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Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans

Jim Dixon 27 May 18 - 08:13 AM
GUEST,Ake 25 May 18 - 11:28 AM
GUEST 25 May 18 - 11:25 AM
Jeri 25 May 18 - 09:53 AM
GUEST,akenaton 25 May 18 - 07:40 AM
GUEST,Gerry 25 May 18 - 06:44 AM
GUEST 25 May 18 - 06:43 AM
Jeri 24 May 18 - 09:17 AM
GUEST,akenaton. 24 May 18 - 03:16 AM
GUEST,akenaton 24 May 18 - 03:00 AM
GUEST 24 May 18 - 02:40 AM
GUEST 24 May 18 - 02:39 AM
GUEST,Gerry 24 May 18 - 12:52 AM
Jim Dixon 23 May 18 - 07:56 PM
Jim Dixon 23 May 18 - 06:21 PM
GUEST,Phil d'Conch 23 May 18 - 04:43 PM
Jim Dixon 23 May 18 - 09:10 AM
Janie 19 Feb 14 - 09:01 PM
GUEST,Gerry 19 Feb 14 - 05:29 PM
Jim Dixon 19 Feb 14 - 03:00 PM
Jim Dixon 17 Feb 14 - 11:55 PM
Jim Dixon 17 Feb 14 - 08:49 PM
Jim Dixon 17 Feb 14 - 05:11 PM
Jim Dixon 17 Feb 14 - 12:32 PM
Jim Dixon 17 Feb 14 - 11:31 AM
Jim Dixon 17 Feb 14 - 11:19 AM
Jim Dixon 16 Feb 14 - 07:41 PM
Mysha 16 Feb 14 - 05:10 PM
Jim Dixon 16 Feb 14 - 01:33 PM
Jim Dixon 16 Feb 14 - 01:07 PM
GUEST 15 Feb 14 - 11:35 PM
Jim Dixon 15 Feb 14 - 11:08 PM
Jim Dixon 14 Feb 14 - 08:28 PM
Jim Dixon 14 Feb 14 - 04:37 PM
GUEST,Roger Knowles 14 Feb 14 - 09:30 AM
Jim Dixon 14 Feb 14 - 07:33 AM
GUEST,Gerry 14 Feb 14 - 12:05 AM
Jim Dixon 13 Feb 14 - 09:52 PM
Jim Dixon 13 Feb 14 - 03:39 PM
Jim Dixon 12 Feb 14 - 12:06 PM
Jim Dixon 12 Feb 14 - 08:25 AM
GUEST,Gerry 11 Feb 14 - 11:55 PM
Steve Shaw 11 Feb 14 - 07:06 PM
GUEST 11 Feb 14 - 06:38 PM
Jim Dixon 11 Feb 14 - 04:25 PM
Jim Dixon 11 Feb 14 - 02:06 PM
Jim Dixon 10 Feb 14 - 11:15 PM
Jim Dixon 09 Feb 14 - 02:44 PM
Jim Dixon 09 Feb 14 - 02:06 PM
Jim Dixon 09 Feb 14 - 01:08 PM
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Subject: Lyr Add: JOHN DOE #24 (Dick Connette/Last Forever)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 27 May 18 - 08:13 AM

Apparently another songwriter read the same story about John Doe #24 and independently wrote a song about him. Unlike Mary Chapin Carpenter, this one doesn't attempt to write from his point of view, and doesn't connect him to New Orleans. You can hear this song on Spotify. I found the liner notes online.

On December 5, 1993, the New York Times ran a story about the death of a man who was noteworthy primarily for his obscurity. I couldn't get it out of my head.... [Several lines and phrases in the song are taken directly from the article.]


JOHN DOE #24
Words by Dick Connette; music, traditional ("John Hardy" as recorded by Lead Belly)
As recorded by Last Forever on "Trainfare Home" (2015)

John Doe Twenty-Four took his secret to the grave.
His funeral was the best the state could give.
A woman asked if anyone had anything to say
Before they covered up the coffin; no one did.
No one did.

It was 1945 when he wandered into town.
He was livin' on the street; he was alone.
He was only in his teens and his fam'ly wasn't found,
So they picked him and put him in a home;
Picked him up and put him in a home.

He never spoke a word; he was deaf; he was blind.
No one knew his name, and what's more,
There were twenty-three just like him in the system at the time,
So they had to call him John Doe Twenty-Four,
Called him John Doe number Twenty-Four.

He must have had a life; you could see it on his face,
But what lived behind the silence no one knew.
For all the time and money they spent workin' on his case,
They were never really able to get through,
Never really able to get through.

Most of all he loved that harmonica he played,
And occasionally he'd grin from ear to ear.
He danced for Christmas parties and he pantomimed parades.
He suffered from a stroke and died last year,
Suffered from a stroke and died last year.

John Doe Twenty-Four took his secret to the grave.
His funeral was the best the state could give.
A woman asked if anyone had anything to say
Before they covered up the coffin; no one did.
No one did.

They say that when you shiver someone's walkin' on your grave.
Well, I don't know, but one thing's for sure:
The earth inherits all of us as living mem'ry fades
Into the silence over John Doe Twenty-Four.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST,Ake
Date: 25 May 18 - 11:28 AM

Sorry Jeri, forgot to sign in.....you may be right, I wonder what the members think? The word is slightly unclear, but "Dad" still doesn't scan properly......maybe Big Al or another writer could comment?


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST
Date: 25 May 18 - 11:25 AM

"John Doe no 24" written an performed by the brilliant MCC.

"Dad" or "Daddy"?


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: Jeri
Date: 25 May 18 - 09:53 AM

No, Ake, you got it right the first time.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST,akenaton
Date: 25 May 18 - 07:40 AM

Thanks Jeri, I supposed "father", as "dad" doesn't scan.
On listening again to the beautiful song, I discovered that Mary sings "daddy". A small point, but the song is so perfect in composition and delivery, I think that it should be fixed....Ake.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST,Gerry
Date: 25 May 18 - 06:44 AM

Forgot to put my name on that last post! Sorry!


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST
Date: 25 May 18 - 06:43 AM

Here's a different set of lyrics for Dylan's New Orleans Rag. It's at a Dylan chords site. I've made a few small changes to bring it into line with the bootleg recording I have.

I was sittin' on a stump down in New Orleans,
I was feelin' kinda low down, dirty and mean.
Along came a fella and he didn't even ask.
He says, "I know of a woman who can fix you up fast."

Well, I didn't think twice, I just said like I should,
"Let's go find this lady who can do me some good."
We walked across Rampart on a sailin' spree
And we came to a door called one-oh-three.

I was just about ready to give my little knock
When out come a fella who couldn't even walk.
He's linkin' and a-slinkin', couldn't stand on his feet,
And he moaned and he groaned and he shuffled down the street.

Well, out of the door there come another man.
He couldn't even talk and he couldn't even stand.
He moaned and he groaned and he shuffled his feet
And he slid slidin' backwards down Rampart Street.

Well, I peeked through the key hole, and comin' down the hall
Was a long-legged man who could hardly crawl.
He had a terrible mean look in his eye,
like he just fought a bear and he was ready to die.

Well, somebody else with his hair all messed
Fell out of the window, and he failed the test
well, he slid and he slunk in broken French,
And he looked like he'd been through a monkey wrench.

Well, by this time I was a-scared to knock,
I was a-scared to move, I's in a state of shock.
I hummed a little tune and I shuffled my feet
And I started walkin' backwards down that Rampart street.

Well, I got to the corner, I tried my best to smile.
I turned around the corner and I ran a bloody mile.
Man, I wasn't runnin' for to meet my wife
I's a just a-runnin' for to save my life.

Well, I's coughing in my ears and wheezin' in my chest
I musta run a mile in a minute or less.
I tripped on a log and I flumped on a stump,
I caught a fast freight train with a one-arm jump.

So, if you're travelin' down the Louisiana way,
And you're feelin' kinda lonesome and you need a place to stay,
Man, you're better off in your misery
Than to tackle that lady at one-oh-three.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: Jeri
Date: 24 May 18 - 09:17 AM

It was Mary Chapin Carpenter

It is St Charles Avenue - will fix it. (But "dad" is right.)


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST,akenaton.
Date: 24 May 18 - 03:16 AM

Sorry , I see there are a few small mistakes in that cut and paste.
I believe "Rue Morgue Avenue" should be "St Charles Avenue"?
"dad" further down should be "father"?


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Subject: Lyr Add: JOHN DOE NO. 24 (Mary Chapin Carpenter)
From: GUEST,akenaton
Date: 24 May 18 - 03:00 AM

One of my favourite songs by one of my favourite singers and writers.
Full of emotion, heartbreak and hope.

n Music

?

JOHN DOE NO. 24
Words and music by Mary Chapin Carpenter
As recorded by Mary Chapin Carpenter on "Stones in the Road" (1994)


I was standing on the sidewalk in 1945
In Jacksonville, Illinois
When asked what my name was there came no reply
They said I was a deaf and sightless half-wit boy
But Louis was my name, though I could not say it
I was born and raised in New Orleans
My spirit was wild, so I let the river take it
On a barge and a prayer upstream

Well they searched for a mother and they searched for a father
And they searched till they searched no more
The doctors put to rest their scientific tests
And they named me "John Doe Number 24"
And they all shook their heads in pity
For a world so silent and dark
Well there's no doubt that life's a mystery
But so too is the human heart

And it was my heart's own perfume when the crepe jasmine bloomed
On Saint Charles Avenue
Though I couldn't hear the bells of the streetcars coming
By toeing the track I knew
And if I were an old man returning
With my satchel and porkpie hat
I'd hit every jazz joint on Bourbon
And I'd hit everyone on Basin after that

The years kept passing as they passed me around
From one state ward to another
Like I was an orphan shoe from the lost and found
Always missing the other
And they gave me a harp last Christmas
And all the nurses took a dance
But lately I've been growing listless
I've been dreaming again of the past

I'm wandering down to the banks of the great Big Muddy
Where the shotgun houses stand
I am seven years old and I feel my dad
Reach out for my hand
While I drew breath no one missed me
So they won't on the day that I cease
Put a sprig of crepe jasmine with me
To remind me of New Orleans

I was standing on the sidewalk in 1945
In Jacksonville, Illinois


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST
Date: 24 May 18 - 02:40 AM

https://www.musical1.com/blair-douglas/uploaded_audio/578/rester-fort-la-nouvelle-orleans-stay-strong-new


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST
Date: 24 May 18 - 02:39 AM

Blair douglas did a song


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST,Gerry
Date: 24 May 18 - 12:52 AM

New Orleans Rag was on the earliest Dylan bootlegs that became available in 1969, Stealin' and Great White Wonder. I think it was released on one of the "official" bootleg albums later.

I don't suppose you're interested in the Phil Ochs song, I Ain't Marching Any More. It's not about New Orleans, but the first stanza goes,

Oh, I marched to the battle of New Orleans
At the end of the early British war
The young land started growing
The young blood started flowing
But I ain't marching anymore


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Subject: Lyr Add: MARDI GRAS IN KANSAS (Truckstop Honeymoon
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 23 May 18 - 07:56 PM

Thanks to Gerry for suggesting this back on 11-Feb-2014. I just now got around to looking it up and I love it! I live at the opposite end of the Mississippi from New Orleans, and Mardi Gras here is just about like Kansas. My transcription from Spotify:


MARDI GRAS IN KANSAS
As recorded by Truckstop Honeymoon on "Great Big Family" (2008)

It's Mardi Gras in Kansas; there ain't no parade.
Still I put on a boa and some plastic beads and this little tutu I made.
As I walked up and down this Midwest town, all I could see were cars
With workin' stiffs goin' to work as if they didn't know it was Mardi Gras.

Mardi Gras in Kansas ain't like it is in New Orleans.
There's no marchin' band, no daiquiri stand, no hookers and no drag queens,
No tourists fallin' in the gutter as they put their margaritas away.
Mardi Gras in Kansas is just another Tuesday.

I should 'a' known somethin' was up when I saw there was snow on the ground.
The neighbors were diggin' out their driveway and nobody else was around.
I thought I made a mistake; maybe I got the wrong date; maybe this was all a dream.
This is Mardi Gras for sure, but it's Kansas, not New Orleans.

Mardi Gras in Kansas, it just ain't the same.
There's no Mardi Gras throws, no cups to go, nobody playin' Liza Jane.
Still I put on a rumba, danced a little number, but I felt like kind of a freak,
'Cause Mardi in Kansas is just another day of the week.

So next year I got a good plan, babe; I tell you what we're gonna do:
Gonna start the very first ever Kansas Mardi Gras Krewe.
Gonna shut down this whole town; we're gonna close off every street,
And them Kansas high-school marchin' bands are gonna learn a different beat.

Mardi Gras in Kansas ain't like it is in New Orleans.
There's no marchin' band, no daiquiri stand, no hookers and no drag queens;
But it's gonna change; it's gonna get strange; it'll be Kansas like you've never seen
When we got Mardi Gras in Kansas just like they got in New Orleans.
Yeah, we'll have Mardi Gras in Kansas just like they got in New Orleans.


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Subject: Lyr Add: LOUISIANA LOVE CALL (Marty Grebb)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 23 May 18 - 06:21 PM

LOUISIANA LOVE CALL
Words and music by Marty Grebb
As recorded by Maria Muldaur (with Aaron Neville) on "Louisiana Love Call" (1992)

I miss the breeze in the magnolia trees.
Oh, I need to go
Down to the delta and let that sweet music
Wash over my soul.
You can't be lonesome once you get to know some
Of old New Orleans.
I'm gonna stay out till dawn and ride on the river
Just like a riverboat queen.

CHORUS: Louisiana love call, callin' to me—
The birds on the bayou sang a sweet melody.
Louisiana love call—sing it to me;
Sing me the sweet lullaby of the Mississippi.

I'm gonna sit out all day at a sidewalk cafe
With the sun shinin' bright,
And I know a place where the street players play
From mornin' till night.
In ev'ry parish the people all cherish
Their easygoin' days.
I'm gonna spend a little time with an old love of mine
Down Abbeville way.

CHORUS TWICE


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 23 May 18 - 04:43 PM

Farewell to Storyville


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Subject: Lyr Add: BOB DYLAN'S NEW ORLEANS RAG (Bob Dylan)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 23 May 18 - 09:10 AM

My transcription from this recording at YouTube. According to my ear, the "official" transcription on the Bob Dylan website contains mondegreens: "across the river" for "across Rampart" and "frightening look" for "fist-fightin' look"--as well as some less important substitutions. According to Wikipedia, Dylan recorded this 4 times in 1963 but it was never included in an album. I don't know how it ended up on YouTube.


BOB DYLAN'S NEW ORLEANS RAG
Words and Music by Bob Dylan

I was sittin' on a stump down in New Orleans.
I was feelin' kind o' low-down, dirty, an' mean.

Along come a fella an' he didn't even ask.
He says: "I know of a woman who can fix you up fast."

I didn't think twice; I said like I should:
"Let's go find this lady who can do me some good."

We walked across Rampart on a sailin' spree
An' we come to a door called One-Oh-Three.

[harmonica interlude]

I's just about ready to give 'em a little knock
When out comes a fella who couldn't even walk.

He's linkin' an' a-slinkin', couldn't stand on his feet,
An' he moaned an' he groaned an' he shuffled down the street.

Well, out o' the door there come another man.
He wiggled an' he wobbled; he couldn't hardly stand.

He had his fist-fightin' look in his eye
Like he just fought a bear an' he was ready to die.

Well, I peeked through the key crack; comin' down the hall
Was a long-legged man who couldn't hardly crawl.

He muttered an' he uttered in broken French
An' he looked like he'd been through a monkey wrench.

[harmonica interlude]

Well, by this time I was a-scared to knock.
I was a-scared to move; I's in a state o' shock.

I hummed a little tune an' I shuffled my feet
An' I started walkin' backwards down Rampart Street.

Well, I got to the corner; I tried my best to smile.
I turned around the corner an' I run a bloody mile.

Man, I wasn't runnin' 'cause I was sick.
I just a-runnin' to get out o' there quick.

[harmonica interlude]

Well, I tripped it along; I'm wheezin' in my chest.
I must 'a' run a mile in a minute or less.

I walked on a log an' I tripped on a stump.
I caught a fast freight with a one-armed jump.

So, if you're travelin' down Louisiana way,
An' you feel kind o' lonesome an' you need a place to stay,

Man, you're better off in your misery
Than to tackle that lady at One-Oh-Three.

Copyright © 1970 by Warner Bros. Inc.; renewed 1998 by Special Rider Music


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Subject: Lyr Add: LITTLE SALLY WALKER DOWN IN NEW ORLEANS
From: Janie
Date: 19 Feb 14 - 09:01 PM

Tune traditional (Little Sally Walker) First and last verse traditional. All other lyrics copyright Mary Jane Endres, 2005

LITTLE SALLY WALKER DOWN IN NEW ORLEANS

Little Sally Walker, sittin' in a saucer
Weepin' and a moanin' like a turtle dove
Gotta rise, Sally, rise wipe your weepin' eyes
Turn to the east, turn to the west
Turn to the one that you love best
I ain't never, no never been satisfied. Satisfied.

Way down south in southern Louisiana
Mississippi gulf coast and Alabam'
Better run, Sisters, run 'til the storm is done.
Hurricane Katrina roared from the Gulf
Big Muddy rose up. It was a terrible loss
I ain't never, no never seen such a sight. Such a sight.

Over in Biloxi the saints and the sinners
Clingin' to each other hand in hand.
Better pray, Brothers, pray, 'til the break of day.
Gamblin' boats and churches, fishermen and merchants
The storm it spared not a single man.
I ain't never, no never had such a fright. Such a fright.

Little Sally Walker sittin' in saucer
Water to the attics down in New Orleans
Better row, Sally row, or you won't ever know.
Row to the east, row to the west
Searchin' for the ones that you love best
I ain't never, no never been satisfied. Satisfied.

Mother, Father, Sister dear Brother
Sweet Jesus won't you take me by the hand.
Get me out. Get me out, or I'll die no doubt.
Take me to the east, take me to west
Just take me to a place where I can rest.
I ain't never, no never seen life this hard. Life this hard.

Little Sally Walker sittin' in a saucer
Tryin' to get the old man to come back home
Better ride, Sally ride with your head up high.
Shake it to the east, shake it to the west
Shake it to the one that you love best.
I ain't never, no never been satisfied. Satisfied.


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Subject: Lyr Add: WHEN THE SAINTS GO MARCHING IN TO NEW ORL
From: GUEST,Gerry
Date: 19 Feb 14 - 05:29 PM

[Apologies if this shows up twice --- didn't seem to go anywhere first time I tried]

WHEN THE SAINTS GO MARCHING IN TO NEW ORLEANS
words and music by Roy Zimmerman © 2005 (Watunes)
[found at http://www.royzimmerman.com/lyrics/faulty_saints.html]

Oh, when the saints go marching in to New Orleans,
Well, they'll be marching with trombones and tambourines
In a wake for the queen of the Delta Queens.

And we can say, "Hey the Big Easy, she took it hard.
We sent the Army; we sent the Navy and some of the National Guard
In time to find our pride floating face down in her front yard."

Yeah, when the levee breaks, it depends how well one prepares.
Will they be on high ground or in the attic standing on chairs
When the waters of rage rise up the White House stairs?

Oh, when the saints go marching in to New Orleans,
When they lay their eyes on those apocalyptic scenes,
They're going to find out what it means to have no means.

So let the cornet blast...and bang the drum.
Let the clarinet wail...let's hear the banjo strum.
To celebrate her great life and her great life to come.


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Subject: Lyr Add: STEW CALLED NEW ORLEANS (Boutté/Sanchez)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 19 Feb 14 - 03:00 PM

Lyrics copied from Paul Sanchez's web site. They are pretty close to what he sings on "Red Beans and Ricely Yours..." (2010).


STEW CALLED NEW ORLEANS
Written by John Boutté & Paul Sanchez

Come check out the scene; see what I mean
'Bout this stew called New Orleans.
It's a gumbo pot for sure.
It is and it ain't and it's so much more.
Now don't take a pass; this could be a gas,
This stew called New Orleans.
From the very young to the very old,
It's a town where the good times roll.

This stew called New Orleans—
Don't forget to bring your greens
To this stew called New Orleans.

Now I'm not the first; I won't be the last
To say, or to have it said:
I'm New-Orleans born, New-Orleans bred,
And when I die I'll be New-Orleans dead.
And if I do, and you should hear the news,
Don't waste any time.
Find the Eureka Brass Band, Mr. Ferbos[1] on horn,
And get me to a second-line.

In this stew called New Orleans,
Don't forget to bring your greens
To this stew called New Orleans.

Come check out the scene; see what I mean
'Bout this stew called New Orleans.
There's a place where we can meet,
Like the song says, on Frenchmen Street,
And if the groove behooves you to move,
Don't waste any time.
Find the Hot Eight Brass Band, Shamarr[2] on horn,
And get to a second-line.
Maybe Leroy Jones, Shorty[3] and his trombone
Will take you to a second-line.
See if Matt Perrine or Mister Craigory Klein
Will take you to a second-line.
Even if there's heat, Glen David[4] is fine.
He'll take you to a second line.

This stew called New Orleans—
Don't forget to bring your greens
To this stew called New Orleans.
I'm talkin' 'bout a stew called New Orleans.
Say, I'm talkin' 'bout a stew called New Orleans.

- - -
To the best of my knowledge:
1. Lionel Ferbos
2. Shamarr Allen
3. Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews.
4. Probably Glen David Andrews.


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Subject: Lyr Add: YOU'VE GOT TO BE CRAZY TO LIVE IN THIS...
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 17 Feb 14 - 11:55 PM

YOU'VE GOT TO BE CRAZY TO LIVE IN THIS TOWN
As sung by Alex McMurray on "Frenchmen Street: Sounds of New Orleans" (2011)

1. A stopped clock's right twice a day, but here it isn't so.
Your clock's somewhere on the neutral ground between here and Thibodeaux.
Gravity's got no business here; ran cryin' like a kid.
He's cryin' up there in the attic where we done hid.

CHORUS: Because you got to be crazy; yeah, you got to be crazy.
You got to be crazy to hang around.
Yeah, you got to be crazy; you got to be crazy.
You got to be crazy to live in this town.

2. Just like you I prayed for rain, and then it rained all day.
It rained and rained for two weeks and two nights; make it go away.
I went to ask the man; he don't know; his brother don't know either.
In the church of the ignorants, I'm a stone believer. CHORUS.

3. I'm goin' to lay it out like the Hindus say.
I'm sayin' there's a god and she want to play.
Yeah, she's up there laughin', and I know it's true,
And down here everybody's sayin', "How'd you do? How'd you do? How'd you do? How'd you do? How'd you do?"

CHORUS: Yeah, you got to be crazy; you got to be crazy.
You got to be crazy to live in this town.

4. They say this town's been bent many times, but it never broke.
They say this place been asleep for so long, but it never woke.
Now, I used to pray to the Lord: "God help us; deliver us from ease."
Now I pray to the Lord: "Where are you? Won't you help us, won't you please?" CHORUS

You got to be stoned out your mind.


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Subject: Lyr Add: MEET ME ON FRENCHMEN STREET (S Allen)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 17 Feb 14 - 08:49 PM

MEET ME ON FRENCHMEN STREET
Written by Shamarr Allen
As recorded by Shamarr Allen and Paul Sanchez on "Bridging the Gap" (2010)[1]

1. If you ever get down to New Orleans,
And you want to enjoy the music scene.
Ev'rybody's drinkin', havin' a good old time.
Let someone teach you how to second-line.

CHORUS: They got jazz bands and trad bands,
Funk[2] bands and brass bands,
Whatever your heart desires.
If you can take the southern heat,
Then you can party with me,
And meet me on Frenchmen Street.

2. Smell the barbecue smoke outside the club.
Have a drink and a drink; you're gonna need some grub.
Ev'rybody's socializin', havin' a real good time.
Let someone teach you how to second-line. CHORUS.

[Repeat verse 1 and chorus.]
[Repeat last 3 lines of chorus.]

- - -
1. I chose this recording to transcribe because of the clarity of enunciation; however there are other musical performances I like better: Shamarr Allen & Kermit Ruffins on "Meet Me on Frenchmen Street" (2007); or Norbert Susemihi et al on "Night on Frenchmen Street" (2012).
2. I think sometimes he sings "punk bands."


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Subject: Lyr Add: FRENCHMEN STREET BLUES (Jon Cleary)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 17 Feb 14 - 05:11 PM

FRENCHMEN STREET BLUES
As sung by Jon Cleary on "Treme: Music from the HBO Original Series, Season 2" (2012)

Sprinkle my ashes on Frenchmen Street.
Don't be upset at the news.
Just cut me a-loose with a soulful song.
Don't play no Frenchmen Street blues.

Hitch me a ride on a river breeze
To Elysian Fields so green,
And I'll join the spirits standin' by to smile
On the back streets of old New Orleans.

I did my time in the masquerade,
And I ran the rough with the smooth,
Now I'm gonna paint me a canvas of peace of mind,
And let go of my Frenchmen Street blues.

See you one night, one night in your sultry dreams.
You can drink me a toast as you snooze.
Closed out my tab in the happy hour,
Let go my Frenchmen Street blues.

No, don't play,
Don't play, don't play,
No, don't play, don't play,
Don't play no Frenchmen Street blues.


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Subject: Lyr Add: FOOT OF CANAL STREET (Boutté/Sanchez)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 17 Feb 14 - 12:32 PM

I copied these lyrics from Paul Sanchez's web site:

FOOT OF CANAL STREET
Words and music by John Boutté and Paul Sanchez

1. Don't waste your time being angry when a moment's better with a smile.
If you feel you're time's been wasted, waste it here a while,
Standing at that bus stop just across from Krauss,[1]
Waiting for the driver to take me to my heavenly house.

CHORUS: I'll see you there. (at the foot of Canal Street)
What will you wear? (at the foot of Canal Street)
Will the band be playing? (at the foot of Canal Street)
What will the people be saying? (at the foot of Canal Street)
Does your father lie there? Does your mother pray there?
I'm going to put on my golden crown at the foot of Canal Street.

2. When the levee banks have overflowed and the streetcar has seen its day
When all is gone—the plantations, the Tremé and the Vieux Carré—
I'll be swinging to that music way up on higher ground
Where Pops is blowing "Walk On"[2] with Gabriel making sacred sounds. CHORUS

- - -
1. Iconic department store that closed in 1997.
2. There are several songs with the same title, and several musicians called "Pops." I haven't figured out which ones are referred to here. Maybe one of the songwriters was referring to his own father?


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Subject: Lyr Add: BOURBON STREET PARADE
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 17 Feb 14 - 11:31 AM

BOURBON STREET PARADE
As sung by Louis Armstrong & The Dukes of Dixieland

Let's fly down
Or drive down
To New Orleans—
That city,
Its pretty
Historic scenes.
I'll take you;
Parade you
Down Bourbon Street.
There are lots of hot spots.
You'll see all the big shots
Down on Bourbon Street.


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Subject: Lyr Add: BOURBON STREET BLUES (from Louis Prima)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 17 Feb 14 - 11:19 AM

BOURBON STREET BLUES
As sung by Louis Prima

Now listen, all you hep ones,
You squares and out-o'-step ones.
I've got a story to tell.
It's all about a street
In New Orleans, and it's a treat
To go there.
You got to go there—

To get the Bourbon Street blues,
And you will never lose
This feeling that you'll find
'Cause it's a fun street.
You'll get the Bourbon Street blues,
No matter what you choose,
This freedom you won't mind,
'Cause it's a fun street.

The music is the craziest.
The people are the gaziest.
The traffic is the jammiest.
The doormen are the hammiest.
The cops are the iciest;
The red beans, the riciest,
And, boy, the girls are the spiciest.
You'll get the Bourbon Street blues.
You're sure to have a ball,
And you're a cinch to fall
For this wildest,
Beguiledest,
Bourbon Street.

The food is the homiest.
The beer is the foamiest.
The gumbo, the tastiest.
The pizza, the pastiest.
The Mardi Gras, the mightiest.
The night clubs, the nightiest.
And boy, the girls are the sightiest.
You'll get the Bourbon Street blues.
You're sure to have a ball,
And you're a cinch to fall
For this wildest,
Beguiledest,
Bourbon Street.


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Subject: Lyr Add: BASIN STREET BLUES
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 16 Feb 14 - 07:41 PM

BASIN STREET BLUES
Music by Spencer Williams, 1926.
Words by Glenn Miller and Jack Teagarden, 1931.
As recorded by The Charleston Chasers with vocal by Jack Teagarden, 1931.

Won't you come along with me
To the Mississippi?
We'll take the boat to the land of dreams,
Steam down the river down to New Orleans.

The band's there to meet us,
Old friends to greet us,
Where all the dark and the light folks meet.[1]
This is Basin Street.

Basin Street
Is the street
Where dark and light always meet,[2]
In New Orleans,
The land of dreams.
You'll never know how nice it seems
Or just how much it really means.
Glad to be,
Yes-siree,
Where welcome's free,
Dear to me,
Where I can lose
My Basin Street blues.

[Instrumental break]

Ain't you glad you came with me
'Long the Mississippi?
You saw the place where the folks all meet:
Heaven on earth, they call it Basin Street.

- - -
1,2. When Ella Fitzgerald sang with Sy Oliver & His Orchestra in 1949, she changed these lines to:
1. Where all the proud and elite folks meet
2. Where the best folks always meet


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: Mysha
Date: 16 Feb 14 - 05:10 PM

Hi,

The City of New Orleans is not, of course, about the city, but about the train. The destination is not actually mentioned in the song (just that they'll be there by morning).

Steve Goodman also recorded it himself, BTW. I prefer Arlo Guthrie's version of the melody, but I like the Steve Goodman's version of the lyrics better. Sure, a "magic carpet made of steel" is something to behold, but it can't touch a "magic carpet made of steam"!

Bye,
                                                                  Mysha


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Subject: Lyr Add: RAMPART STREET BLUES (Hoagy Carmichael)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 16 Feb 14 - 01:33 PM

RAMPART STREET BLUES
As sung by Hoagy Carmichael

Oh, the Mississippi is so doggone deep and wi-wide,
Yes, the Mississippi is so doggone deep and wi-wide,
But if I can swim across it, there's where I can hide.

Way down on Rampart lives my mama Lulu.
Says, down on Rampart lives my mama Lulu.
She's the one sweet mama I can tell my troubles to.


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Subject: Lyr Add: BLUES FOR RAMPART STREET (from Ida Cox)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 16 Feb 14 - 01:07 PM

BLUES FOR RAMPART STREET
As sung by Ida Cox with the Coleman Hawkins Quintet, on the album "Blues for Rampart Street" (1990).

Rampart Street in New Orleans town,
Known to ev'ryone for miles around,
Creole music and real jazz bands,
That's the best spot in all the land.

In most ev'ry cabaret,
They turn night into day.
I'm blue from my head down to my feet,
Blue for dear old Rampart Street.

I yearn to go down to Tom Anderson's Cafe.
I want to hear that Creole jazz band play.
The Cadillac, the Red Onion, too,
The Boogie-Woogie and the Parc Sans Sou'—
You can enjoy yourself down on Rampart Street.

I yearn to go down to Tom Anderson's Cafe.
I want to hear that Creole jazz band play.
The Boogie-Woogie and the Parc Sans Sou',
Annie Lou, the Red Onion too—
I want to go down home on Rampart Street.


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Subject: Lyr Add: GONNA GO DOWN THE RIVER ONCE MORE
From: GUEST
Date: 15 Feb 14 - 11:35 PM

GONNA GO DOWN THE RIVER ONCE MORE
(Buddy Mize/Dallas Frazier)
recorded by Kingston Trio

I just heard that whistle blow. Gonna go down the river once more.
Well, I've got my bag and I'm ready to go. Gonna go down the river once more.
Gonna leave St. Louis, go to New Orleans. Eat a little bacon. Eat a little beans.
Have a good time like I did before. Gonna go down the river once more.

Chorus:
Gonna go down the river, gonna go down the river, gonna go down the river once more. (Repeat)

Gonna load that cotton on the boat by the bale. Gonna go down the river once more.
Gonna quit my drinkin'. Gonna stay out of jail. Gonna go down the river once more.
Yeah, my little woman's gonna say goodbye, wavin' her hand with a tear in her eye.
Leave these docks about a quarter to four. Gonna go down the river once more.

(Chorus - interlude - chorus)

Gonna ride that boat to the glory land. Gonna go down the river once more.
Hey, I'll do a little dance with a riverboat band. Gonna go down the river once more.
I've got my banjo ready to play, hey, we'll shout and sing both night and day.
I'll make my bed on the riverboat floor. Gonna go down the river once more.

(Chorus)

Gonna go down the river once more!


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Subject: Lyr Add: SOUTH RAMPART STREET PARADE
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 15 Feb 14 - 11:08 PM

SOUTH RAMPART STREET PARADE
Music by Ray Bauduc and Bob Haggart, 1937.
Words, Steve Allen, 1952.
As sung by Bing Crosby and the Andrews Sisters, 1952.

Do you hear the beat
Away down the street?

Hey, do you hear the neat
Little rhythm of the happy dancin' feet?
Well, now, look there! The people are runnin'
And right now, they're gonna have a lot of fun.
Make way, 'cause everybody's comin'
And you'll see a big parade.

Hey boy, you're really gonna celebrate.
Hear that? Listen to the clarinet!
Your feet are really gonna palpitate
When you are marchin' around.

Marchin' around,
Wonderful sound!

I hear the rattle-de-tat.
I love to hear the way the little drummer does that.

Oh, what a glorious day!
Out o' my way!

Make room and gimme some air.
I got a little rhythm to spare.


We all swing high, swing low,
Everybody rockin' to and fro.
It ain't fast or slow,
But oh, that glory, hallelujah!
Swing that thing.
Make the river bottom ring and sing.
Hush ma mouth!
That's the South
Rampart Street parade!


[Starting here, the lines overlap in a kind of counterpoint.]

Ev'ry boy's got a girl .
They're doin' it, soft-shoein' it.
The town's gonna whirl.
They're tryin' it, untyin' it.
Tonight's a jamboree.
They're jivin' it, revivin' it, I tell you.
Mister, and if you come along,
They're struttin' it, rug-cuttin' it,
You'll join in the song.
They're shakin' it and breakin' it.

[Starting here, they sing in unison.]

Hey, Dad!
Not bad!
I'm glad you dig!
Hey, boy, that band is grand.

I hear the trombone,
That shiny trombone,

Everybody playin' mighty fine as they march along,
And I never get enough of that Creole song.

Here now,
It's loud and clear now.
I really get a thrill—
I know I always will—
Whenever I can hear the rhythm of a band.
Way down yonder in the canebrake,
You can hear the music they make,
Ringin' out until the daybreak.
Louisiana band,
Gotta get a hand,
It's the South Rampart Street Parade.



[A very similar arrangement was also recorded by Bing Crosby and Rosemary Clooney.]


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Subject: Lyr Add: PAPA-DE-DA-DA (Williams/Todd/Williams)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 14 Feb 14 - 08:28 PM

PAPA-DE-DA-DA (A NEW ORLEANS STOMP)
by Spencer Williams, Clarence Todd & Clarence Williams, ©1925.
As recorded by Bessie Brown, on "Original Bessie Brown / Liza Brown 1925-1929" (Document Records, DOCD-5456, 1996)

Way down in New Orleans,
The land of dreamy scenes,
There's a man, a music man.
He plays and sings, buck-and-wings.
Papa tree-top tall,
That boy's long and lean, that's all.
Ev'ry night, it's a sight.
You should hear folks call.

Papa-de-da-da, he's a ladies' man,
Papa-de-da-da, sweetest in the land.
Papa-de-da-da, watch him clap his hands.
That boy can play piano grand.
Papa-de-da-da, he can whip them blues.
Papa-de-da-da, always spreadin' news,
He's neat and keen; that's what I mean.
Got all the girls in New Orleans.
Papa-de-da, de-da-da, he's the hottest man in town.

Now there ain't no use in talkin'; he's the cat's meow.
He's got the gals all guessin' 'cause he knows just how
To hug and love and kiss 'em ev'ry night and day.
Lawd, they can't live without him; that's just what they say.

He's long, lean and lanky and he knows his stuff.
Talkin' gals are crazy 'cause he's never rough.
He's born in Louisiana; he's a sweet Creole,
Milky(?) in his manner like a sweet jelly roll.

Papa-de-da-da, he's a ladies' man,
Papa-de-da-da, sweetest in the land.
Papa-de-da-da, watch him clap his hands.
That boy can play piano grand.
Papa-de-da-da, always spreadin' news,
Papa-de-da-da, that boy can play the blues.
He's neat and clean; that's what I mean.
Got all the gals in New Orleans.
Papa-de-da, de-da-da, he's the hottest man in town.

He's neat and clean, that's what I mean.
Got all the gals in New Orleans.
Papa-de-da, de-da-da, he's the hottest man in town.

[Other notable early recordings were by Clarence Williams' Blue Five with vocalist Eva Taylor, 1925; St Louis Rhythm Kings, 1925; Virginia Liston, 1925; Ed Smalle, 1925; Birmingham Serenaders, 1935.]


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Subject: Lyr Add: OLD NEW ORLEANS BLUES (Willie Jackson)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 14 Feb 14 - 04:37 PM

OLD NEW ORLEANS BLUES
As recorded by New Orleans Willie Jackson, Columbia 14136-D, 1926.

Have you ever been down south in dear old New Orleans?
Have you ever been down south in dear old New Orleans?
It's a nasty town; got things there that you never seen.

Canal Street's made for diamonds, and Saint Charles Street's made for gold.
Canal Street's made of diamonds, and Saint Charles Street's made for gold.
But when you go back o' town, you're bound to see nothin' but old Creoles.

You take a pleasure trip riding on the cap'tol boat.
Take a pleasure trip riding on the cap'tol boat.
You end up in the lake, out in the Spanish Fort.

You ever go to Memphis, stop down at Jim Colane(?).
You ever go to Memphis, stop down at Jim Colane(?).
There's a place where monkey women will learn just how to treat they man.

Deedly-dum...[etc., scat verse].

And I dreamt last night, baby, my house was burnin' down.
I said I dreamt last night, my house was burnin' down.
But it was a cootie with a lantern making his fore-day round.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST,Roger Knowles
Date: 14 Feb 14 - 09:30 AM

How about Shel Silverstein's "It's An Old New Orleans Custom"?


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Subject: Lyr Add: NEW ORLEANS LOVER MAN
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 14 Feb 14 - 07:33 AM

I heard this on Spotify, where it was strangely attributed to "Susie-Sue," but you can hear what I believe to be the same recording with the correct attribution on YouTube. The artist's name was inconsistently spelled on various record labels and album covers, sometimes appearing as "Newsome."


NEW ORLEANS LOVER MAN
As sung by Chubby "Hip Shakin'" Newsom and her Hip Shakers (1949)

Hey, ev'rything is fine in New Orleans.
I say, hey, ev'rything is fine in New Orleans.
Well, I've got a man who's ev'ry woman's dream.

That man loves me like no other man can.
Yes, he loves me like no other man can.
That's why I call him my New Orleans lover man.

When he's around, makes me feel so fine.
When he's around, makes me feel so fine,
And when he loves me, chills run up and down my spine.

Well, the things he does make me scream.
Now all you girls know what I mean.
That man can love me like no other can.
That's why I call him my New Orleans lover man.

He does what he ain't done before.
He keeps me beggin' for a little bit more.
Man can love me like no other can.
That's why I call him my New Orleans lover man.

He says, "You ain't good lookin' but you're built quality.
The lovin' you've got been a stint(?) for me."
My man can love me like no other can.
That's why I call him my New Orleans lover man.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST,Gerry
Date: 14 Feb 14 - 12:05 AM

I wonder whether your "tee-na-nay" could be related to the "finane" that was discussed at length in the (New Orleans related) thread, Jacomo finane? What does that mean?


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Subject: Lyr Add: MIDNIGHT IN NEW ORLEANS
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 13 Feb 14 - 09:52 PM

MIDNIGHT IN NEW ORLEANS
Words, Walter Melrose; music, Earl Hines.
As recorded by Earl "Fatha" Hines and Orchestra with Johnny Hartman, vocalist, 1947.

When it's midnight down in New Orleans,
Those hep-cat bands are jivin' fiends.
Round ev'ry corner there's music in the air.
They can play those blues better than they play them anywhere.

When it's midnight down in New Orleans,
I sit right there in all of my dreams.
The syncopation invigorates my soul.
When they play the blues, Basin Street begins to rock 'n' roll.


- - -
From Wikipedia: "Melrose added lyrics to many existing jazz compositions in order to claim a songwriting royalty, although these are rarely performed today due to their amateurish nature."


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Subject: Lyr Add: GOING DOWN TO NEW ORLEANS (Bobby Taylor)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 13 Feb 14 - 03:39 PM

Spotify has this. You can also hear a sample on CDBaby.


GOING DOWN TO NEW ORLEANS
As sung by Bobby Taylor on "Route 66 Revisited" (2008)

When the world's got you down,
Or you're wearin' a frown,
You need a change of scene.
There's a place we all know.
It's where ev'rybody goes.
They come down to New Orleans.

Hey, hey, hey, yah, yah, yah,
My, oh, my, ooh-la-la,
Run down to New Orleans.
Café du Monde, Jackson Square,
Sweet, sweet music fills the air
Down in New Orleans.

Yeah, they got crawfish pie,
Rice and beans,
Jambalaya,
Sweet baked(?) beans.

When you walk down the street,
Ev'rybody you greet
Is singin' in New Orleans.
Mardi Gras, fais do-do,
Come on people; here we go.
We're goin' down to New Orleans.

Hey, hey, hey, yah, yah, yah,
My, oh, my, ooh-la-la,
Goin' down to New Orleans.
Café du Monde, Jackson Square,
Sweet, sweet music fills the air
Down in New Orleans.

Well, they got crawfish pie,
A little rice and beans,
Jambalaya,
Sweet baked(?) beans.

Little boys on the street
Dancin' to the happy beat,
You can party just as you please.
Yeah, summer breeze, big oak trees,
...(?) memories,
On down in New Orleans.

Hey, hey, hey, yah, yah, yah,
My, oh, my, ooh-la-la,
Yeah, we're goin' down to New Orleans.
Hermann(?) Street, Royale(?), Dumaine(?),
Stolen kisses in the rain,
Oh, down to New Orleans.
Yeah, way down in New Orleans.
Come on, we're goin' down in New Orleans.
Yeah, down in New Orleans.
Down, down, down, New Orleans.


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Subject: Lyr Add: GOING BACK TO NEW ORLEANS (Joe Liggins)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 12 Feb 14 - 12:06 PM

GOING BACK TO NEW ORLEANS
Written by Joe Liggins
As sung by Joe Liggins & The Honeydrippers on "Joe Liggins & The Honeydrippers" (1990)

Goin' back home, tee-na-nay, to the land of the beautiful queens.
I'm goin' back home to my baby; I'm goin' back to New Orleans.
Want to see nannan(?), my parrain(?), Suzanne and my ma and pa.
Gonna plant my feet on Rampart Street and be there for the Mardi Gras.

I been to Cuba, South American way.
I been to Europe; Mexico is okay.
Over in France, the chicks are really fine.
I get my thrill below the Mason-Dixon Line.

Goin' back home, tee-na-nay; never, never more will I roam.
Gonna get my fill of gumbo filé 'cause New Orleans is my home.

Goin' back home, tee-na-nay, to the land of the beautiful queens.
I'm goin' back home to my baby; I'm goin' back to New Orleans.
Gonna get me crawfish, jambalay', red beans and some fine pralines.
Gonna get some lovin' that will satisfy, back home in New Orleans.


[Also recorded by Deacon John Moore; The J Street Jumpers; Kenny Sara & The Sounds of New Orleans; King Pleasure and the Biscuit Boys; Poncho Sanchez; Stella & Karin Klingenstierna; The Travellers. I have verified that all these perform the same song by actually listening to samples; there are other songs with the same title.

[There's that phrase tee-na-nay again. I have spelled it phonetically, according to how it sounds on the recording. The fact that it is dropped into the middle of a sentence seems to indicate it has a meaning, and it is not just a meaningless refrain like oobie-doobie-doo. Yet I have no idea what the meaning is. It sounds vaguely French, but I can't find it in any dictionary or other helpful text.

[Parrain is French for godfather; marraine is the equivalent: godmother—but I don't think that's what he's singing in line 3. That's what I would sing, though, if I couldn't come up with something better.]


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Subject: Lyr Add: DROP ME OFF IN NEW ORLEANS (K Ruffins)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 12 Feb 14 - 08:25 AM

DROP ME OFF IN NEW ORLEANS
Written by Kermit Ruffins
As sung by Kermit Ruffins on "1533 St. Philip Street" (2001)

Have you ever been to New Orleans?
It's the hottest city you've ever seen.
Gotta love them red beans,
You gotta love them mustard greens,
In this city called New Orleans.

If you're not from New Orleans, let me hear you scream.
Hope you're feelin' much better now, like my homies feel.
When you're feelin' down and out,
And you feel there's no way out,
You get dropped off in New Orleans.

Oh, drop me off in New Orleans.
Drop me off, oh, in New Orleans.
Gotta love them butter beans,
Gotta love them collard greens,
So drop me off in New Orleans.

If you're not from New Orleans, let me hear you scream.
Hope you're feelin' better now, like my home boys do.
When you're feelin' down and out,
And you feel there's no way out,
Tell 'em "Drop me off in New Orleans.
Drop me off in New Orleans.
Drop me off in New Orleans."

[Kermit Ruffins also sings this on "Live at Vaughan's" (2001), and the lyrics, repeats, etc., vary somewhat. At one point, I think he sings "Gotta love them spotted beans." Are they the same as pinto beans?

[Also, he uses the pronunciation "New Orleens" (obviously, to rhyme with greens, beans, etc.) which Paul Soniat disparages. (See above.) What's up with that? Do people from NO have a convention that you pronounce it one way when speaking and another way when singing? Have jazz musicians been influenced by the Tin-Pan-Alley songwriters who didn't know any better? Do they use the pronunciation "New Orleens" only because it's so easy to rhyme?]


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: GUEST,Gerry
Date: 11 Feb 14 - 11:55 PM

Mardi Gras in Kansas, by Truckstop Honeymoon, contrasts Kansas with New Orleans (the band relocated to Kansas after Katrina wiped out their home in New Orleans). Available at http://www.truckstophoneymoon.com/clips/great_big_family/01_mardi_gras_in_kansas


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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs about New Orleans
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 11 Feb 14 - 07:06 PM

Ron Kavana wrote a great song called St Patrick's Day In New Orleans which is on an album by his band, Alias Ron Kavana, called "Galway To Graceland", released in the '90s. I can't find the words online. The album is ultra-rare now, but the song was also issued by Froots magazine on one of their free CDs (#6).


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Subject: Lyr Add: MY HEART WILL ALWAYS BE IN NEW ORLEANS
From: GUEST
Date: 11 Feb 14 - 06:38 PM

Don't know if originals count (I would think so!) but I have one from my Disaster Song site- written after I passed on visiting New Orleans the summer before Katrina-


MY HEART WILL ALWAYS BE IN NEW ORLEANS

Hey if you ever go down to New Orleans
Won't you let me come along
To a place I still remember I first heard of in a song
Since then I've been there many times
Though only in my dreams
And my heart will always be in New Orleans

Oh let me wake up down on Basin Street
To the sound of Dixieland
Crowds with dancing, tappin feet
Snappin fingers, clappin hands
Oh let me be part of that scene I've seen
So often in my dreams
For my heart will always be in New Orleans

So if you're headin down the Mississippi River
To the Gulf of Mexico
Won't you let me come along
To that place I long to go
I heard about it in a song
And I've seen it in my dreams
Now my heart will always be in New Orleans

I've been down with the Chicago blues
Been soothed by Memphis soul
Been diggin' Appalachian folksongs
Dark as West Virginia coal
Now let me be part of that scene I've seen
So often in my dreams
For my heart will always be in New Orleans


©2005 Jon Waterman www.thedisastersongproject.com


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Subject: Lyr Add: DOWN SOUTH IN NEW ORLEANS
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 11 Feb 14 - 04:25 PM

DOWN SOUTH IN NEW ORLEANS
Words and music by Jack Anglin, Jim Anglin, and Johnnie Wright.
As sung by Doug Kershaw & Rustyn on "Cajun Shuffle" (2011)

CHORUS: Down south in New Orleans,
The purtiest girl that I ever seen.
Sparklin' eyes, lips so sweet,
We make love to a Cajun beat.

1. My ship's at anchor; my suitcase packed.
I got a one-way ticket; ain't comin' back.
Life's a pleasure; I love to dream
Down south in New Orleans. CHORUS

2. My dark-eyed baby, I'm on my way.
I'm back into your arms to stay.
I'm tired o' work; I'm gonna play.
I'm gonna make love to you night and day. CHORUS

3. I want to get loose on Toulouse Street.
I want to kiss all the purty girls I see,
Drink all day, dance all night,
Do it wrong till I do it right. CHORUS TWICE

Also sung by: Josh Graves and Delbert McClinton, The Band, Dry Branch Fire Squad, Lou Ann Barton, Coal Creek Bluegrass Band, Throwin' Cat, Mac Martin, Middle Spunk Creek Boys, and Biff Moss.


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Subject: Lyr Add: BORN IN NEW ORLEANS (Paul Soniat)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 11 Feb 14 - 02:06 PM

My transcription from hearing the song on Spotify:


BORN IN NEW ORLEANS
Written by Paul Soniat
As recorded by Paul Soniat on "Born in New Orleans" (2005)

I'm what you call a lucky guy,
Born in the land of deep fried
Seafood platters.
You know that it matters
Where you come from,
Where you come from.
So glad I was born here in New Orleans.
So glad I was born here in New Orleans.

We love our food, yeah, we live to eat.
Even white people like the second line with their pretty white feet.
Love our parties like our Mardi Gras.
Shiny beads and plastic cups are what we jump up for.
So glad I was born here in New Orleans.
So glad I was born here in New Orleans.

And this is the City that Care Forgot,
But you know we care about a whole lot,
Care about a hurricane that could blow us away,
Care about catchin' a coconut in the Zulu parade,
Care to live our life in our own way,
And we pray that the saints are gonna win someday.
So glad I was born here in New Orleans.
So glad I was born here in New Orleans.

Some people they say they're from "N'Awlins."
If you're from Uptown, you might say you're from "New Oryuns."
But me, I just say I'm from "New Orlins,"
But you never, never, never say "New Orleens,"
But you never, never, never say "New Orleens,"*
'Cause if you do, they will know that you are not from here,
And some may say, "He must be from away."
Born and raised, spent my days in New Orleans.
Couldn't write this song if I wasn't born in New Orleans.
Tryin' to make a livin', tough to pay tuition in New Orleans.
Still livin' on Soniat Street in New Orleans.

[* Regardless, there are a lot of recorded songs that use the pronunciation "New Orleens." Even Louis Armstrong, who was born there and grew up there, sang songs in which he used the pronunciation "New Orleens." Sometimes it's necessary for the rhyme, for example, "Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?" (See the link at the beginning of this thread.) Can we assume all those songs were written by non-natives? I haven't figured that out yet. Anyway, Soniat consistently sings "New Orlins" except where I have used other phonetic spellings and put them in quotes.]


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Subject: Lyr Add: BACK TO NEW ORLEANS (Lightnin' Hopkins)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 10 Feb 14 - 11:15 PM

This song usually goes by the title BABY, PLEASE DON'T GO. Wikipedia says it was written by Big Joe Williams and recorded by him in 1935, and that Hopkins recorded it in 1947. However, it's obvious that Hopkins recorded it several times, and I don't know whether this recording was the first. This is my transcription from Spotify:


BACK TO NEW ORLEANS
As sung by Sam "Lightnin' " Hopkins.

1. Now, baby, please don't go.
Now, baby, please don't go.
Now, baby, please don't go
Back to New Orleans.
You know I love you so.
Baby, please don't go.

[SPOKEN:] Don't go, baby. If you go, take me with you.

2. You got me way down here.
You got me way down here.
Now, 'fore I'll be your dog,
I'll make you walk the log.
Now, baby, please don't go.
Baby, please don't go.

[SPOKEN:] No, don't go, sugar. If you just got to go, take me with you.

3. Now, don't you call my name.
Now, don't you call my name.
You got me way down here,
Wearin' a ball and chain.
Now, baby, please don't go.
Baby, please don't go.

4. I b'lieve your man done gone.
I b'lieve your man done gone.
He left the county farm.
He had his shackles on.
Now, baby, please don't go.
Baby, please don't go.

[SPOKEN:] No, I don't b'lieve she gone.

[SPOKEN:] Play it awhile!

5. Now, baby, please don't go.
Now, baby, please don't go.
Now, baby, please don't go
Back to New Orleans.
You know I love you so.
Baby, please don't go.

[SPOKEN:] No, don't go, baby; if you go, just take me with you.


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Subject: Lyr Add: NEW ORLEANS (Hoagy Carmichael)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 09 Feb 14 - 02:44 PM

I found a recording on Spotify that includes the chorus but not the verse. I found the text of the verse on the internet, here, but I can't confirm it's correct.

NEW ORLEANS
Hoagy Carmichael
New York: Southern Music Publishing Company, Inc., 1932.

VERSE: I've a home in the sunny Southland not so far from the 'Sippi shore.
It's away down there by the Delta where you'll find old Dixie's door.
If your heart's made to love the Southland and magnolia trees galore,
Hang your hat up, man, in New Orleans and you'll never wish for more.

CHORUS: if you've never seen a quaint old southern city,
Just think of New Orleans.
If you've never seen that town, boy, it's a pity.
There's nothing like New Orleans.
It will remind you of old-fashioned lace.
A glass of wine will greet your smiling face.
And if you ever see a black-eyed gal like mine, boy,
You're right in New Orleans.


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Subject: Lyr Add: I GOT A MAMA DOWN IN NEW ORLEANS
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 09 Feb 14 - 02:06 PM

I GOT A MAMA DOWN IN NEW ORLEANS (ANOTHER IN MAINE)[1]
I'VE GOT A MAMA DOWN IN NEW ORLEANS[2]
Words and music by Jack Culley, Jimmy McHugh, and Irving Mills, ©1926.
As sung by Alma Henderson

Hey there, stranger!
There's somethin' on my mind.
I'm in danger
Most all of the time.
I never killed, never stole.
Somehow I've got myself in a hole.
Hey there, stranger!
My conscience hurts me so.

I got a daddy down in New Orleans,
Another daddy way up in Maine.
Don't know which one that I like best.
I guess I like 'em both 'bout the same.
I got two daddies; got to keep 'em apart,
'Cause, you know, one's my livin'; the other has my heart.
I got a daddy down in New Orleans,
Another daddy way up in Maine;
Yes sir, another daddy way up in Maine.

Someone told me that my daddy was goin' all aroun'
Leavin' sample kisses ev'rywhere in town.

I got a daddy down in New Orleans;
Got another daddy way up in Maine.
Don't know which one I like best.
Guess I ought to like 'em both the same.
I kind o' think he's been cheatin' on his mama; I'm wise.
I heard him say once that it pays to advertise.
I got a daddy down in New Orleans.
I got another one way up in Maine,
Yes sir, another daddy way up in Maine.

- - -
1. Title as given in the sheet music, according to the catalog entry at Middle Tennessee State University.

2. Title as given on the CD "Vocal Blues & Jazz 1921-1930" (Document Records, 1997), for the Alma Henderson recording, according to Spotify.

According to The Online 78-rpm Discography Project, Evelyn Thompson recorded I GOT A PAPA DOWN IN NEW ORLEANS.


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Subject: Lyr Add: CLEMENTINE (FROM NEW ORLEANS)
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 09 Feb 14 - 01:08 PM

This can be found both on Spotify and YouTube.


CLEMENTINE (FROM NEW ORLEANS)
Words by Henry Creamer; music by Harry Warren
New York : Shapiro, Bernstein & Co., ©1927.
As sung by Kate Smith

My, look up the street, look up the street right now!
Hi, look at her feet. Isn't she neat? And how!
Oh, ain't she a darlin'? Oh, isn't she sweet,
That baby you're wild to meet?

Here comes Miss Clementine,
That baby from New Orleans.
She's only seventeen,
But what a queen,
Oh, my!
She has those flashing eyes,
The kind that can hypnotize,
And when she rolls 'em, pal,
Just kiss your gal
Goodbye.

And oh-oh-oh, when she starts dancing,
She plays a mean castanet.
You won't forget,
I mean.
Down in that Creole town,
Are wonderful gals around,
But none like Clementine
From New Orleans.

Now, you talk about Tabasco mamas,
Lulu Belles, and other charmers.
She's the baby that made the farmers
Raise a lot of cane.
She vamped a guy named Old Bill Bailey.
In the dark she kissed him gaily.
Then he threw down his ukulele
And he prayed for rain.

Look out for Clementine,
That baby from New Orleans.
She's only seventeen,
But what a queen!
Oh my!
She has two yearning lips.
Why, her kisses are burning pips.
They make the fellows shout,
And lay right out
And die.

Her dancing movements
Have improvements.
She shakes a mean tambourine
Out where the grass is green.

I've seen asbestos dames
Who set the whole town in flames,
But none like Clementine,
From New Orleans.

* * *
"Clementine" is pronounced to rhyme (approximately) with "seventeen."

Several jazz bands have recorded this as an instrumental. The Goofus Five and The Varsity Eight include a vocal, but omit most of the lyrics shown above.

I have found catalog entries for 78-rpm recordings by the following artists, but since I haven't heard them, I can't say whether they are instrumentals or vocals: Jack Crawford and His Orchestra, Jean Goldkette and His Orchestra, University Six.


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