Such a great version of this song, Furry really puts a lot of feeling into it. One suggestion on the lyrics, John:
3.2 For the help HEW the mountain down
Chris
3.2 For the help HEW the mountain down
Chris
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WeeniePedia
Your resource for country blues lyrics, playing tips, artist information, trivia and more.
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She had this [barbecue pit] piled up full of hickory. She comes out with this two gallon can of gasoline & she up-ends this thing over the hickory... As she walks away from the pit she takes a kitchen match, strikes it on her butt, throws it over her shoulder, causes an explosion 30 feet into the air. Then she walked by and said: 'Be ready'n about an hour...' - Steve James, Port Townsend 97
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Such a great version of this song, Furry really puts a lot of feeling into it. One suggestion on the lyrics, John:
3.2 For the help HEW the mountain down Chris Hi Chris,
Thanks for the catch. I was hearing an "s" at the end of the syllable in question, heard the "h" at the beginning, and thought "hews" would be a weird construction there, but re-listening, I think it's just some artifact of how "hew" transitions into "the" that was confusing me. "Hew" certainly makes more sense, and I'm hearing the sound right, too, so I've made the change. Thanks! All best, Johnm Hi all,
Furry Lewis' Folkways album opens with "Longing Blues", played in Spanish tuning. The song is very much, instrumentally, in the mode of "Rock Island Blues" or "Black Gypsy Blues" of his early recordings, though it differs from them in Furry's sparing use of a slide, which he eschewed on the earlier recordings. Furry really just uses the slide in the response to to the repetition of his opening line in a couple of the verses. Here is his performance of "Longing Blues": INTRO SOLO Babe, going away, baby, crying won't make me stay Babe, goin' away, crying won't make me stay If I had train fare, Lord, I wouldn't be here today I woke up this morning and blues all 'round my bed Woke up this morning, blues all 'round my bed I looked under my pillow, blues all under my head Boy, I'm sorry, sorry, sorry to my heart Babe, I'm sorry, sorry to my heart We've been together so long, now today we got to part SOLO Been together so long, now we've got to part If you ever want to hear me blow my horn, come to my number when old Stella's gone If you ever hear me, hear be blow my horn Come to my number, oh when old Stella's gone All best, Johnm
Sally Long was a dancer (and film star) in the years prior to Furry recording this (28 August 1928 according to my Document Records issue) so it's highly possible that her name became used for a type of dance or, as has been suggested, a euphemism for something more, err, "personal". ![]() https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sally_Long Regarding "Kassie Jones - Part 2".
What is an "eastman"? I'm more familiar with the line in the Grateful Dead's "On The Road Again" (traditional) which sounds like "She's on the road again, sure as you're born, Natural born easy on the road again". Sorry if this is a du-umb question. I'm a foreigner with cloth ears. Hi Pete,
"Eastman" was explained to me as a man who lives off of a woman's earnings. All best, Johnm Hi Pete, Thank-you for the enlightenment. To expand on John's definition I found the below. I'm still looking for any period usage of the term outside of lyrics but haven't found that yet.
http://www.oxfordreference.com/oso/viewentry/10.1093$002facref$002f9780199829941.001.0001$002facref-9780199829941-e-15759;jsessionid=AB4CE3E9645605DA65AC29E51C0C4A1D There's also some more details on the use and meaning of the word here: https://books.google.com/books?id=14XuqpJGkrwC&pg=PA103&lpg=PA103&dq=%22eastman%22+slang+definition&source=bl&ots=A7CFYLTLAg&sig=YOA7-Ssird_5ZpholMWLQZNOrQU&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj8yNbJt6rXAhWWw4MKHU2YCAw4ChDoAQgwMAI#v=onepage&q=%22eastman%22%20slang%20definition&f=false There was an "Eastman gang" around the turn of the century. There were based in New York but became nationally notorious. When Furry Lewis (and the Memphis Jug Band) sing about being a "natural born Eastman" I think they mean a natural gangster, hustler. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastman_Gang
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