We knows nothing much about the blues... we called it blues, we called it breakdowns, we called it blues and some people say it's square dances... We didn't know what it was; the achin'-hearted blues is slow, breakdowns is fast - Percy Thomas, who played in the Son Simms Four with Muddy Waters, interviewed by Paul Oliver, from Blues Off The Record
For the September SOTM I've chosen Ain't Nobody's Business. From Paul Oliver's book 'Songsters and Saints' this was collected by Howard Odum as 'T'aint Nobody's Busisness But My Own' which, to quote from 'Songsters and Saints, Songs of the Ragtime Era' was in the opinion of Howard Odum, 'represented the more reckless temperament of the wanderer'. Lyrics collected were:
I went to see my Hanner turn tricks in the manner T'aint nobodys business but my own
Don't care if I don't make a dollar Je'so I wear my shirt and collar T'aint nobodys business but my own
It is suggested that the versions recorded by Frank Stokes with Dan Sane at the end of August 1928 and the version Nobody's Dirty Business recorded by John Hurt in February 1928 derives from this 'tradition'.
The versions recored by Sara Martin and Anna Meyers in 1922 and by Bessie Smith, Lena Wilson and Alberta Hunter in 1923 were versions of the song published by Porter Grainger, though this published version, it is suggested, derives originally from the 'traditional' material that was being performed in the first decade of the 1900's.
The first recording I've found is from Anna Meyers with the Original Memphis Five
Sara Martin recorded the song in December 1922 accompanied by Fats Waller on piano
Alberta Hunter, Bessie Smith taking it at a bit more laid back pace, and Lena Wilson all recored the song a year later
Here's the Frank Stokes and John Hurt versions. What I've found surprising, given it was clearly a popular song, is that these are the only country blues, guitar based recordings I've found from around ths time.
A search through YouTube brings up lots of different versions. Here's some of my favourites. Please add your own.
Billie Holiday
A lovely version from one of my favourite piano players, James Booker
There's a lot of old time string band 78s of this one too starting around '26 or '27. Earl Johnson and the Dixie Entertainers, Emry Arthur, Warren Caplinger, The Short Creek Trio, Walker's Corbin Ramblers, and Riley Puckett. I won't fill up the thread with the videos, but I'm sure a lot of them are on youtube. Instead, here's a particular favorite of mine from a little further south, Theodore Miller and his mento band :
Thanks, Old Man Ned, for a great Song of the Month choice and the initial post and research, and to Pan and Lastfirstface for the other versions. Here is Riley Puckett's version, which he called "Nobody's Business":
claims that the song originated in the West Indies as Nobody's Business but Me Own. On CD B of the set , he includes this 1919 recording by Bert Williams titled It's Nobody's Business But My Own.
Haymes suggests that Williams, who was born in Antigua, may have introduced our song from the West Indies. I don't buy this. Yes, there is a tune playing behind his recitation, but the tune doesn't sound anything like any version I've heard of Ain't Nobody's Business. At times, the band plays a straight quote from William's earlier big hit Nobody. I think it's most likely that Williams wanted a routine to follow the success of Nobody and latched on to a saying that was also in the popular consciousness.
On a West Indian origin, I think he's on stronger grounds. There are several versions of Nobody's Business posted on YouTube, presunmably the ones John Cowley refers to in Nobody Knows where the Blues Comes From. YouTube doesn't date the recordings, but Cowley says the song was recorded in Jamaica and West Africa after the Second World War. Too recent? Well, no; almost every posting describes it as an old song ? usually as a 'traditional' or 'authentic' or even 'ancient' Jamaica folk song.
This version by a Belize singer, Brad Pattico gives a good idea of the full melodic and lyric structure:
My best attempt at transcribing the first full section is:
Quote
Solomon's grandpa go to Ecuador Left him wife and pic'ny out of door Nobody's business but him own
Solomon grandma swears she no forget (??)T'ief went out with Sammy Polo-neck Nobody's business but she own
Nobody's business, business Nobody's business, business Nobody's business, business but me own
Nobody's business, business Nobody's business, business Nobody's business, business but me own
Here's a similar version by Ainsworth Rose:
(Other versions have less full variants of Solomon's grandpa or some other husband going to Ecuador. Another floating verse has a very un-PC reference to marrying a N-man or a Chinaman)
One melody is used for the two half-verses. A related melody is used for a two halves of the chorus.
[While I was writing this post, Lastfirstface posted a fine instrumental version by a band led by a Mento fiddler ? Mento being a Jamaican style contemporary with Trinidadian Calypso.]
Compare this with the first section of Part 2 of the Frank Stokes Record, as transcribed by Rivers
Quote from: 'Tain't Nobody's Business Part 2 (Rivers transcription)
I'm goin' stay 'round in Tennessee Where the girls down there take a like to me Though I won't have no other place to go Now listen at me baby, be good an? kind You mistreat me lately all the time Ain't nobody?s business but mine
Ain?t nobody?s business baby, (blank line) Nobody?s business but mine It ain?t nobody?s business honey, Where in the world I spend my money Nobody?s business but my own
Again, a melody used for two half-verses ? and again a similar (near identical) melody for two half-choruses. Most of Sokes' half-verses (though not the first one here) have the refrain Ain't nobody's business but mine as the third line. And Stokes' chorus is almost as repetitious as Brad Pattico's.
John Hurt's version has a similar structure ? except that he uses the first half of the melody for a short verse and the second half of the melody for a short chorus.
Quote from: Missippi John Hurt
Some of these mornings going to wake up crazy Going to grab me a gun kill my baby Nobody's business but mine
Ain't nobody's doggone business How my baby's treatin' me Nobody's business but my own
This post is getting too long. I'll explain in a latter post why I chose that particular verse from John Hurt.
« Last Edit: September 03, 2018, 06:34:03 PM by DavidCrosbie »
I promised to explain why I quoted a particular verse from John Hurt...
I choose it because it was collected as early as 1909 and published some years later by EC Perrow in the Journal of American Folklore. He published an essay and a body of material he'd collected or obtained from other collectors. It was spread over three volumes of the Journal under the title Songs and Rhymes from the South. You can read all three here:
and they're well worth reading for early versions of pre-Blues and lines that turn up later on Blues records. Here's the fragment that anticipated John Hurt:
Quote from: SOME OF THES DAYS
Some of these days I'm going to go crazy Take my gun and shoot my baby Nobody's business but mine
(The rest of the fragment is unrelated.)
In another volume, also collected in 1909:
Quote from: WITH A CHICKEN ON MY BACK A
With a chicken on my back I'm goin' to my shack En' it's nobody's business but mine Lord Lord En' it's nobody's business but mine
This was collected in 1909 from 'East Tennessee; mountain whites', but look what was collected from 'Mississippi; negroes'
Quote from: WITH A CHICKEN ON MY BACK B
With them bloodhounds on my track, And a chicken on my back, I'se gwine to make it to my shanty, if I can,
If I can, can, can, If I can, can, I'se gwine to make it to my shanty, if I can.
With a ham-bone on my back, And them bloodhounds on my track, I'se gwine to keep my skillet greasy, if I can
Something like that first verse forms the core of Henry Thomas's Shanty Blues.
The song that Howard Odum was writing about ? as quoted by Paul Oliver ? makes more sense of the connection between 'nobody's business' and 'make it to my shanty'. It's from the days when the chicken-stealing joke was still funny and acceptable.
Quote from: NOBODY'S BIZNESS BUT MINE
Goin' back to my shack, Ain't coming' back. Nobody's business but mine.
...
Goin' back to my shack, Goin' have hump on my back: Nobody's business but mine.
Goin' be hump on my back: So many chickens in de sack Nobody's business but mine.
Chickens in my sack, Big hounds on my track, Nobody's business but mine.
I missed out three verses that were irrelevant. Odum missed out a lot more:
Quote from: Howard Odum
There are many other verses which are sung, but which will not permit reproduction.
Odum distinguished this from the popular song:
Quote from: Howard Odum
The sentiment is somewhat similar to the song "'Tain't Nobody's Business but My Own", but is more careless and care-free.
It also had a
Quote from: Howard Odum
chorus, which is repeated after each stanza or omitted at will
The chorus is actually very different, but we're clearly looking at a song sung before 1910 which resembled in many ways the later recordings of Frank Stokes and John Hurt.
The Blues recording tradition stems from the song copyrighted by Porter Grainger an Everett Robbins. Some posters on Mudcat think they wrote it in 1911, but didn't formally copyright it until 1921. The sheet music has, broadly speaking, the lyrics as sung by the women singers of the 1920's.
Quote
1. There ain't nothin' I can do, nor nothin' I can say, That folks don't criticize me; But I'm gonna do just as I want to anyway, And don't care if they all despise me.
Refrain: I I should take a notion To jump into the ocean, 'TAIN'T NOBODY'S BIZ-NESS IF I DO. Rather than persecute me, I choose that you would shoot me, 'TAIN'T NOBODY'S BIZ-NESS IF I DO. If I should get the feelin' To dance on the ceilin', 'TAINT NOBODY'S BIZ-NESS IF I DO. If I get my best companion Drive me right into the canyon, 'TAIN'T NOBODY'S BIZ-NESS IF I DO.
If I dislike my lover And leave him for another, 'TAIN'T NOBODY'S BIZ-NESS IF I DO. If I go to church on Sunday, Then cabaret on Monday, 'TAIN'T NOBODY'S BIZ-NESS IF I DO. If my friend ain't got no money And I say "take all mine, honey," 'TAIN'T NOBODY'S BIZ-NESS IF I DO. If I give him my last nickel And if it leaves me in a pickle, 'TAIN'T NOBODY'S BIZ-NESS IF I DO.
2. After all, the way to do is do just as you please, Regardless of their talkin'; Often times ones that talk will get down on their knees, And beg your pardon for their squawkin'.
They seem to have taken the traditional song, added a tune and two verses, but simplified the body of the song into a string of three-line units without the old chorus. The lyrics they wrote made the song more personal, a complaint ? in short, a blues. I think this was the contrast Odum had in mind when he described the folk-song version as 'more careless and care-free'.
It's interesting that the folk-like version persisted in Old Timey records for the White market, and on into the Bluegrass repertoire.
The 1935 Riley Puckett record (posted by Johnm) even has (almost) that old verse collected in 1909
Quote from: Riley Puckett
One of these mornings goin to wake up carzy Kill my wife and slay/save my baby Nobody's business if I do
The 1927 record by Earl Johnson had included the same verse.
And it turns up again in the 1959 Bluegrass version by the Stanley Brothers
Back in the Black tradition, John Jackson was singing his take on the old version
« Last Edit: September 03, 2018, 06:17:41 PM by DavidCrosbie »