I'm walkin' through the summer nights the jukebox playing low yesterday everything was goin' too fast Today it's movin' too slow
I got no place left to turn I got nothin' left to burn
Don't know if I saw you if I would kiss you or kill you It probably wouldn't matter to you anyhow You left me standing in the doorway cryin' I got nothin' to go back to now.
The light in this place is so bad Makin' me sick in the head All the laughter is just makin' me sad The stars have turned cherry red I'm strummin' on my gay guitar Smokin' a cheap cigar The ghost of our old love has not gone away Don't look it like it will anytime soon You left me standin' in the doorway cryin' Under the midnight moon.
Maybe they'll get me and maybe they won't But not tonight and it won't be here There are things I could say, but I don't I know the mercy of God must be near I been ridin a midnight train 1) Got ice water in my veins I would be crazy if I took you back It would go up against every rule You left me standin' in the doorway cryin' Sufferin' like a fool.
When the last rays of daylight go down Buddy you'll roll no more 2) I can hear the church bells ringin' in the yard I wonder who they're ringin' for I know I can't win But my heart just won't give in Last night I danced with a stranger But she just reminded me you were the one You left me standin' in the doorway cryin' In the dark land of the sun.
I eat when I'm hungry drink when I'm dry 3) And live my life on the square And even if the flesh falls off of my face I know someone will be there to care It always means so much Even the softest touch I see nothing to be gained by any explanation There's no words that need to be said You left me standin' in the doorway cryin' Blues wrapped around my head.
1) From Jesse Anderson: I saw an album in a music store today by Doc Watson called "Riding the Midnight Train." I didn't buy it, but it probably refers to a lyric... Jesse
2) From Manfred Helfert:
Peter Stone Brown <peterb@erols.com> wrote: >catherine yronwode wrote: > >> PHyatt1962 wrote: > > > > From the Smithsonian Folkways boxset: > > > > "Buddy, Won't You Roll Down the Line" by Uncle Dave Macon, > > recorded in 1930 > > > > "...buddy, roll down line, > > yonder comes my darling, coming down line..." > >> Also, as has been mentioned here earlier, there is an oft-recorded white >> Kentucky coal-miner's song "Nine Pound Hammer" (not to be completely >> confused with, but somewhat similar to, the black railroad worker's song >> "Take This Hmmer") > >> Roll on, buddy, don't you roll so slow >> How can i roll, when the wheels won't go? > >Sorry Catherine, >But "Buddy Won't You Roll Down The Line" is a completely different song than >"Nine Pound Hammer." >--Peter Maybe I can shed a little light on all these songs which became so thoroughly mixed up in these previous posts (most of the factual info is from Archie Green, Only A Miner, while most of the evaluations/conclusions are mine) : 1) The "black" song, earliest recorded version (sung for noted folksong collector Robert Winslow Gordon by William H. Stevens at Biltmore – a suburb of Asheville, NC, on Nov. 26, 1925) as "Convict Song" (about black prisoners used as "involuntary scabs" in coal mines against orgainzed labor – presumably based on the Coal Creek troubles 1876-'77): CHORUS: O buddy, won't yer roll down the line, Hop down, skip down, Well, yonder comes my darlin' Rollin' down the line. IMO, this songs is also lyrically and structurally related to other prison songs like "Midnight Special." Other variants by Watts and Wilson (as "Chain Gang Special"), Paramount 3019, Mar 1927 (black artists, song localized to Belmont, NC, area, about convicts on a chain gang "shoveling sand"): CHORUS: Hey, nigger won't you roll down the line, Roll down the line. Yonder comes my darling, roll down the line, Keep a-rolling – won't you roll down the line, Roll on – won't you roll down the line. Yonder comes my darling, roll down the line, Again, structural and lyrical similarities to the "Midnight Special" song family. A rather abridged "white" version (references to forced labor basically left out – with the exception of references to a "captain" and the "mouth of the hole" – , modeled slightly after "Handsome Molly"/"Shady Grove" song families) was recorded by the Allen Brothers (Lee and Austin Allen) in Nov 1930 as "Roll Down The Line" (Victor 23551) and again in 1934 as "Hey Buddy, Won't You Roll Down The Line" (Vocalion 02818). CHORUS (1931 version): Hey Buddy, won't you roll down the line, Roll down the line. Hey, yonder comes my darling, roll down the line, Oh, roll down the line, Roll down the line. Hey, yonder comes my darling, roll down the line, 2) A related "black/white" song family – clearly about the Coal Creek troubles -- one version "Lone Rock Song" collected by James Dombrowski from "Uncle Jesse" James in 1937, who stated that he had learned the song as a young miner from black convicts in Tracy City, Grundy County, TN – far more elaborate than the three previous variants (11 stanzas) with clear and explicit references to convict coal mining. CHORUS: Buddy won't you roll down the mountain Buddy won't you roll down the line, Yonder come my darlin' Comin' down the line. The most widely circulated version: Uncle Dave Macon's version (with Sam McGee), "Buddy Won't You Roll Down The Line", recorded Jul 25, 1928 (Brunswick 292) and reissued on Harry Smith's "Anthology of American Folk Music"; also recorded by Pete Seeger ("American Industrial Ballads", Folkways), The Gateway Singers ("At the Hungry I", Decca), The Kingston Trio ("String Along", Capitol), and Hedy West ("Serves 'Em Fine", Fontana), to name but a few. Again explicit references to the Coal Creek labor struggles and the use of convict miners "against free labor stout" – altogether a rather "humorous" piece (consistent with Uncle Dave Macon's image) than the "Lone Rock Song". CHORUS: Oh, Buddy, won't you roll down the line? Buddy, won't you roll down the line? Yonder comes my darling, coming down the line. Buddy, won't you roll down the line? Buddy, won't you roll down the line? Yonder comes my darling, coming down the line. Another possibly related variant was collected by John and Alan Lomax, from unnamed black prisoners, in Memphis, TN, Jul 1933. The song itself is basically the British broadside "The Sailor Boy" (aka "Deep Blue Sea", "My Willie's On the Dark Blue Sea"), with a chorus basically identical to that of the two previous versions and a rather "incongruous" reference to a "captain" who lost 90 of his 100 men (convicts?) "when he got to Nashville" – basically the only reference tying this song in with the Coal Creek labor struggles. Further "white" variants (under the title "Ole Humpy"), clearly related to or derived from the "Lone Rock Song" variant, were collected by Archie Green in the 1960s. 3) The "Nine Pound Hammer" song family – NOT related to the two previous song families. First variant in print: Robert Winslow Gordon, Adventure (1924): one of six fragments heard in southern railroad and other construction camps by Charles Miller of Waycross, GA: And it's roll on, buddy, What makes you roll so slow? Your buddy is almost broke Down on the K.N.O. Earliest commercial recording with the title "Nine Pound Hammer": Al Hopkins and His Buckle Busters, May 1927 (Brunswick 177): CHORUS: Nine pound hammer, just a little too heavy, Baby, for my size, baby, for my size. Roll on buddy, don't you roll so slow, Baby, how can I roll when my wheel won't go? According to Charles Bowman, an original member of the "Buckle Busters" (interviewed by Archie Green, 1961), he learned parts of the song from black railroad construction crews near Johnson City, TN, most likely between 1903 and 1905 when the C C & O reached his community. The song itself is related to the "John Henry" song family ("Nine pound hammer killed John Henry"), the tune (according to Green) is related to that of "Swannanoa Town" (as collected by Cecil Sharp in 1916). Several other recordings by Grayson & Whitter (Victor 40105, 1928), The Monroe Brothers (1936), and others. Merle Travis' famous version (recorded Aug 8, 1946) is derived from the Buckle Buster's variant via "Texas Ruby" Owens, with whom Merle had worked before World War II on WLW, Cincinnati, OH. He further confuses the matter, because he puts this original "railroad" song into a coal mining setting (possibly because of – subconscious -- recollections of "another" coal mining song of the #1 or #2 variety?). He changed the chorus to read: Roll on buddy, don't you roll so slow, How can I roll when the wheels don't go? Roll on buddy, pull a load of coal, How can I pull when the wheels won't go? and introduced the song: "Up in East Kentucky around Harlan and Perry County, the coal miner sings a little song called the 'Nine Pound Hammer.'... Based on this intro, many people assumed Merle Travis being from "around Harlan and Hazard" (he was from Ebenezer, KY, about 200 miles away), so that he himself had to say the following about "Nine Pound Hammer" in later years: "It's strange that folks would get mixed up about the old hammer song. I've sung about Heaven all my life, and nobody ever thought I was from there." Anyhow – this has been my rather condensed analysis of the different song families containing "buddy" and "roll" – I hope that nobody's more confused than before. Take care -- Manfred Bob Dylan Musical Roots Site at http://www.yi.com/home/HelfertManfred/ Doc Watson/Woody Guthrie Site at http://www.geocities.com/Nashville/3448/ American History in Song Site at http://www.fortunecity.com/tinpan/parton/2/
3) Finally I get the chance to add a quotation myself. The line
I eat when I’m hungry, I drink when I’m dry
could be “stolen” from Moonshine Blues (sung, i.a., on the second Gaslight tape), where it goes:
I eat when I’m hungry, I shine when I’m dry
Or, as donaghcronin@unison.ie points out, “from a song by the clancy brothers which goes
I’ll eat when I’m hungry I’ll drink when I’m dry
and if whisky doesn’t kill me, I’ll live till I die
The Clancy Brothers were also the source of the tune for With God on our Side. The original song was The patriot game written by dominic behan, brother of brendan.”