22 Feb 05 - 11:21 PM (#1418284) Subject: Lyr Add: No Beer, No Work (anti-Prohibition song) From: Jim Dixon I ran across this while searching for something else. From The Lester S. Levy Collection of Sheet Music: NO BEER, NO WORK Sammy Edwards, 1919 1. Johnny Hymer was a miner, always on the job. Johnny loved his lager like a sailor loves his grog. One day, his foreman told him that this country would go dry. John threw his tools upon the ground. You should have heard him cry: CHORUS: "No beer, no work" will be my battle cry. "No beer, no work" when I am feeling dry. I never could like lemonade or bevo*, for beer is all I'll buy. I'll hide my self away Until some brighter day When I can sip the lager from a stein. "No beer, no work" will be my battle cry After the first of July. 2. Johnny's steady, ever ready to give good advice, Said, "Go back to work or there'll be no old shoes or rice. Be like Kipling's hero. Bear your troubles with a grin." John said, "I'll be your hero, but I'll be no Gunga Din."** 3. "When I was a baby," said our Johnny with a smile, "They raised me on a bottle. Now they want to change the style. John Barleycorn's a friend of mine. My daddy knew him well. He'd bring John home with him at night and ma would give him –––. --- *Bevo was a brand of non-alcoholic "near beer" that was made by Anheuser-Busch before and during prohibition. If "bevo" was ever used as a generic term for near beer, I wasn't aware of it, but that's what the song seems to imply. "Bevo" is NOT capitalized in the printed lyrics. **Something seems garbled in this verse, since Johnny's foreman seems to be speaking, although it doesn't say so. Also, the reference to "old shoes or rice" seems odd. It suggests that Johnny was planning to get married, but if so, I think the lyrics should say so more plainly. Click to play |
23 Feb 05 - 04:19 AM (#1418427) Subject: RE: Lyr Add: No Beer, No Work (anti-Prohibition song) From: Joe Offer I think that one deserves a MIDI. Click to play |
23 Feb 05 - 09:01 AM (#1418593) Subject: RE: Lyr Add: No Beer, No Work (anti-Prohibition so From: Charley Noble Well, never ran across that one before. Thanks! Charley Noble |
23 Feb 05 - 09:11 AM (#1418598) Subject: RE: Lyr Add: No Beer, No Work (anti-Prohibition song) From: Snuffy Isn't it his "steady" (girl) speaking in verse 2? He says " No beer, no work", and she replies "No work, no wedding" |
23 Feb 05 - 09:54 AM (#1418635) Subject: RE: Lyr Add: No Beer, No Work (anti-Prohibition song) From: Jim Dixon Snuffy: You're right! I took "Johnny's steady" to mean "Johnny is steady" which completely threw me off. |
23 Feb 05 - 10:09 AM (#1418639) Subject: RE: Lyr Add: No Beer, No Work (anti-Prohibition so From: GUEST "Johnny's steady" is not "Johnny is steady" but "the steady girlfriend of Johnny." Dave Oesterreich |
23 Feb 05 - 10:27 AM (#1418644) Subject: RE: Lyr Add: No Beer, No Work (anti-Prohibition song) From: GUEST,Jim Dixon That also means there should be a comma, not a period, after "advice." (I often try to rationalize the punctuation in song lyrics, which are often written as long run-on sentences separated by commas, if anything. This time I rationalized wrongly.) (Am I the only person who considers punctuation significant?)
-Joe Offer- |
25 Aug 05 - 02:38 PM (#1549625) Subject: RE: Lyr Add: No Beer, No Work (anti-Prohibition song) From: GUEST,hfenton@rcn.com This is interesting - I found a (lapel) pin that says "NO BEER NO WORK JULY 1" in a group of pins relating to WWI and shortly after. This helps explain the pin. |
04 Jul 06 - 11:21 PM (#1776231) Subject: RE: Lyr Add: No Beer, No Work (anti-Prohibition song) From: GUEST,Phil Thanks for this discussion. We were cleaning belongings out of an old house that belonged to a coal miner and found a lapel pin that said "No Beer No Work". I liked the phrase and have continued to wear the pin, but considering we found it on July 2 and the above thread, it has more meaning now. Thanks. |
04 Nov 09 - 04:17 AM (#2759202) Subject: RE: Lyr Add: No Beer, No Work (anti-Prohibition song) From: GUEST,Johnny I like this song good work |