This is another song I picked up from the Greenbriar Boys’ Ragged But Right album. As I’ve explained in previous posts, I’m not a huge bluegrass fan but loved that group. It was partly John Herald’s voice, and the way Ralph Rinzler and Bob Yellin played mandolin and banjo,
and partly the terrifically varied repertoire, mixing bluegrass and old-time country with ragtime and old-time pop tunes — but mostly it was the energy and humor. They were terrific musicians, but also sounded like they were having a terrific time, and not worrying about getting everything perfect. The title summed it up, as well as being a great song that I later used as my regular opening number when I was playing bar gigs.
I listened to that record over and over, and ended up knowing half the songs on it. (I’ve already posted versions of “Ragged But Right” and “Roll On, John,” as well as “Katy Clyne,” which I learned off the Greenbriars’ first recording.) As an inveterate show-off, I was particularly attracted to this one by its fast comic patter section, which the Greenbriars pulled off with fine diction and verve, and with the addition of a kazoo solo I made it a feature of my two-song set at a high school talent show (along with “San Francisco Bay Blues,” which I played with kazoo and harmonica). It was the first time I got onstage and performed anything resembling the kind of music I would end up playing professionally, and I was at least a moderate hit — the fast patter and kazoo solos in particular.
This song was composed in 1919, just before blues began being marketed on recordings by Black singers, and although a lot of historians date the heyday of the style from 1920, in terms of mainstream show business “blues” was already regarded as somewhat passé, mocked in songs like “Everybody’s Talking ‘Bout the Doggone Blues, But I’m Happy.” This comic novelty was instantly recorded by a couple of white vaudevillians and continued to be recorded by lots of other folks over the years, including an instrumental version by Sidney Bechet in 1951 and a version by the Kweskin Jug Band in the 1960s. I also just ran across a video of John Denver singing it while doing some of the lamest dancing ever, and playing the break on kazoo, which I’m assuming means he got it from the Kweskin bunch. I only heard their version later, and they don’t go for tongue-twisting speed on the patter chorus, which, for me, is the whole point (which is not to say I necessarily pull it off).
In any case… when I stopped playing kazoo — no doubt a relief to everyone — I dropped this from my repertoire because I no longer had an instrumental break for it. Then, when when my wife Sandrine and I began playing together, her clarinet solved that problem and I welcomed it back with open arms… and then, since she won’t do videos, I had to work out a guitar break. However one does it, it’s a remarkably silly song and what more need be said?
I arrived at a good moment, from my point of view, and, in a way, from his. It was a bad time in his life, a low point when he was feeling like the world had passed him by, and there I was, an eager young acolyte. I had the right background: I auditioned at my first lesson with Willie McTell’s “Georgia Rag,” and had grown up on Woody Guthrie, and had read a lot of the right books (Mark Twain, for example), and was young and ready to spend long nights eating his amazing meals, listening to him talk for hour upon hour, and drinking in his wisdom (and less than my share of his whiskey).
he played for me was a selection of early jazz cuts, on the Biograph label, which I knew from albums of Willie McTell, Skip James, and Gary Davis — again, not the company in which I would have expected to find Crosby. So I borrowed it, recorded it on cassette, and later bought my own copy.
Finally, I just looked up what a “Morris chair” is, and it turns out to be exactly what I imagined: an early sort of cushioned reclining chair, ideal for cuddling, which is the pleasant theme of this song.
— and for those of us who are only here because our parents (my mother, for example) were able to flee other places, it is an obligation to do what we can to tear down those borders.
That album was foundational for me because the Greenbriars put no limits on the material they could play. They recorded bluegrass standards, old-time country, modern singer-songwriter compositions (they were the first to record Mike Nesmith’s “Different Drum”), old pop songs, new pop songs, some original instrumentals… I’ve already done posts on “
In Nairobi, I was hoping to find some of the musicians who had played on some wonderful acoustic guitar records that I’d heard on reissues from
And the man said, “He’s over there,” pointing to a man standing behind another counter on the other side of the store. And he was.
As I recall, he played it more like Merle Travis, and I’ve retained some of what he showed me and filled in the rest as best I could.
I don’t remember ever performing this one, but by the last set I wasn’t always in shape to remember much, so I may have. It’s a fun song, and although I tend to try to reshape lyrics to fit my own voice and time, I do it as a character piece, complete with the reference to “the cutest girl in the 48 states.” I later heard the original version by Tex Williams, a classic Western Swing hit with a tight horn section, but I continue to associate it with Mark and evenings sitting around drinking whiskey and smoking Bull Durhams in his cluttered apartment in Missoula. That was more than forty years ago, and he’s in Eugene, Oregon, now, still playing, and we talk on the phone every few months. Too many people I knew back then are gone, and I treasure the ones who are holding on.
surprised, because Dave hadn’t recorded any of Woody’s other songs, and I didn’t think of them as his kind of music.
This is another of the songs Woody wrote in 1941 on commission for the Department of the Interior, celebrating the Bonneville Power Administration, and appearing on the soundtrack of a documentary film promoting dam-building and rural electrification. I’ve posted some others (“
musically, Butch supplied a bunch of the best songs in Joe’s repertoire, and I learned a bunch of them, though I only performed a couple onstage.
Willie Dixon wrote this one and gave it to Muddy, and it changed Muddy’s career. It was by far his biggest hit, but that wasn’t the only thing; it was fundamentally different from the deep Delta blues style that originally put him on the map in Chicago. For one thing, his early hits featured his ferociously amplified slide guitar, but he didn’t play on this one. For another thing, it was clever, and funny.
transforming my ideas about what I wanted to be playing and how, and why.