KY area.

A side track: (I am good/bad for that) I remember years ago how aggravated I was that Marty Robbins was chosen over Bradley Kincaid for inclusion in the Country Music Hall of Fame. I remember thinking that here Bradley is an old man who certainly deserves to be included, and though they are electing a good choice, still one so much younger while Bradley may not have another chance. Of course, Marty was dead before another year rolled around, and Bradley never did make it.


16 Sep 00 - 07:24 AM (#298583)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Dale Rose

Oh, something happened to my cookie. Oh, well, there ARE worse things in life than posting as GUEST!


16 Sep 00 - 11:03 AM (#298644)
Subject: Lyr Add: OLD JOE CLARK
From: Bud Savoie

The verses are endless. A few more:

I went down to Old Joe Clark's, I did not go to stay.
I got stuck on a little old girl, Stayed there half a day.

I went down to Old Joe Clark's, I hadn't been there before.
He slept on the feather bed, I slept on the floor.

Old Joe Clark's a mean old man, Mean as he can be.
He threw my dog out in the rain, Then he threw out me.

Old Joe Clark's a dang old dog, Old Joe Clark will steal.
Old Joe Clark's a dang old dog, but he can't go through my field.

Old Joe Clark went courtin', And what do you reckon she said?
She said she wouldn't marry him 'Til all the rest were dead.

Old Joe Clark's a mean old man, Tell you the reason why.
He spits tobacco on the floor and never shuts his fly.

The higher up the cherry tree, the sweeter grows the cherry.
The more you hug and kiss a gal, The more she wants to marry.

* * * * * * *
In the unlikely event that you ever run out of verses, you can sing all of the verses to "Barbara Allen" and "Mary Hamilton" to the tune, while ignoring the looks.

HTML line breaks added. --JoeClone, 23-Jun-02.


17 Sep 00 - 03:59 AM (#299115)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: The Shambles

What's the strangest version? I have heard a very serious unaccompanied English style treatment.


17 Sep 00 - 06:02 AM (#299131)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Dewey

I HAD a Bradley Kincaid 78 of this song, one additional verse was: I went down to old joe's house, old joe wasn't at home I ate all the meat that old joe had and left old joe the bones.


17 Sep 00 - 06:13 AM (#299133)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Dewey

Offensive lyrics I believe are best shared among only like minded individuals who enjoy them, There is a decent group of people (who I feel are the majority) who don't like them. So why post them and upset others un-necessarily, sure you guys can continue to do it anyway but just because you can do itdoesn't mean you should. I am offend and hereby requesting that you do not. Be a part of the solution, not the problem!


17 Sep 00 - 10:31 AM (#299246)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: rabbitrunning

Hang on there! When discussing the history of a song, offensive lyrics are just "facts" not insults. Tracking variations is one of the joys of scholarship, and obliterating what is offensive at the moment makes it impossible for us to consider how attitudes have changed in the long run. I'm a lot more offended by bowdlerized lyrics to traditional songs, but I just put that sort of thing down to the folk process and figure the best changes will survive.

Personally, I don't think I know "Old Joe Clark", but an awful lot of the verses look familiar to me, so now I am off to listen to the midi and find out whether the tune is familiar, too.

And if I know any rude lyrics I fully intend to post them! -- Along with WHEN and WHERE and WHO I learned them from.


17 Sep 00 - 10:42 AM (#299249)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Arnie

Old Joe is really fun to play on the fiddle in cross tuning in key of a AEAE. I've recorded a version on banjo in the key of G (can't sing in A for the life of me)and interestingly enough, it is fairly easy to play one of the parts way up the neck in a higher octave in standard g tuning - very cool. Joe Clark by the way is looking to be the next Prime Minister of Canada.


17 Sep 00 - 02:26 PM (#299345)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: The Shambles

You can hear a little bit of a version of the tune here. Rendezvous Old Joe Clark


17 Sep 00 - 02:48 PM (#299358)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,leeneia

I'm with Dewey on the question of promulgating offensive lyrics, but for a different reason. Too often we find that a gifted person has composed a good, creative tune (such as Old Joe Clark or Shady Grove) and then some unknown, mediocre person has slapped crude, no-talent lyrics onto the tune, ruining its beauty. It's ruined because it's so hard to get a rhyme out of your head once it enters.

(So often the lyrics belong to a class I call The Unfussy Lassy.)

We have the right to control what's in our lives and what we promulgate. We also ought to respect and protect the efforts of others (such as beautiful tunes).

I say, let such verses die a well-deserved death.


17 Sep 00 - 03:13 PM (#299370)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Jon Freeman

Arnie, I just tried the EAEA tuning on my tenor banjo - I can see that it would be fun on a fiddle tuned that way (if only I played the fiddle).

Jon


17 Sep 00 - 03:32 PM (#299374)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Dale Rose

I am sorry, but I am having trouble figuring out which verses to Old Joe Clark THAT HAVE BEEN POSTED are particularly offensive. I am not saying that people have never written or sung verses that might be offensive to some, but I sure don't see them here ~~ could someone point them out to me, so that I might examine the motives behind them more closely? References to cruelty to animals, old maids, sloppy habits, what? If I am wrong, I would like to know. I don't normally enter controversial threads, and I am pained to see ones that I DO like to respond to turned into points of contention for no reason.


19 Sep 00 - 11:49 PM (#301168)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Art Thieme

Dale, you beat me to it ! "DANG IT !" (Jeez, I never said "dang" in my whole life before.)

There is absolutely nothing in this thread that offends me in ANY way whatsover. What the "heck" are you referring to ?

My favorite verse to this song has always been,

I won't go to old Joe's house,
Tell you the reason why,
He blows his nose in old corn bread,
And calls it pumpkin pie.

Now, this verse is just mildly funny to me. I sang it for kids for over 20 years (several generations of kids)in their schools and NOBODY ever said a word to me about it. Not even the nuns or fascist parents or anything. The kids loved singing it. In 20 part harmony. Where are you coming from?? As Dale said, which verses do you think are "bad" ones?

Art Thieme


20 Sep 00 - 08:48 AM (#301284)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: CamiSu

And which verses are the good and lovely ones ruined by the rude? A college friend and I enjoy singing this one together still, (I won't say how many years later)

I clumb up the apple tree She clumb up the plum I never met a pretty girl but what I loved her some

And I agree, it IS easy, and catchy. Every one feels included when we sing it.

Cami Su


20 Sep 00 - 09:24 AM (#301303)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: rabbitrunning

Hey, I like parodies too! Lyrics change and get added to and it's just part of the folk process. We only sing the ones we really like anyway.

I think I've heard this once or twice, but that's all. Some of the words got transferred to "Cindy" and "Old Dan Tucker". Got a day off today, so I'm going to go look for a CD. Any suggestions?


20 Sep 00 - 10:53 PM (#301922)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,mag

Oops, I was thinking of "Old Dan Tucker," above. Sorry


21 Sep 00 - 07:22 AM (#302096)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: CamiSu

Just realised I hadn't seen this one that made the most sense after I learned to play Pitch.

Joe Clark was a preacher's son, Preached all o'er the plain, The only text that he did know, Was High, Low, Jack, and Game.

And the bloomin' song has been going through my head for a day now!


06 Sep 01 - 08:45 PM (#543996)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Geoff the Duck

refresh


06 Sep 01 - 11:30 PM (#544121)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Ebbie

Some of the Joe Clark verses given here seem related to the Carter Family's 'Chawin', Chewin' Gum', i.e.
I wouldn't marry a doctor
Tell you the reason why
He drives around the country
And makes the people die.

I wouldn't marry a lawyer
Tell you the reason why,etc, etc.

I haven't heard them sung in Joe Clark. Not to say they wouldn't fit.

Ebbie


07 Sep 01 - 07:42 PM (#544846)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Mudweasel

I love references to the "folk process". As the joke goes in my band, we all know what a food processor does to food.

RRRRRRRZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ!!!!!!!!!!!!!

We're in the habit of folk-processing irish and scottish ballads and folk-songs. It almost always involves electricity and an increase in tempo. Fun!

--Mudweasel

(I keep forgetting that some people do Star of the County Down in waltz time instead of a hyper 6/8)


07 Sep 01 - 08:40 PM (#544870)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST

Dude, Have you heard Sam Bushes version? it folks!


16 Jan 04 - 08:16 AM (#1094057)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Paul Castle

Bud Savoie wrote (about Old Joe Clark) on 14 Sep 00

>Pete Seeger once wrote that if he were to be allowed to sing one song before dying, that would be it.

I recently came across this quote whilst researching a web page - see

Old Joe Clark (click on 'Biography / Song Research)

and wondered if Bud (or anyone else) could confirm the reference -
ie publication and date - for this quote.

Also, if anyone has additional background information/comments,
please post.

Very best

Paul
The Rosinators
http://www.rosinators.com

email


16 Jan 04 - 05:07 PM (#1094429)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Sandina

Anyone notice the melodic resemblance to "Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll?"


16 Jan 04 - 06:16 PM (#1094490)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Q (Frank Staplin)

Old Joe Clark goes back a long ways (pub. 1842, "Nursery Rhymes," Halliwell) and probably older.
'Joe Clark' cannot be referred or traced to anyone, no connections can be made.
I prefer this one:
Old Joe Clark is a preacher,
He preached all over the plain,
The highest text he ever took
Was high, low, jack and the game!

(Randolph, Ozark Folk-Songs, vol. 3, p. 124. Many verses, everyone has contributed over the years).

See the threads, esp. 25394 and 48624.

Old Joe Clark 25394
Old Joe Clark 48624


16 Jan 04 - 06:19 PM (#1094497)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Q (Frank Staplin)

Oops! 25394 is this thread.


17 Jan 04 - 12:13 PM (#1094887)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Paul Castle

Q wrote:

>'Joe Clark' cannot be referred or traced to anyone, no connections can be made.

Does Lisa Clark's extensive research into the Clark family history - or
the Kentucky Historical Society State Marker - or Bradley Kincaid's
quite similar Clay County connections - or Pete Seeger's assertion
(in 'How to Play the 5-string banjo') that he was "an actual person"
not make you think that - just maybe - they can?

Paul


21 Aug 08 - 02:48 PM (#2419631)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Josh

I have been playing a version of this song that I believe I based almost entirely on Woody Guthrie's version on the 2-disc Smithsonian/Alan Lomax recordings. I'm almost positive I got these lyrics in particular from his interpretation of it. Now that I google the song, I don't find some these two particular verses, but I like the old fashioned message in it. Woody seems to have a pretty original rendering which isn't based on any of the historical facts I find about Joe Clark, but based on the theme of those recordings, one would infer it was the Okie version of the song. He only seems to be playing an excerpt at Lomax's request.

Old Joe Clark had a dog as blind as he could be
Chase a possum up a hollow log, you'd swear that dog could see

Old Joe Clark killed a girl and threw her in the branch
Old Joe Clark's gonna get hanged, ain't no other chance.

In between, he also does the often repeated verse about the cat in the buttermilk jar, and he says in kind of a break "Fare thee well, Old Joe Clark, Goodbye Betty Brown" which I love because it seems dark and ominous when you consider that last lyric. The thing I like about this version really is that it seems to make a statement about how violence towards women should be punished.


22 Aug 08 - 03:04 PM (#2420251)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Jack Campin

The tune is remarkably similar to the Elizabethan "How should I your true love know?" as sung by Ophelia in "Hamlet".

Any sightings of the melody in the intervening 300 years?


23 Aug 08 - 09:53 AM (#2420634)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,leeneia

That song can be heard using this URL:

http://sniff.numachi.com/pages/tiTRULOVNO;ttTRULOVNO.html

(left click on MIDI)

I don't think there is enough resemblance to Old Joe Clark to claim any link between the tunes.
http://www.mudcat.org/@displaysong.cfm?SongID=2742


23 Aug 08 - 12:50 PM (#2420732)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Q (Frank Staplin)

What tune, if any, did Shakespeare have in mind?


23 Aug 08 - 06:14 PM (#2420883)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Jack Campin

Probably not the one in Mudcat, as it doesn't resemble any version I've heard.

Starts more simply, | ABcB AAE2 | ABcB A4 |. Paralleling the words:


Fare you    well,      old Joe Clark,
How should I    your true love know

Fare you well I    say
From a- no- ther one


24 Aug 08 - 02:31 AM (#2421060)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Dave Hanson

I went down to Old Joes house,
Old Joe wasn't home,
Ate all Old Joes meat and bread,
And gave the dog a bone.

eric


24 Sep 08 - 09:36 PM (#2449380)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Jim

New chorus and verses to Old Joe Clark for election time


Time to go now, Old George Bush,
Time to go, I say
You've left our country in a mess
Now, please, just go away



verse:
   George scared us into endless war,
   And spent up all our money,
   John McCain will do the same,
   Don't you doubt that, sonny
   
verse:

   Never elect a Republican,
   I'll tell you the reason why,
   He'll lock you up, hide the key
   Just for getting high


25 Sep 08 - 01:32 AM (#2449448)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Lonesome EJ

Old Joe Clark was a CEO
wore a thousand dollar suit
He left me poor and jumped out the door
with his golden parachute


25 Sep 08 - 04:15 PM (#2450191)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Jim

Dick Cheney's a vicious man
He shoots his friends for fun
I hope to meet him in the street
When I'm packin' my squirt gun


09 Oct 08 - 12:18 AM (#2460769)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Jim

Another verse for Old Joe Clark


Sara Pallin is a babe,
On that we all agree,
Her politics are a diff'rent thing,
She ain't fit for the Presidency.


09 Oct 08 - 01:13 AM (#2460791)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Lonesome EJ

Guest, Jim writes some pretty good lines
That we all understand!
But "she ain't fit for the presidency"
is a line that just don't scan


09 Oct 08 - 08:43 AM (#2460989)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Snuffy

Elide a load of syllables
Then you'll plainly see
Just how cosy it can fit:
Sh'ain't fit for the pres'dency


09 Oct 08 - 11:40 AM (#2461126)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Uncle_DaveO

Somebody said:

Pete Seeger once wrote that if he were to be allowed to sing one song before dying, that would be it.

Maybe that's because he'd never get done singing it, and so couldn't die!

Dave Oesterreich


09 Oct 08 - 11:45 AM (#2461129)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Uncle_DaveO

Old Joe Clark, he built a house
Fifteen stories high
And ev'ry story in that house
Was filled with chicken pie.

Dave Oesterreich


09 Oct 08 - 02:11 PM (#2461273)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Gene Burton

A very accomplished version


10 Oct 08 - 10:36 PM (#2462715)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Jim

Snuffy, thank you. Thank God for the kindness of strangers, and the elasticity of the English language.

John McCain, he bought a house,
His wife bought seven more,
Wouldn't if be lovely,
If he gave one to the poor


11 Oct 08 - 08:58 AM (#2462889)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: topical tom

Here are a few other verses:

                He set that old clucking hen
                Couple of weeks ago.
                He set her on three buzzard eggs
                And she hatched out one old crow.

                Old Joe had a muley cow;
                She was muley when she was born.
                It took a jaybird forty years
                To fly from horn to horn.

                Old Joe had an old gray mule,
                Lord but she could travel;
                Every step that she did take
                Was up to her knees in gravel.


17 Oct 08 - 01:12 AM (#2467975)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Jim

In keeping with the rural nature of many of the verses for Old Joe Clark, how about this one:

John McCain, he bought a pig,
Cause he loved to hear her squeal,
He paraded her around the town
In lipstick and high heels.


17 Oct 08 - 03:36 AM (#2468013)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Mr Red

As a very keen ceilidh dancer I can tell you it is not only popular with ceilidh bands but they all do it well - if it is simple then they have found ways of embellishing it. And it is very danceable. Add to that the Appalacian display teams that use it.

Having said that, I don't recall hearing it as a song.


17 Oct 08 - 07:22 PM (#2468716)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Azizi

There may be no way of ever confirming this, but I wonder if a verse of "Old Joe Clark" was the source for a contemporary British playground rhyme?

Here's the verse from "Old Joe Clark":

Old Joe Clark, the preacher's son,
Preached all over the plain,
The only text he ever knew
Was "high low jack and the game".

-snip-

Here's a post from another Mudcat thread about a version of the British children's handclap rhyme:

Subject: RE: Gigalo & other children's rhymes &cheers
From: Jeanie - PM
Date: 15 Apr 07 - 05:44 PM

Very interesting how these rhymes etc. are spread across continents.

Version of the above, called "Jackalo", as a handclapping song, played by middle-class white British girls in private school, Essex, just outside Greater London, end 20th/beginning 21st century:

My name is [each partner holds hands together, palm to palm, as if "praying", then each pair of hands brushes the other]

Hands now parted. Partners face each other.
[Whilst the rest of the song is sung, left hand is held straight out, as if waiting to shake hands. Right hands meet, high and low, to match the rhythm of the song]:

Hi, low, Jackalo, Jackalo, Jackalo,
Hi, low, Jackalo, Jackalo and HIGH !

- jeanie
thread.cfm?threadid=100807&messages=28

**

My theory is that the American children's handclap rhyme or children's foot stomping cheer "Gigalo" {"Jigalo"} might have come from that British {and other countries'?} children's handclap rhyme.

A verse from that "Gigalo" {"Jigalo"} rhyme/cheer is

My hands up high
My feet down low
And this is the way
I gig a lo

{see the link above for the complete rhyme/cheer}

**

So, according to my theory, both of these children's playground rhymes would have their source in a line which refers to a card game.

I know very little about cards. Can anyone tell me which game or games of cards "high low jack" or "high low jack and the game" refer to? .

I'd love to have feedback on this theory that a line from "Old Joe Clark" might have been a source of these children's rhymes.

Thanks.


17 Oct 08 - 07:43 PM (#2468729)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Azizi

Btw, GUEST,Jim, kudos on your updated verses for this song as found in your 24 Sep 08 - 09:36 PM and your 17 Oct 08 - 01:12 AM post!

I'm guessing that the "pig" in your last post comes from the state of Alaska {and I'm praying that she goes back there soon}.


18 Oct 08 - 06:37 AM (#2469011)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: NormanD

I saw a reference above to "Sex & Drugs & Rock 'n' Roll" and how they are melodically similar.

The story is that Ian Dury took the tune from "Old Joe Clark" after haring Charlie Haden's bass solo on Ornette Coleman's "Ramblin" - he breaks into OJC.

Now that's what I call living tradition - a folk song becomes a jazz solo becomes a rock anthem and a verbal quotation.


18 Oct 08 - 08:56 AM (#2469077)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Q (Frank Staplin)

Verses in Randolph-Legman, heard in MO, c. 1895:

I went up on the mountain top
To give my horn a toot,
Thought I heard Lucindy say
Come on with your jackass root!

Old Joe Clark growed lots of corn,
An' he et so much of it,
Corn bread, ash cake, hominy too,
Tumblebugs had to shuck his shit.

Vol. 1, p. 428.
Many more in that vein.


18 Oct 08 - 12:55 PM (#2469221)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,The black belt caterpillar wrestler

Well, I've just come across this thread and looked at the original question and thought NO.

I've been going to folk clubs and festivals since 1972 (loads of them in England and Wales) and I've never heard any of the word sets mentioned above. In fact I've never heard any words set to the tune and I've only heard the tune in the last 10 years.

Perhaps it is an example of a tune/song that is well known to a subset of folkies but it is certainly not universal.


18 Oct 08 - 04:01 PM (#2469331)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Q (Frank Staplin)

Unless one is a square dancer or fiddler, or interested in old American folk or popular music, guest bbcw is probably correct.


09 Aug 18 - 11:16 AM (#3942716)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST

I picked up a copy of Mother Goose Rhymes, and there were the same words used in Old Joe Clark, Little Liza Jane, Whoa, Mule, Whoa, etc.. Which came first? The chicken or the egg?


09 Aug 18 - 06:19 PM (#3942787)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Lighter

The earliest reference I've seen to the tune/song is from the "Asheville [N.C.] Daily Citizen" of July 8, 1892:

“At night, the banjos were brought out, and to the strains of ‘Old Joe Clarke’ and ‘Pretty Little Liza Jane’ and ‘I’m gwine down to town,’ the puncheons resounded to the tread of the ‘dancers dancing in tune.’”


09 Aug 18 - 10:34 PM (#3942808)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Marcia Palmater

This thread wouldn't be complete without a mention of the musical coop house that existed for many years in Cambridge, Mass. Old Joe Clark was a 3-story Victorian; you had to be a musician to live there. Traveling musicians would crash there and many musicians, including Pete Seeger, owned shares in the house. Many times when the phone rang it would be answered by someone grabbing the nearest instrument and playing a few bars of the tune.


10 Aug 18 - 06:04 PM (#3943005)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Joe_F

Marcia: I used to go the lively monthly sings organized by Don Duncan. Sandy Sheehan of Sandy's Music lived there. It was done in by real estate in 2000 (I think).f


12 Aug 18 - 03:23 AM (#3943267)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch

Guest: “Which came first? Chicken or the egg?

Rooster.


Eliza Jane; Lucy Long; Old Joe and Pomp (Pompey) were all stock minstrel characters pretty much from the start (c.1840.)

“Many are the verses and variations to Liza Jane, but "Old Joe Clark" is the banner song for length. "There are one hundred and forty-four verses to 'Old Joe Clark,' though I don't know all of them," modestly affirmed a popular "caller" in Nolan County.”

46. OLD JOE CLARK.
Old Joe Clark is dead and gone,
I hope he's doin well(1)
He made me wear the ball and chain
Till it made my ankles swell.

Chorus—

Round and round, old Joe Clark,
Round and round, I say;
Round and round, old Joe Clark,
I ain't got long to stay.

Eighteen pounds of meat a week,
Bacon (candy) here to sell,
How can a young man stay at home,
When the gals all look so well.

Old Joe Clark had a big white house,
Sixteen stories high,
And every room in that old house
Was filled with chicken pie.

Old Joe Clark is mad at me,
I'll tell you the reason why,
I went down to old Joe's house
And ate all his chicken pie.

Old Joe Clark had a possum dog
So blind he couldn't see;
He treed a chigger on a log,
And thought it was a flea.

(1) In more boisterous gatherings a more profane wish is expressed in this
line.

[Thompson, Stith, ed., Some Texas Party-Play Songs, Publications of the Folk-Lore Society of Texas, No.1, (Austin, 1916, p.32)]


12 Aug 18 - 03:32 AM (#3943270)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch

Lyr Add: Miss Lucy Long (minstrel)

Lyr Req: Rock the Cradle Joe


21 Apr 20 - 07:00 PM (#4047517)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Lighter

People who should know better (including the editors of the Ballad Index) take at face value the claim that "Old Joe Clark" "dates from" 1842.

The sole reference given (perhaps taken from Cox's "Folk Songs of the South, 1925) is to Halliwell-Phillips's "The Nursery Rhymes of England "(London, 1842).

But here's the entire nursery rhyme on p.135 (with no suggestion that it was ever sung):

WHEN I was a little boy my mammy kept me in,
But now I am a great boy I’m fit to serve the king;
I can hand a musket, and I can smoke a pipe,
And I can kiss a pretty girl at twelve o'clock at night.

Not exactly "Old Joe Clark," is it?

OK, "When I was a little boy .... But now I am a great boy" is a lot like "When I was a little boy...But now I am a great big boy." All that suggests is that the creator of the corresponding OJC stanza knew this rhyme or something similar. But "OJC" is a whole lot more than those two phrases, and that's not even counting the distinctive tune.

The earliest ref. to OJC I've unearthed is this, from the Asheville [N.C.] Daily Citizen (July 8, 1892), p.1:

“At night, the banjos were brought out, and to the strains of ‘Old Joe Clarke’ and ‘Pretty Little Liza Jane’ and ‘I’m gwine down to town,’ the puncheons resounded to the tread of the ‘dancers dancing in tune.’”

All of the few references to the tune/song before 1910 seem to be from North Carolina papers. No texts or musical transcriptions, unfortunately.


07 Feb 21 - 02:20 AM (#4091914)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: reggie miles

I worked up a slippery bottleneck slide version of the melody and wrote a song (parody?) loosely using this melody structure called, "I Went To The Country Fair."


07 Feb 21 - 02:42 AM (#4091916)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: reggie miles

I Went To The Country Fair (Fare Thee Well Jerry Garcia)
By Reggie Miles ©2012 All rights reserved
(Loosely to the tune of Old Joe Clark)

I went to the Country Fair
That Teddy Bear's picnic treat
Patchouli sweat & tie dye lust
To find some vegan meat
To find some vegan meat
Find some vegan meat to eat
To find some vegan meat

I went to the Country Fair
Hungry for somethin new
But every booth I found there
Sold organic tofu stew
Free range tofu stew
Certified organic through n through
Free trade tofu stew

Fare thee well Jerry Garcia
Fare thee well I say
I'm bound for ol Veneta town
To the Country Fair today

Fare thee well Jerry Garcia
Fare thee well I'm gone
Been walkin 1500 miles
Singin this ol song
Singin this ol song
Singin this song all day long
Singin this ol song

I went to the Country Fair
To laugh n dance n sing
So much music filled the air
My ears began to ring

I went to the Country Fair
Hitched till my feet got sore
Had so much fun while I was there
I'm goin' back for more
I'm goin back for more
I'm goin back for more, for more
I'm goin back for more

Fare thee well Jerry Garcia
Fare thee well I say
I'm bound for ol Veneta town
To the Country Fair today

Fare thee well Jerry Garcia
Fare thee well I'm gone
I walked for 1500 miles
Jus singin this ol song
Singin this ol song
Singin this song all day long
Woncha sing along

Fare thee well Jerry Garcia
Fare thee well my friend
I've sang my ass off all day long
I guess this is the end

Fare thee well Jerry Garcia
Fare thee well I go
I'll sing this line just once mo
Then that's the end of my show
That's the end of my show
It's off to bed I go, I go
Cuz that's the end of my show


07 Feb 21 - 04:28 AM (#4091926)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Tattie Bogle

We also use it as a tune for dancing: last tune for our Virginia Reel set. It does somehow drive the dancers wild, especially when I drop an octave in the left hand on keyboard: thunderous finale!


07 Feb 21 - 05:21 AM (#4091932)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Mo the caller

The simple tunes are really good to dance to. Strong structure to get people moving to the music. I often use Winster Gallop for Galopede as a first dance. The 2 bar, 2 bar, 4 bar A makes it easy to go forward and back and cross over.
And yes, it's great as a novice player to play a simple tune at a session and have everyone join in and raise the roof. And maybe the people at the bar even join in and sing Blaydon Races.


07 Feb 21 - 09:12 AM (#4091967)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: GUEST,Lighter

The Journal of American Folklore offers one stanza and a chorus from Tennessee in 1905 and a different stanza (no chorus) from Mississippi in 1909.


20 Sep 22 - 01:33 PM (#4153157)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: Lighter

A slightly earlier reference to the tune, again from North Carolina:

Morganton [N.C.] Herald (Feb. 6, 1890):

"John Branch, who escaped from Morganton jail,...was recaptured by jailor Ward last Friday night. Branch, who is an expert fiddler, was playing 'Old Joe Clarke' at a dance at John Piercy's, three miles above Piedmont Springs, and was taken completely by surprise."


25 Sep 22 - 12:50 AM (#4153593)
Subject: RE: Old Joe Clark. THE folk song/tune?
From: leeneia

It's an interesting tune, Dorian mostly. Fun to play, but I wish it weren't so short.