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29 Sep 02 - 12:05 AM (#793291) Subject: Ryestraw From: GUEST,Ron Williams I'm looking for the lyrics for the fiddle tune "Ryestraw". An old fiddler who I did field recordings of from 1975-1981, Eldia Barbee (Soddy, TN) and released on the Pine Breeze label used to tell the joke: "Two boys were arguing over who's daddy was the best fiddler. One boy says, 'My Daddy can play "Free Little Bird" so good you can see them little birdies just a flutterin' about. The other boy says, "That ain't nothing. My Daddy can play "Ryestraw" to stink 'em out of the room!" (Eldia was talking about and playing a tune called "Did you ever see Lulu make water", and sort of wandered into Ryestraw, another tune whose lyrics he considered 'off-color'.) |
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29 Sep 02 - 12:23 AM (#793293) Subject: RE: Ryestraw From: GUEST Go to honkingduck.com. Clayton McMichen and Riley Puckett, 1930, in real audio. Honkingduck Click on 78s and go to R in titles. Also version by Fiddlin' Jim Burke, also 1930. |
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29 Sep 02 - 03:10 AM (#793320) Subject: ADD: Ryestraw From: Stewie There's not much to the McMichen and Puckett lyrics - probably Riley was taking note of his conscience as indicated in the opening remarks:
Dog eat a catfish, dog eat a minnow
In his notes to Rounder LP 1005 'Gid Tanner and His Skillet Lickers', Mark Wilson noted that it was known by both northern and southern fiddlers as 'Ryestraw' or 'Old Ryefields' and other titles. Tunes like this, such as 'Old Mollie Hare' or 'Black-eyed Susan', carried scatological stanzas, but unfortunately Wilson quotes only one:
Dog shit a ryestraw
The Fiddler's Companion site gives some others as follows:
Dog shit a rye straw, dog shit a needle
--Stewie.
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