Wednesday, April 20, 2022

I DON’T LOVE NOBODY: EARL JOHNSON & HIS DIXIE ENTERTAINERS STRIKE A DEFIANT TONE ON ‘AMOUR’ BUT NOT WITHOUT SWINGING THE PARTY MAAAAADLY.

 


Our deep dive into historical old-time fiddle music continues. Behold one Earl Johnson, fiddler, and his walloping tune “I Don’t Love Nobody” from 1927. Our musicology team has been working overtime, and below, Dear Reader, you can find biographical details, beguiling analyses, full lyrics, and session details, amidst our usual incitements to drink and dance. We suggest that you have a few sips of swamp gas (aka moonshine), turn up the volume, and yes: jump around.

We’re talking some greasy, rowdy, electric, filthy fiddling. One imagines the strings of Johnson’s instrument fraying after every “hoedown.” However it goes, it goes madly. Whoever sings the high falsetto novelty stuff in the chorus — well, that fellow will understand your loneliness, Pilgrim, and he’ll make you feel A-okay about the lack of love in your life. It’s a standoff, basically. “I don’t love nobody, nobody loves me.” Might as well hop in concert to the bedlam. Might as well laugh and cry all at once. “Boop” goes the cap on the moonshine.

Johnson was born into a musical family, in 1886, near Atlanta. Early on and throughout his career, he played with luminary Georgia musician Fiddlin’ John Carson. [Nota bene: It is possible that Johnson is ‘second fiddle’ on Carson’s version of “Goodbye Liza Jane,” a tune that is part of the “Liza Jane
” family of songs.] A virtuosic performer himself, Johnson became state fiddle champion (in Georgia) in 1926, a year before he cut this side for OKeh Records. In all, he recorded more than 50 tunes for a variety of labels, toured broadly, and was eventually enshrined in the Atlanta Country Music Hall of Fame.


Earl Johnson

Like many musicians of his era, including Carson and African American guitar player Peg Leg Howell, Johnson repurposed songs that had been mainstays of burnt cork minstrelsy. “I Don’t Love Nobody” was written by minstrel performer Lew Sully and dates to at least 1896, if not earlier. The lyrics of the original Sully version are horrendously racist, while, mercifully, the Johnson version is much milder, almost to the point of being a completely different song: in fact, the ‘speaker’ of Johnson’s song is probably meant to be white and not a white person pretending to be Black. Nevertheless, the singing style of Johnson and his bandmates may blend old-time and minstrel traditions. It is important to acknowledge this type of difficult archaeology, even as we can appreciate Johnson’s fiddling skills and the upbeat rowdiness of the music.

Here, now, we offer instructions on how to proceed. Scroll up to the top of the page and click “play” on the video. That would be number one, and after that — well — allow yourself to be swung maaaaadly.

Lyrics, session details, and sources of information follow. Enjoy.

lyrics:

I Don’t Love Nobody (1927)
Earl Johnson & His Dixie Entertainers


Met Miss Martha Johnson down at a colored ball
Tried her best to shake me, that wouldn’t work at all
She told me her troubles, she asked me for a dime
G’wan now honey, you ain’t no gal of mine

Chorus:
I don’t love nobody, nobody loves me
You’re after all my money, you don’t care for me
Gonna live single, always be free
I don’t love nobody, nobody loves me

Went out with [a matron]* down on Peter Street
Met some tall li’l lady, she smiled at me so [mean]**
She told me she loved me, and marry me to git away
G’wan now honey, you ain’t gonna talk with me

Chorus

Down in Alabama, settled down for life
Met a girl named Dinah, I choosed her for my wife
See that gal every Sunday, and I asked her to marry away
See that gal on Monday, and this is what she said:

Chorus

Met Miss Martha Johnson down at a colored ball
Tried her best to shake me, that wouldn’t work at all
She told me her troubles, she asked me for a dime
G’wan now honey, you ain’t no gal of mine

Chorus


Notes:
*Second verse, first line: “matron” is what we hear. Other possibilities include “Mabel” or some half-slurred version of “promenading”
**Second verse, second line: “mean” is what we hear. Another possibility might be a half-slurred version of “sweet”


session details:

Earl Johnson & His Dixie Entertainers. Earl Johnson, fiddle; Byrd Moore, guitar and lead vocal; Emmett Bankston, banjo; Ensemble chorus; Other musicians, if any, unknown. Recorded March 23, 1927 in Atlanta, Ga. Released as OKeh 45101.

 
sources of information:

--Daniel, Wayne W. Pickin’ on Peachtree: A History of Country Music in Atlanta, Georgia. University of Illinois Press, 1990
--Discography of American Historical Recordings page for “I Don’t Love Nobody”
--Earl Johnson biography at AllMusic Guide
--Sully, Lew. “I Don’t Love Nobody.” Howley, Haviland & Co. (New York: 1896). This burnt cork minstrelsy sheet music publication can be accessed at its Library of Congress page; be forewarned that the content is offensive


MY BEST MATE FROM THE ANIMAL KINGDOM: A WILD RED FOX PHOTO ESSAY








By now, many of you know my best mate from the animal kingdom. These photos were all taken in March and April 2022, about 24 to 30 months after I first met this wild red fox. Many thanks again to Phyllis Rosenzweig at Primary Writing Books, who published a book of poetry and photography about this unlikely friendship. Lo, my fox friend has given birth to three or four fluffy kits. They bounce around happily in the undergrowth and shrubberies. My stunning rusty red friend, pictured above, took some time to visit with me, before returning to motherly duties. A key to the photos follows.

1. Classic blogger / fox eye contact.
2. Drinking water from a puddle.
3. Checking on the kits.
4. A good looking fox. I melt every time.
5. Whoa! What was that?
6. Foxy activities.
7. The whole fox. What a tail!
8. Healthy, alert, jokester, rusty red, fierceness.