Subject: Lyr Add: RUN, NIGGER, RUN From: Abby Sale Date: 18 Dec 99 - 08:38 PM So I believe I mentioned I got the CD of Original Folkways Recordings of Doc Watson & Clarence Ashley, from Smith/Folkways? There's an exciting song on it called "Run, Jimmie, Run." Like many of the well-known mountain tunes it's both familiar & hard to place. The words are difficult to make out but seem to be one of those last remnants of a legit ballad. So I had a lookaround. It turns out to be a travesty of a travesty of "Run, Nigger, Run." That one comes in many forms (See Jane Keefer's Index) mostly as a children's play song, "Run, Child, Run," etc. Most innocuous. Then we find a minstrel show travesty when we Search http://memory.loc.gov "America Singing: Nineteenth-Century Song Sheets" under "Run, Nigger, Run" with Mr Bones singing what was probably well-known to a comic monolog. Rinzler, in the CD's notes doesn't help much but pushes reported versions back to Ozark 1852 reports as ""Patteroller's Song." (It comes with both single or double t's.) Finally (for me) Lomax in Amer. Ballads & F S, p228 refers to escaping the patrols after Nat Turner's Revolt. The song & persisting base tune "Fire on the Mountain" processed into many instrumental & comic versions. Virginia: Nat Turner (b1800, executed 11/11/1831) began the only effective, sustained slave revolt in U.S. history on 8/21/1831. The rebellion created panic throughout the white South but put an end to their myth that slaves were either contented with their lot or too servile to mount an armed revolt. [EB] From 1832 "Negroes were put under special restriction to home quarters and patrolmen ("patter-rollers") appointed to keep them in." [Lomax] Now the more political & story type (not quite balladic) & still likely somewhat corrupt, words are clear: (they're essetially the same as the L of C text as above.) "'The day is done, night comes down"Like everything of merit it has been plagiarized and burdened with outside inventions until it is hardly recognizable, but the 'Fire in the Mountains' still sticks." Polk Miller, Richmond, Virginia, who interpreted Negro songs sucessfully on the platform, contributed these stanzas: I run down to de ribber, but I couldn't get across,I don't know any way to post the sheet music here but as I said, "Fire on the Mountain" is pretty rousing & surely accounts for the persistance of the song. I just thought you'd like to know. Click for related song |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: 'Run, Jimmie, Run' From: Dale Rose Date: 18 Dec 99 - 09:49 PM Yes, I enjoyed it. I am always pleased to learn more about the old songs. Thank You. |
Subject: Lyr Add: RUN, NIGGER, RUN From: Stewie Date: 19 Dec 99 - 09:19 PM In his note to the song in the Watson/Ashley, Rinzler referred to the Tanner/ McMichen duo fiddling. The Skillet Lickers recorded 'Run Nigger Run' in 1927. This was reissued on an very early Rounder LP. In his note to the song, Mark Wilson also points out that it was sometimes called 'The Pateroller Song' and that it is widely known across the South as a fiddle tune, but is most often titled 'Run Boy Run'. Snuffy Jenkins and Pappy Sherrill, for example, recorded it under the latter title. As pointed out above, the song dates to the slave rebellions of the 1830s when the plantation owners forbade free association among slaves and organised patrols to catch slaves off their plantations after curfew. Wilson agrees that 'pateroller' presumably derives from 'patroller'. The song was quickly taken up by the earliest minstrel shows. The Rounder note quotes a skit from 'White's Serenaders Song-Book of 1857' which can be accessed through the link to 19th song sheets posted above by Abby: 'De sun am set – dis nigger is free' etc. Supposedly the skit was composed and sung by C.White of White's Band of Serenaders at the Melodeon Concert Saloon, 53 Bowery, NY. There was an earlier commerial recording than that of the Skillet Lickers: Fiddlin' John Carson recorded it as solo piece, accompanying himself on the fiddle, in 1924. It has different lyrics, but is along the same lines. It has been reissued on Fiddlin' John Carson 'Complete Recorded Works Vol II' Document DOCD – 8015. Here is the song as sung by the Skillet Lickers – it shares only 2 verses (the 'hornet' verse and the 'snake' verse) with the version sung by Clint Howard on the Watson/Ashley set. Wilson points out that, for Tanner, the song had lost its meaning because when asked what a 'pateroller' was, he could only reply: 'A bad man, I reckon'. As Tony Russell has commented elsewhere, like numerous post-Civil War numbers, the song is basically a pastiche:
RUN NIGGER RUN
Chorus:
Nigger run, nigger flew
Nigger run, he run so fast
Nigger run, he run through the field
Some folks say a nigger won't steal
One had a bushel, one had a peck
Oh nigger run, nigger flew
Hey Mr pateroller, don't catch me Verse 2 repeated
Nigger run, was so fast Source: Gid Tanner and His Skillet Lickers 'Run Nigger Run' Co 1518-D Recorded 28 March 1927. Reissued on Gid Tanner and His Skillet Lickers 'Hear These New Southern Fiddle and Guitar Records!' Rounder LP 1005. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: 'Run, Jimmie, Run' From: GUEST,Bud Savoie Date: 04 Feb 00 - 08:43 AM When I was a boy and reading Joel Chandler Harris's Uncle Remus tales, I recall Bre'r Rabbit strutting around in one of the tales as if he was "king ob de patterollers." A footnote gave some of the words to the song, although no music. I have since heard versions of it from many sources, all changing the operative word to Johnny, Jimmie, slave, chillen, Smoke, Boy, and others. Hedy West sings "Run, Slave Run" in Vanguard II, and the liner notes state that the existtence of this song in the lWest family suggests a long-held sylmpathy for the slaves. |
Share Thread: |
Subject: | Help |
From: | |
Preview Automatic Linebreaks Make a link ("blue clicky") |