Nina Simone performed
“Little Liza Jane” throughout her career.
ORDERING INFO &c. FOR POOR GAL & LINKS TO OUR DOCUMENTARY PROJECT
(October 31, 2024 update.)
Dear Readers,
I am honored to report that Poor Gal is the recipient of a Special Recognition Award in The Deems Taylor/Virgil Thomson Book Awards, ASCAP Foundation, New York, NY.
Of course, Poor Gal is now available! Please note publication and ordering info for Poor Gal: The Cultural History of Little Liza Jane, University Press of Mississippi, November 27, 2023. Available at UPM website, Amazon, and other online merchants.
For reviews of Poor Gal, see Mississippi Clarion-Ledger (same review also appeared in USA Today network) and Washington City Paper.
Also see:
I am honored to report that Poor Gal is the recipient of a Special Recognition Award in The Deems Taylor/Virgil Thomson Book Awards, ASCAP Foundation, New York, NY.
Of course, Poor Gal is now available! Please note publication and ordering info for Poor Gal: The Cultural History of Little Liza Jane, University Press of Mississippi, November 27, 2023. Available at UPM website, Amazon, and other online merchants.
For reviews of Poor Gal, see Mississippi Clarion-Ledger (same review also appeared in USA Today network) and Washington City Paper.
Also see:
Poor Gal Table of Contents (Nov. 1, 2023 post on this blog)
The Lesser-Known Characters Behind “Liza Jane” (Nov. 1, 2023 post on this blog)
Spotify play list designed as a companion to Poor Gal
The Lesser-Known Characters Behind “Liza Jane” (Nov. 1, 2023 post on this blog)
Spotify play list designed as a companion to Poor Gal
Poor Gal page on the author’s website
(For more information about our documentary film, please see: “Behind the Scenes at the Li’l Liza Jane trailer shoot” or visit our website.)
_____
Likely personnel for Slim Harpo’s version of “Little Liza Jane”—James
“Slim Harpo” Moore (vocals and harmonica), Rudolph Richard (guitar), James
Johnson (bass guitar), Sammy Brown (drums), and Willie Parker (tenor sax).
_____
In 1927, the poet Carl Sandburg declared, “There are as many
Liza songs in the Appalachian Mountains as there are species of trees on the
slopes of that range.” This unmagnified observation would help introduce one of
the “Liza Jane” compositions in his crucial effort, The American Songbag, a celebrated, voluminous compilation that bestowed
significance upon numerous folksongs. “Liza Jane” appealed to lonesome drifters
who attempted to ranch the “flat prairies and level horizons” on the western
plains of the Appalachians, yet another tune, “Good-By Liza Jane,” apparently
accompanied a Midwestern circus as a minstrel song. The character, Liza Jane,
is rather incidental to the silliness of the circus minstrelsy—a horse falls
partway down a well, a snail bursts through the tail of the goose that swallowed
it, a woman crosses a bridge that that wasn’t yet built—but in the mountain
range version, Liza Jane (the character) assumes more prominence. In that piece,
the narrators make jugs of molasses in order to “sweeten little Liza Jane” and
contrast the hardest work of their lives (“a-brakin’ on the train”) with the
easiest, “a-huggin’ little Liza Jane.” Questions about the relationships of
these variations as well as their origins might not persevere in the
inquisitive mind of the listener would the song not persevere among recording
artists. Nina Simone, for example, delivered stirring renditions of “Li’l Liza
Jane” throughout her career, including a fabulous live performance at the
Newport Jazz Festival in 1960. Wynton Marsalis, David Bowie (as Davie Jones),
The Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Pete Seeger, Harry Belafonte, Bing Crosby, Trombone Shorty, Coleman Hawkins, Bob Wills, Duane Eddy,
Doc Watson, Slim Harpo, and Fats Domino, among countless others, performed the song. In many renditions of the tune, Liza Jane represents an object of courtship,
one who eludes the promises of gifts and affection with elegiac steadfastness.
The Hill Billies
recorded “Mountaineer’s Love Song” in 1926.
Step Back
When investigating John Lomax’s early 1930s recordings in Louisiana, the writer Joshua Clegg Caffery
encountered “Little Liza Jane,” terming it a “crossover dance number” performed
by African American string bands and jug bands. In his book, Traditional Music in Coastal Louisiana: The
1934 Lomax Recordings, Caffery parses a version of the song performed by
Wilson “Stavin’ Chain” Jones. The most charming passage of the tune, “Some
people tell me Liza don’t steal, Little Liza Jane / And I caught little Liza in
my cornfield, Little Liza Jane,” stamps a humorous realization onto a piece
that otherwise, according to Caffery, veers between “unrelated episodes constructed
out of stock phrases.” Even as that might be an unfair qualification, the
author draws a distinction between Stavin’ Chain’s version of
“Liza Jane” and the repertoire of Appalachian fiddle tunes such as “Susan Jane”
and “Lasses Cane,” songs quite similar to the mountaintop variation introduced
by Sandburg (although not the minstrel piece.) Terming them “second cousins
once removed,” Caffery still acknowledges lineage between the Louisiana
and Appalachian compositions. Many early recordings of “Li’l Liza Jane” predate
the Lomax field recordings, among them these two popular versions: Earl
Fuller’s Famous Jazz Band recording of “Li’l’ Liza Jane—One Step” in 1917 and The
Hill Billies recording of “Mountaineer’s Love Song” in 1926, both in New York City.
The former, recorded by white musicians, carries the traditional “Little Liza Jane” melody,
whereas the latter (its “second cousin once removed”) clips along with obvious
Appalachian fiddling qualities. While “Mountaineer’s Love Song” doesn’t mention
Liza Jane in its title, the singers frequently recall her throughout the piece.
Neither rendition, however, accounts for the genesis of “Li’l Liza Jane”—not
nearly. The nearly untraceable Countess Ada De Lachau published sheet music for a
version of the song, “Li’l Liza Jane,” that was performed as entr’acte
incidental music for a thriving Broadway three-act comedy, Come Out of the Kitchen, starring Ruth Chatterton, an actress who
knew Amelia Earhart and would later fly solo several times, herself, across the
United States, in addition to becoming a best-selling novelist. Broadway
audiences heard “Li’l Liza Jane” as many as 224 times between the play’s
opening in October 1916 and closing in May 1917, not long after Congress voted
to declare war on Germany as part of the mobilization for World War I. Don
Tyler, in his book, Music of the First
World War, cannot classify “Li’l Liza Jane” easily, dubbing it “part folk
song, part [minstrel] song, part early jazz, and part early country.”
Wilson “Stavin’ Chain”
Jones is pictured during
John Lomax’s field recording sessions in 1934.
John Lomax’s field recording sessions in 1934.
Step Back, Twice
According to The American Songbag,
one C.W. Loutzenhiser of Chicago recalls seeing a performance of the minstrel
song “Good-By Liza Jane” as a child attending the circus. No date accompanies
this information, but we can assume that minstrels may have been performing
versions of the song in the nineteenth century. At least
two writers published scores earlier than the mysterious Countess Ada De
Lachau, one being Harry von Tilzer’s “Good Bye Eliza Jane” (1903) and the
earliest being Eddie Fox’s “Good Bye Liza Jane” (1871.) The Fox version doesn’t
overtly lampoon Blacks, and instead, bills itself as a “comic song,” offering
rural themes and silly couplets such as “Chickens and hens have gone to roost /
A hawk flew down and bit an old goose.” The von Tilzer sheet music, on the
other hand, portrays two Black faces in a stereotyped cover image and narrates a
dialect-heavy scenario in which Eliza Jane has betrayed a lover, who then
demands his belongings and promises to skip town before having to pay the rent.
To be sure, the song’s estimable legacy exceeds sheet music and popular
recordings, and we must take an important moment to understand that “Li’l Liza
Jane” also served as a dancing game, or more specifically, a “Stealin’
Partners” dance-game song. In her 1918 collection, Negro Folk Songs, Book 4, the ethnomusicologist Natalie Curtis
Burlin informed the tune “‘Liza Jane” as one during which an unaccompanied man
would dance in the center of a circle, surrounded by couples. He would ‘steal’
a female partner, and the resulting single man would repeat the process, amid
joyous lyrics in which a suitor urges Liza Jane to follow him, to Baltimore: “I
got a house in Baltimo’, L’il’ ‘Liza-Jane / Street-car runs right by ma do’,
L’il’ ‘Liza-Jane / O Eliza, L’il’ ‘Liza-Jane / O Eliza, L’il’ ‘Liza-Jane.” (As
an aside, Natalie Curtis Burlin famously spent time transcribing songs on
Native American reservations, including one stay accompanied by her pal,
Theodore Roosevelt.) Additionally, Curtis Burlin would note an observation by Charles
N. Wheeler, who wrote about a tune, “‘Liza Jane,” sung by African American
soldiers in France, during World War I, perhaps the New York 15th (Colored)
Regiment. According to his article in the Chicago
Tribune, Wheeler related the words, probably sung as cadence, which began,
“I’se got a gal an’ you got none—L’il’ ‘Liza Jane / House an’ lot in
Baltimo’—L’il ‘Liza Jane.”
The Countess
Ada De Lachau helped popularize
the song by publishing this sheet music in
1916.
Roots in Slavery
Whether or not the African American soldiers drew from Countess Ada De
Lachau, they nevertheless restated her entry to “Li’l Liza Jane.” A phrase—“I’se got a gal an’ you got none”—reinforces the basic situation of the stealing partners dance game. The placement of
Baltimore in many versions of “Li’l Liza Jane” may comment on some of the
song’s evolutionary twists or may offer poetic convenience, seeing as
“Baltimore” can be (and is) end-rhymed with words like “door” and “floor,” both
evidence of house ownership, and both cited as reasons why Liza Jane should
follow her suitor. The Countess Ada De Lachau’s sheet music, despite being
billed as a “Southern Dialect Song,” contains a curious nod to old minstrel songs: “I will
take good care [of] thee,” a line that Nina Simone maintains in her 1960
Newport appearance. Long before Simone wowed the audience at Newport, more than one ex-slave narrative referenced the presence of “Liza Jane” songs in the antebellum South. One such narrative from the Federal Writers’ Project of the Works Progress
Administration confirms that a version of “Li’l Liza Jane” was being sung in
Louisiana before the Civil War. This blogger found the narrative of Lucy
Thurston extremely painful to read, but she recited, at 101 years of age, quite
a few lines of the Liza song she sang: “Hair as [black] as coal in de mi--ine /
Lil Liza Jane / Eyes so large and big and [fine] / Lil Liza Jane / OHooooo Lil Liza,
Lil Liza Jane / OHooooo Lil Liza, Lil Liza Jane.” Indeed, the score by Countess
Ada De Lachau emphasizes a refrain similar to Lucy Thurston’s rendition.
“Ohe—————Liz – a, Li’l Liz – a – Jane,” it reads, with weight placed on the
“Ohe,” which may actually be “Oh” on the one hand, and the first syllable of “Eliza” (“E”) on the other hand. Then it plunges toward the name of the woman who, either lightheartedly
or earnestly, the crooner courts.
Slim Harpo and His
King Bees play “Little Liza Jane” in 1961.
Apologies, Further
Listening, and Listening
“I apologize for the imperfections in this work,” wrote Carl
Sandburg, in the prefatory material to The
American Songbag. “No one else is now, or ever will be, so deeply aware and
so thoroughly and widely conscious of the imperfections in these pages.” Your
humble blogger would like to express the same feelings—obviously on a much
smaller scale—as those of Sandburg, a stately character revered for his writings,
politics, and humility alike. To the contrary, The American Songbag stands out as a work of massive significance. Sandburg’s work, along with a few other sources, led me to a host of electrifying Appalachian-themed recordings of
the song. Look for Uncle Am Stuart “Old Liza Jane” (1924), Fiddlin’ John
Carson, “Goodbye Liza Jane” (1926), Tenneva Ramblers “Miss Liza Poor Gal”
(1928), Bradley Kincaid “Liza up the ‘Simmon Tree” (1928), and Charlie Poole
“Goodbye Liza Jane” (1930), among others already mentioned. Don’t neglect its
second cousin once removed, either. Among others already mentioned, seek Huey
“Piano” Smith and His Rhythm Aces “Little Liza Jane” (1956), Fats Domino “Lil’
Liza Jane” (1959), Art Neville “Little Liza Jane” (1965), Scott Dunbar “Little
Liza Jane” (1970), and the Slim Harpo version, “Little Liza Jane,” that sits
atop this concluding paragraph. What is it about Slim Harpo, man? Recorded
blurry from the public address system at the National Guard Armory on Sage
Avenue in Mobile, Alabama, on July 1st,1961, the King Bees and their leader play
this version Through-The-Roof. By then, more than one hundred years had elapsed
between Lucy Thurston singing “Li’l Liza Jane” in slavery and James “Slim
Harpo” Moore inhabiting the song as part of a raucous celebration. The shouting
and hollering in 1961 ought to learn us a thing or two about the magnificence
of human transformation.
Sources of
Information
Carl Sandburg, The American Songbag (Harcourt, Brace & Company, New York, 1927)
Carl Sandburg, The American Songbag (Harcourt, Brace & Company, New York, 1927)
Nina Simone recording information for Nina at Newport (1960)
Joshua Clegg Caffery, Traditional Music in Coastal Louisiana: The 1934 Lomax Recordings (LSU Press, Baton Rouge, 2013)
Wilson “Stavin’ Chain” Jones recording information for “Little Liza Jane” (1934)
Earl Fuller’s Famous Jazz Band recording information for “Li’l’ Liza Jane—One Step” (1917)
The Hill Billies recording information for “Mountaineer’s Love Song” at Discogs (1926)
Come Out of the Kitchen production information at Internet Broadway Database
Ruth Chatterton entry at Wikipedia
Joshua Clegg Caffery, Traditional Music in Coastal Louisiana: The 1934 Lomax Recordings (LSU Press, Baton Rouge, 2013)
Wilson “Stavin’ Chain” Jones recording information for “Little Liza Jane” (1934)
Earl Fuller’s Famous Jazz Band recording information for “Li’l’ Liza Jane—One Step” (1917)
The Hill Billies recording information for “Mountaineer’s Love Song” at Discogs (1926)
Come Out of the Kitchen production information at Internet Broadway Database
Ruth Chatterton entry at Wikipedia
“Li’l Liza Jane”
(song) entry at Wikipedia
Don Tyler, Music of the First World War (ABC-CLIO, Santa Barbara, Calif., 2016)
Don Tyler, Music of the First World War (ABC-CLIO, Santa Barbara, Calif., 2016)
Harry von Tilzer
sheet music for “Good Bye Eliza Jane” (1903) at Library of Congress
Eddie Fox sheet music
for “Good Bye Liza Jane” (1871) at Library of Congress
Natalie Curtis Burlin, Negro Folk Songs, Book 4 (G. Schirmer, New York, 1918)
Natalie Curtis Burlin entry at Wikipedia
Natalie Curtis Burlin, Negro Folk Songs, Book 4 (G. Schirmer, New York, 1918)
Natalie Curtis Burlin entry at Wikipedia
Countess Ada De Lachau sheet music for “Li’l Liza Jane”
(1916) at Duke University Library
Lucy Thurston Works Progress Administration slave narrative (late
1930s)
Traditional Tune Archive (various pages)
Martin Hawkins, Slim Harpo: Blues King Bee of Baton Rouge
(LSU Press, Baton Rouge, 2016)
Slim Harpo Sting it Then!
(1961) at AllMusic
A few bars of this song were stuck in my head today from a distant memory of childhood sing song. I went down a rabbit hole and found your blog. This is really cool information I always wondered where that song came from!
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting the blog and for your kind words. There is an amazing history -- I think unparalleled -- for the "Liza Jane" family of songs. Check out our documentary film project too -- you can find it at www.lizajanemovie.com Cheers, BA
ReplyDeleteThere are so many songs that spring from problematic roots, so I do my best to check their references before adding anything "traditional" to my repertoire. Thank you for your incredible work.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words. My book (Poor Gal) goes "a mile wide and a mile deep" in case you'd like to know a lot more. I appreciate you visiting my blog and wish you well on your repertoire -- there's a lot to choose from in the "Liza Jane" galaxy.
ReplyDelete