In The Country Blues, Sam Charters says that Tim Moore's Farm has "dozens of verses." As far as I can tell, only a few were recorded (i.e, the ones below). Anyone have any idea if the others were ever written down, and if so, what they are? Thanks!
Yeah, you know it ain't but the one thing you know, this black man done was wrong Yeah, you know it ain't but the one thing, you know, this black man done was wrong Yes, you know I moved my wife and family down on mr. Tim Moore's farm Yeah, you know mr. Tim Moore's a man, he don't never stand and grin He just said, "Keep out of the graveyard, I'll save you from the pen" You know, soon in the morning he'll give you scrambled eggs Yes, but he's liable to call you so soon, you'll catch a mule by his hind legs Yes, you know I got a telegram this morning, boy, it read, it say, "Your wife is dead" I show it to mr. Moore, he said, "Go ahead, nigger you know you got to plow old Red" That white man says, "It's been raining, yes, and I'm way behind I may let you bury that woman one of these old dinner times" I told him, "No, mr. Moore; somebody's got to go" He says, "If you ain't able to plow, Sam, stay up there and grab your hoe"
Bumping this to see if there is an answer out there. I don't know that Lightnin' tune myself. Normally, I would say "competition" would refer to another man/lover, as you find in Blind Lemon's Competition Bed Blues.
Competition Bed Blues (20749-2) - Blind Lemon Jefferson
Competition worryin' me, I don't even know what competition mean. Competition worryin' me, do you realize what competition mean? It pops up at every man's door and it worries him in his midnight dream.
I had a lovin' brown, I didn't never mean to do her wrong. I had a lovin' brown, I didn't never mean to do her wrong. My partner's so full of competition, he's got my gal and gone.
I passed my partner's house, I stopped in to comb my head. I passed my partner's house, I stopped in to comb my head. Who should I find, but my brown makin' up my partner's bed.
Almost wrecked my mind, competition's goin' between me and my friend. Almost wrecked my mind, competition's goin' between me and my friend. It hurts me so, I thought we'd be pals 'til the end.
It makes a man feel bad for his partner to turn him down. It makes a man feel bad for his partner to throw him down. Now it's so much competition, I believe I'll leave this town.
Not sure of the meaning in Lightnin's song. If I don't find another woman I'm going to start shooting? Perhaps others will chime in.
Sounds to me like there's going to be trouble either way!
She knows he is trouble and is trying to get rid of him. the verses are: Yes, you know my woman tried to quit me When I ain't done nothin' wrong She done put me out of doors But I even ain't got no home as it goes
Yes, you know that my momma told me The day that I left her door She said, y' gonna have bad luck, son And I don't care where you go
I take it to mean that either Lightning has competition or he doesn't. He's not sure. If he has competition (if there is another man in 'his' woman's life ... ) then he can understand being kicked out. I see him planning to stake out his girlfriends house and see how things are. if there is no competition (no other man) then she just kicked him out, and i think he is having trouble getting his head around that possibility. He wants to be part of the contest (and he wants the advantage of his trusty shotgun). Either way he's going to sort things out to his satisfaction.
In the 1960 version (Bring Me My Shotgun) Lightning is threatening to kill the woman, and competition isn't mentioned.
that threat is implied in this version (1948?)
Well, I cried, Bye-bye, baby You know you done me wrong I'm gonna take my little shotgun now And I'm gonna carry it back home
I said one in the morning I'm gonna carry my shotgun home Yes, I figure the best thing I can do Why did I leave that woman alone?
All in all it's a pretty scary portrait of a man who prefers murder to domestic upheaval!
« Last Edit: April 07, 2011, 09:45:45 AM by Gumbo »
hello friend, i always wondered what he meant by "competition", too. never quite made sense to me. b.b. king recorded the song in the mid or late fifties, & he used the word "consideration" in it's place. that made more sense. but lightnin' is definitely saying "competition". & i know this doesn't help any, but the king version suggests he didn't like it either. or perhaps translating a slang term that was dead within a decade after lightnin's original recording?
Sounds like the word competition means what it says. Am I missing something? I can also state from my own experiences where country artists often get words reversed around in their meaning. Especially when they twist and take ownership of another tune. Sometimes intentional, sometimes simple ignorance. I know one guy I consider very authentic that sings, "I'm tired of living a bachelor" and I backed him up for a number of years as he performed that song and I know personally he was married and actually meant the opposite of what people would hear in his lyric. I never said a word to him but it's a great example how we can put more thought and analysis into the lyrics than the performer actually did. Lightnin took a ton of standard songs and made them his, and even claimed he wrote them.
moan Big Brazoes whooo lawd here I come, you know I'm gonna do time for another man When it haven't been a thing poor lightnin' done They say you oughta been on Brazos, 19an' 10 Buddy Russel drove the pretty women Like he did the ugly men Moan Big Brazoes here I come figurin' to do time for another man when it ain't nothin' poor Lightnin' done.
Logged
My loathings are simple: stupidity, oppression, crime, cruelty, soft music. Vladimir Nabokov (1899 - 1977)
Penitentiary Blues Mmm?.Big Brazos here I come Mmm?Oh, Lord have mercy Big Brazos here I come You know I?m gonna do time for another man When there haven?t been a thing poor Lightnin? done They say you oughta been on Brazos Nineteen and ten Bud Russell drove pretty women Just like he did ugly mens Mmmm Big Brazos Oh lord yes here I come Thinkin?to do time for another man And ain?t nothing poor Lightnin? done Well, you oughta be ?shamed Yeah you know my momma called me I answered ma?am She said son: You tired a workin? I said Mama yes I am Papa called me I answered: Sir He said son you tired a workin? What the hell you gonna stay there for? I couldn?t No, I just couldn?t hear myself. -- By the way, that's a GREAT album.
Penitentiary Blues Mmm .Big Brazos here I come Mmm Oh, Lord have mercy Big Brazos here I come
The Brazos River was originally named "Brazos de Dios" meaning "Arms of God." The Texas Almanac link below has more info on it including various explanations for how that name came to be.
In the book (and film) titled Racehoss, a former convict who served time in a penitentiary on the Brazos writes that the place was referred to by the convicts as "the burnin' hell."
So you might say that the men who tried to escape from the prison by running to the river were running from hell to the arms of God.
Since the early 70s I've had an ever disintegrating photocopy of Sterling Brown's Negro Folk Expression: Spirituals, Seculars, Ballads and Work Songs. This topic has reminded me that it's now on the internet. The chapters Seculars and Ballads and Work Songs and Social Protest might be of particular interest...or not, as the case maybe.
Since the early 70s I've had an ever disintegrating photocopy of Sterling Brown's Negro Folk Expression: Spirituals, Seculars, Ballads and Work Songs. This topic has reminded me that it's now on the internet. The chapters Seculars and Ballads and Work Songs and Social Protest might be of particular interest...or not, as the case maybe.
Yeah you know my momma called me I answered ma?am She said son: You tired a workin? I said Mama yes I am Papa called me I answered: Sir He said son you tired a workin? What the hell you gonna stay there for? I couldn?t No, I just couldn?t hear myself.
Does anybody know the significance of the above lyrics from the song ? Are they some kind of protest? Are they somehow connected with the other lyrics in which Hopkins claims he hasn't done anything wrong and is serving time for another man's crime? If he has done nothing wrong, then he should be free to go home. Maybe this is some kind of veiled comment on the brand of justice that blacks had to endure???
These particular lyrics remind me of something I read in the Bruce Jackson book Wake Up Dead Man. In it, a prison guard asks a convict if he's going home this weekend (knowing full well that the man is not done serving his time.) I imagine that this question was asked regularly and was meant as a taunt. The response was:
"No suh, I don't think I'm goin' home this weekend. The warden told me I had to work, boss. I can't make it."
The guard knows the convict can't go home and Hopkins's parents know that he can't go home, but they ask questions which assume the opposite. In the case of the Jackson book, the convict even has to play along and pretend that he's not incarcerated.