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Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care

21 Apr 99 - 05:06 PM (#72520)
Subject: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: bookwoman69@hotmail.com

What is the origin of this song? Where can I find the lyrics?


21 Apr 99 - 06:21 PM (#72540)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: JVZ

Take a look at the thread "What was Jimmie doing?" (note the ie spelling) last dated Mar-11-99. I started that thread and although it got off the subject a bit, I believe it will answer your questions.

John


21 Apr 99 - 09:07 PM (#72575)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Paul

This song was also know as "The Blue-tail Fly". Big Bill Broonzy recorded it on "Black, Brown and White".


21 Apr 99 - 09:17 PM (#72579)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Joe Offer

Well, I found a couple songs in the database by looking for [crack corn], but I haven't found exactly the lyrics I'm familiar with (the ones they sang on Ding Dong School, dontchaknow....). JIM CRACK CORN (click here) is close. BLUE-TAIL FLY is closer.

Here's the What Was Jimmie Doing? thread.
-Joe Offer-


21 Apr 99 - 09:47 PM (#72586)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Bruce O.

Search the Levy sheet music collection (Mudcat's Links) for copies of 1846. Use 'Blue tail' in the search box.


22 Apr 99 - 11:20 AM (#72729)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Pete Peterson

Some years ago in Sing Out Pete Seeger gave his explanation of the song-- the proper chorus is "GIMME" cracked corn, and I don't care when a slave had done something really rotten, his rations were reduced to cracked corn & nothing more but in this song-- the slave had found a way to cause(??) an accident that resulted in his getting rid of his master, and he is saying "gimme cracked corn, and I don't care" in other words-- "it was worth it" a very subversive song for the 1840s! I would attribute it to Wm. Lloyd Garrison except that he, reportedly, had no sense of humor!


22 Apr 99 - 01:58 PM (#72762)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Bruce O.

Unless Pete Seeger can show his chorus in a copy earlier than the "Jim crack corn' of 1846 in the Levy collection, I won't believe him.


22 Apr 99 - 11:02 PM (#72875)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: MAG (inactive)

I thought "Jimmy" was crows, and now that the big boss man was gone he didn't have to care ... in school, of course, we were taught that he was so broke up by the loss he couldn't chase crows. I doubt it.

Mary Ann (MA)


23 Apr 99 - 09:20 PM (#73034)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Ole Bull

Jim Crack Corn is a bootlegger. Cracking the grain is what you do before you prepare the mash. Hence the references to the bottle. This song has obscure and complex origins. It was associated with the Minstrel groups of the 1840 in several different versions, one attributed to Dan Emmett. Because these varients all popped up about the same time one suspects an earlier, unrecorded source.


23 Apr 99 - 11:35 PM (#73056)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: rich r

The 1846 sheet music published by F D Benteen of Baltimore has on the first page:

The Virginia Minstrels, No. 5 "Jim Crack Corn" or the Blue Tail Fly.

In March of 1843 in Boston four men calling themselves The Virginia Minstrels gave what may have been the first "minstrel" show, a format that gained great popularity. The band quickly became very popular and even toured England. They broke up late in 1844. The band members were Richard Pelham on tambourine, William Whitlock on banjo, Frank Brower on bones and Dan Emmett on fiddle and banjo. The original show included a new song called "Old Dan Tucker". "De Blue Tail Fly" was apparently used by the Virginia Minstrels and the first published version was by Keith's of Boston in 1844 as part of "Old Dan Emmit's Original Banjo Melodies (second series)". Whether Emmett wrote the tune is uincertain, but that tune was decidely different from the 1846 published version for which no composer is listed. Similarly the chorus and the "jim crack corn I don't care..." line are found in the 1846 version but not in the 1844. The 1844 version had 10 verses, the 1846 only 7 verses that were virtually identical to verses 3-9 of the earlier publication. Who added the chorus is not known. Since the Virginia Minstrels disbanded in 1844 it is quite possible they never used the 1846 format and the publisher was just trying to cash in on their popularity while at the same time avoiding the previous copyright. The song became President Lincoln's favorite minstrel tune and he is said to have called it "that buzzing song".

rich r


24 Apr 99 - 02:55 PM (#73183)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Alex

Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn, either.


24 Apr 99 - 03:19 PM (#73187)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Bruce O.

rich r, where do we find the 1844 version?


24 Apr 99 - 09:53 PM (#73229)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: rich r

Ah that is the question. My source only shows the 1846 version and talks about the 1844 sheet. I haven't searched the Levy collection for composer or publisher because I can't read the texts on my computer. Maybe it is there. Note the alternate spelling of "Emmit", it's not a typo like most of my other errors.

rich r


08 May 99 - 08:55 PM (#76816)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Ole Bull

Dan Emmett's earlier and distinct version can be found in Hans Nathan's Dan Emmett and the Rise of Negro Minstrelsy. I'm guessing a library search will turn it up too, for the Virginia Minstrel series have been well collected and preserved.


19 May 99 - 05:15 PM (#79902)
Subject: Looking for lyrics=Jimmie crack corn
From: denny denny.maloy@pss.boeing.com

I am looking for the original lyrics and music of .... Jimmy crack corn...I don't think that is the actual name of the song though. Any help out there?


19 May 99 - 06:39 PM (#79922)
Subject: RE: Looking for lyrics=Jimmie crack corn
From: Jon W.

Here is one version in the database, and here is another. I don't pretend to know which, if either, is more original. We had another discussion of this a couple of months ago and in it were included links to the Lester Levy collection of old sheet music. The versions in that collection are more similar to the second version in the DT than the first, and date back into the mid 1800's.


19 May 99 - 10:53 PM (#79981)
Subject: RE: Looking for lyrics=Jimmie crack corn
From: Chris Seymour

Michael Cooney, a fine folk singer who now lives in Maine, USA, recorded the first version, more or less, on his first album on Folk-Legacy. It is an *excellent* record, and I expect Folk-Legacy's Sandy Paton will tell us soon whether it's available.


20 May 99 - 07:47 AM (#80054)
Subject: RE: Looking for lyrics=Jimmie crack corn
From: Ferrara

Version 2 is the one I learned from my mom, but I feel frustrated that so many fine old southern expressions are incomprehensible to the folk musicians of today :-). Which is to say, I don't think you should sing "give me cracked corn" or "gimmie cracked corn" as the chorus of this song, because it ain't right and it ain't traditional. The phrase is "Jimmy crack corn, and I don't care."

The way Mommy (who grew up in small towns in Georgia) explained it to her little girls is, "Jimmy crack corn and I don't care, the massa's gone away" means "Jimmy has opened a jug of corn whiskey and I am so heart broken at the master's death, I don't even care whether I drink any or not."

Dick, I wish you'd fix that one. I never knew anyone who learned it in the oral tradition who sang anything but "Jimmy Crack Corn."

- Rita Ferrara, who can get a teensy bit curmudgeonly when she has a strong attachment to what she considers the "real words."


30 May 99 - 09:32 PM (#82928)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: JTC111@aol.com

I have an opinion on this song. I believe Jimmy is the name of the slave/narrator and that he's celebrating his master's death by cracking open a jug of corn liquor.


14 Feb 00 - 09:50 AM (#178040)
Subject: Lyr Add: JIMMY CRACK CORN
From: GUEST,Major Jeff White

My father sent me this version of the lyrics he learned as a boy in Tennessee.

JIMMY CRACK CORN

When I was young, I used to wait
Upon ol' massa every day
Passed down the bottle when he got dry
And chased away the blue-tailed fly.

Jimmy crack corn and I don't care
Jimmy crack corn and I don't care
Jimmy crack corn and I don't care
The massa's gone away.

The pony run, he bucked and kicked
He threw ol' massa in the ditch
He died and we all wondered why
The verdict was the blue tailed fly.

They buried him under a 'simmon tree
His epitaph is plain to see
"Beneath this sod I'm forced to lie
A victim of the blue-tailed fly"

Hope this helps


14 Feb 00 - 10:03 AM (#178043)
Subject: RE: Looking for lyrics=Jimmie crack corn
From: Crowhugger

Major Jeff,

That's the one I was raised with, but we always dropped the 'ed' on 'blue-tailed.'

denny denny,

The title is "The Bluetail(ed) Fly" but it looks like everyone knows what you meant, eh?


14 Feb 00 - 02:09 PM (#178157)
Subject: RE: Looking for lyrics=Jimmie crack corn
From: Amos

Ain't no "gimme" in it! At least in any version I've heard.

A


14 Feb 00 - 02:54 PM (#178181)
Subject: RE: Looking for lyrics=Jimmie crack corn
From: Gary T

Rita, I've always wondered what the heck it meant to "crack corn". Thank you so much for the thorough explanation of those lyrics.


26 Jul 00 - 11:20 PM (#265483)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Joe Offer

Levy has seven examples of sheet music for the song-Joe Offer-


27 Jul 00 - 12:19 AM (#265510)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,Gene S.

The Random House Word Maven has something to say about Jimmy Crack Corn.

http://www.randomhouse.com/wotd/index.pperl?date=20000313


27 Jul 00 - 01:47 AM (#265537)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Gary T

This came up a while ago, perhaps on one of the threads linked above. One of our Mudcatters grew up in the South, as did her mother, and she shared with us the explanation her mother gave her, to wit:

Jimmy (presumably a fellow slave to the narrator) has cracked open a jug of corn whiskey in response to the master's death. The narrator, however, is so grief-stricken at the loss of the master that he doesn't even care to have any (whereas normally, it is assumed, he'd jump at the chance).

JIMMY CRACKed open a jug of CORN whiskey, AND I DON'T CARE to have any, because THE MASTER'S GONE AWAY.

Makes sense to me.


13 Apr 06 - 05:00 PM (#1717548)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,no_name's_bytch

and I just thought it was a catchy tune sung by Bugs Bunny. thanks for the knowledge.


13 Apr 06 - 07:08 PM (#1717609)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Joybell

So it's not only me who thinks (actually told by my father back in 1950) that "Jimmy" was the name for the crow. I've long been seeking a link between this song and the old crow-scaring songs of England and North America. I've found some "crow-scaring" songs that have the same idea. ie. ideas like -- Now that the Master's gone you crows can eat all the corn you want. Cheers, Joy


13 Apr 06 - 07:54 PM (#1717641)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,thurg

As a kid, I figured that to "crack corn" must mean to fool around - now that massa was gone, Jimmy could fool around all he wanted, and I don't care. That interpretation has satisfied me for many years ... possibly until now ...


13 Apr 06 - 08:05 PM (#1717652)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Leadfingers

Thread Creep !! Which contemporary song has the line ' I couldn't care less if Jimmy cracked corn ' in it ??


14 Apr 06 - 10:31 AM (#1718077)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,Ken Brock

It's similar to a line in Tom Lehrer's "Folk Song Army", from THAT WAS THE YEAR THAT WAS.


14 Apr 06 - 10:38 AM (#1718090)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Big Tim

If Jimmy cracked corn and I don't care, why did somebody write a song about it?


27 Oct 06 - 01:30 PM (#1870151)
Subject: RE: Origins: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,Sultan5000

I am surprised that you don't know what "Cracked Corn" is. It is corn whiskey. Have you ever heard the term, "Cracker," used in a despairaing context by a black person in reference to a white man? Fairly old school. The Negro Baseball League even had a team called The Atlanta Black Crackers, which is a very cool name IMO.


27 Oct 06 - 04:03 PM (#1870234)
Subject: RE: Origins: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Q (Frank Staplin)

Sultan apparently was suffering the effects of too much corn juice when he related the unrelated in his post.
"Cracker" was defined in print at least as early as 1766 (see Mathews, Dictionary of Americanisms, the quotation in the "Historical Dictionary of American Slang," vol. 1, J. E. Lighter, pp. 503-504:
"I should explain to your Lordship what is meant by Crackers, a name they have got from being great boasters; they are a lawless set of rascals on the frontiers of Virginia, Maryland, the Carolinas, and Georgia, who often hange their places of abode."
In 1772, McWhiney, "Cracker Culture," wrote: "The people I refer to are really what you and I understand by 'Crackers' - persons who have no settled habitation and live by hunting and plundering the industrious Settlers."
In the 20th century, the meaning had changed.
1908, Sullivan, in "Criminal Slang"- Cracker: a poor Southerner.
By 1924, the term had become perjorative in a racial sense- Clarke, "American Negro Stories," They's a thousand shines in Harlem would change places with you in a minute jess f' the honor of killin' a cracker." The term had evolved in Black English (esp. in urban areas of the north) to mean a white racist (or just a white
Southerner).
I will agree that the name "Atlanta Black Crackers," was 'cool,' a nice twist.
By the 1920s in white Georgia, however, the appellation Cracker was on its way to respectability, with some Georgians referring to themselves as Crackers.
In Florida, if the term is used as a racial perjorative, it is a violation under the Florida Hate Crimes Act.

Crack corn- referring to corn whiskey. This possibility is referred to in several early posts to this thread. In the song, it showed up between revisions to the song between 1846-1848 (see post above by rich r) in Minstrel Shows, and also possible could mean cracking wise, but the former is more likely. Richie, in another thread, noted that cracking corn also was a slang term for snoring or sleeping.


06 Dec 06 - 02:39 PM (#1901711)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,Southern Gentleman

This song actually pre-dates its know performance by decades. You have to explore several songs of that genre to fully understand what is really going on. One must also posses a more complete knowledge of the culture of the south, and the relationship between most slaves and their owners.

Contrary to the popular belief of most people today, thanks to movies like roots, and the rantings of those leading up to and even after the civil war, most slaves were in fact treated as valuable assets. This in no way is meant to take away from the fact that slavery is wrong. Nor is this intended to say that 'some' slave owners were not brutal. It is to say that brutality was actually rare. Any businessman fully understands the need to take proper care of equipment, or treat it right. Slaves were mentally considered property, or equipment.

Just as "Follow the Drinking Gourd" was an instruction to follow the Big Dipper north to freedom, this song too told of one method to avoid being tracked by hounds.

Jimmy was in fact a direct reference to the crow. The reference is deliberately intended to mask the instruction in the song. The crow is also black. Cracking Corn was, and in some remote areas of the south, a term for pulling the cork on corn mash whiskey.

Because the massa is gone, the farm is likely to be sold off, if the widow is unable to remarry and keep the farm intact. That meant all the land and its assets would be auctioned at the courthouse. This was a perfect opportunity to slaves to leave, before taking the chance of being sold off to one of the very few, but notoriously cruel plantations. Not to mention the very real possibility of families being separated.

Pouring the pure grain alcohol on ones feet was a sure fire way to cover the scent of your tracks. The narrator is saying, the other slaves, "Blacks - Crows" are running away, but he's too upset to care and leave with them.

This is what I was told by a 98 year old black woman when I was just a kid living in Arkansas. I was fifteen at the time, 41 now, and I was working with my pops. We were remodeling her house under a HUD program. 26 years ago, a white doing something kind and good for a black was still a bit new in the middle south. My respect for her opened her up to tell me many things. I shall never forget Ole Miss Mary Foster.

I trust her version, as she was the daughter of a share cropper, a very common practice after abolition. The very home we were fixing up was the same share cropper's shack her daddy purchased through years of service. Her daddy was a slave as a boy. She was born in 1882.


06 Dec 06 - 02:42 PM (#1901717)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Peace

Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care--but the revenoors do!


08 Dec 06 - 04:51 PM (#1903850)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,Q35

Reading this and several other threads on the subject convinces me of the vastness of "folk etymologies" in Anglo-Saxon culture and their blending with the African-American experience. The canvas is so broad and deep that definitive solutions are seldom possible. "Southern Gentleman" offers a perfect example of their enduring nature and complexity. He gives an iron-clad origin for an improbable theory.


08 Dec 06 - 05:10 PM (#1903865)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Q (Frank Staplin)

Improbable it is. But also typical of stories made up to entertain the wee ones, or, later, to tell to credulous folk life investigators.


08 Dec 06 - 05:32 PM (#1903882)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Joybell

I still believe that one day a link will turn up between this song and the old crow-scaring songs of Southern England.
Cheers, Joy who can't leave this one alone.


20 Aug 07 - 03:06 PM (#2129841)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,onlymyopinion333

I think the term "crack corn" has to do with working in a mill and the process of producing corn flour.

In working on the farm, one of his duties was probably working at the mill as a miller and while working he probably made up this song to pass the time.

As you know, cracked corn is the corn that is discarded... so it doesn't matter. The flour that is kept and used is a fine powder and this is what is used for baking.


20 Aug 07 - 03:44 PM (#2129870)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,TJ in San Diego

Never mind that I, too, have done versions of this song - even harking back to what one Mudcatter referred to as the "Ding Dong School" version. I was unencumbered by the need to fill a conscientiously manifested scholarly void in the lineage of the material prior to performing it. At this point, with due homage and respect to all contributors, I suggest we ALL "crack corn" and enjoy the veritas revealed therein!


20 Aug 07 - 06:10 PM (#2129959)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: SINSULL

From Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Tail_Fly

But before you take it too seriously, note that it cites Mudcat as a source for its info.


20 Aug 07 - 09:22 PM (#2130064)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Rapparee

Well, YOU might not care that Jimmy Crack Corn, but I care. I care a lot. So there.


20 Aug 07 - 09:30 PM (#2130068)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Azizi

Me too.


21 Aug 07 - 07:59 PM (#2130739)
Subject: RE: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Cluin

"Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care"

He doth protest too much, methinks. If he doesn't care, why does he repeat the news--re the cracking of said corn--so much in the song?


19 Oct 10 - 08:11 AM (#3010515)
Subject: RE: Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,Dirty Pierre

If cracking corn refers to what one said is, talking about something as in gossip, it makes sense that there is still plenty of talk about the events of Massa's death.

All through the song the phrase repeats. There is all this talk about something that has been decided. The verdict being it was the Blue Tail Fly's fault that Massa is dead. You can talk all you want and I don't care because I am cleared of this crime.

The song is a celebration of the verdict and say what you will.

With respect to all, mho.

Pete


21 Mar 11 - 05:54 AM (#3118079)
Subject: RE: Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,Rick Maskell

I think the line "Jimmie Crack Corn and I don't care" is a mistake.

So many times I hear "LADETTES" staggering out of pubs and clubs totally legless, and the usual anthem is :-

"gimme one glass of champagne and I'm anybody's"

The equivalent line in this song is :-

"Gimme crack corn and I don't care"

not Jimmie Crack Corn which is meaningless.


21 Mar 11 - 01:19 PM (#3118387)
Subject: RE: Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Max Johnson

I wonder if the original word was 'gimcrack', which is a now little-used word meaning 'junk', - i.e, the corn was of low quality quality?


22 Mar 11 - 01:09 AM (#3118750)
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jimmie Crack Corn
From: mayomick

Peggy Seeger used to sing the chorus with a heavy emphasis on the word "don't" rather than "I" .

Interesting take that Rita's mother had on the song . I always had it down more as a song in praise of the blue tailed fly celebrating the master's fall from the horse.


22 Mar 11 - 01:45 AM (#3118758)
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jimmie Crack Corn
From: MGM·Lion

No-one over the years seems to have observed that Major White's version of 14 Feb 00 leaves out the verse in which the fly bites the pony, which is what causes the bucking and kicking leading to Massa's death ~ which is surely the central point of the story.

~Michael~


08 Mar 18 - 04:11 PM (#3910093)
Subject: RE: Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Lighter

The earliest sheet-music printings (1846-47) have "Jim crack corn!" not "Jimmy," which seems not to appear until the 1940s.

So it's no "mistake" for "gimme," as suggested above.

Cracked corn was used everywhere as chicken feed.

I can't find any instance of "to crack corn" meaning "to gossip" - outside of clever explanations of the meaning of the phrase in the song.

BTW, F. D. Benteen's 1846 tune is rather more like "In and Out the Window" than what was popularized by Burl Ives.

There was another minstrel-era tune that was rather different. Sample:

https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-music&field-keywords=south+carolina+%22blue+tail+fly%22


04 Feb 21 - 03:02 PM (#4091490)
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jimmie Crack Corn
From: EBarnacle

This is a rather convoluted approach but, here goes. Beelzebub literally translates to "Lord of the Flies." The mention of the Devil in the some versions of the song raises the possibility that the person who wrote the song was literate enough to know of the translation.
If this theory is correct, as with many other slave and pseudo-slave songs, there is the underlying message of "Be damned to ol' Massa."


05 Feb 21 - 05:31 AM (#4091563)
Subject: RE: Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: GUEST,Sean O'Shea

My interpretation has always been that Jimmy Crack is the whip wielding overseer and 'corn'
is a mishearing of 'gone'
Jimmy Crack is gone and I don't care, the masters gone away.


05 Feb 21 - 08:40 AM (#4091582)
Subject: RE: Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Steve Gardham

Nathan gives further info on the 1844 version of De Blue tail Fly. It appeared in 'Old Dan Emmett's Original Banjo Melodies, Second Series, 1844'. '. Neither composer or author is mentioned. The edition is dated 1844 on the title page, and by mistake, 1846 on the inside'.

There is no 'Jimmy Crack Corn' chorus and the only refrain, a single line, runs 'An scratch 'im wid a brier too'. There are 10 stanzas. I can't read music but the tune doesn't appear to be the well-known 'In and out the windows' version. The tune is the same for all 4 lines.


05 Feb 21 - 09:29 AM (#4091592)
Subject: RE: Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Steve Gardham

We need to remember that minstrel performers like Rice, Emmett, Brower, Whitlock and co. were all performing as solo and duo acts quite a few years before the Virginia Minstrels set up the successful troupes in 1843. They were already picking up tunes, choruses, the language, body language (albeit exaggerated and burlesqued) and typical phrases from African-Americans, but the verses were largely new and their own invention.


05 Feb 21 - 10:49 AM (#4091607)
Subject: RE: Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Lighter

Steve, the "brier" tune is quite unusual.

A first-rate rendition is here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OriDf7Y4e7Q


05 Feb 21 - 10:57 AM (#4091609)
Subject: RE: Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Lighter

From my post last year to another thread:

This may be the earliest appearance of a song called "The Blue Tail'd Fly" - the familiar one, presumably:

Daily Republican Banner (Nashville) (Nov. 20, 1838), p. 3:

“On Tuesday Evening, Nov. 20 / will be presented / Mr. M. G. Lewis’ celebrated tragedy in 5 acts, entitled

                                        ADELGITHA
                            Or, The Fruits of a Single Error
                                                      -----------------------
Song, The Blue Tail’d Fly…….by Master Austin.”

The next mention is more than seven years later, from the Daily National Republic (Buffalo, N.Y.) (Feb. 6, 1846), p. 2:

“George J----, the pride of the Podunk bar, can…sing ‘The Blue tail fly.’”

And the earliest newspaper text, from the Yazoo City (Miss.) Whig (Nov. 13, 1846), p. 1:

“Blue Tailed Flies—We have always had an aversion to ‘blue tailed flies,’ but by request of a musical friend, we let the following loose among our readers:...

I’ve sung about my long tail blue,
So often you want something new,
With your desire I'll now comply;
My song is about dat blue tail fly.
Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care,
Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care,
Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care.
Ole massa gone from home.

Dar’s many a kind ob dese here tings,
From different sort ob insects springs,
Some hatch in spring and some in July,
But August brings dat blue tail fly.
    Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care, &c.

If you should go in de summer time,
To Carolina’s sultry clime,
If in de shade you chance to lie,
You’ll soon find out dat Blue tail Fly.
Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care, &c.

When I was young I used to wait,
On massa table and hand de plate;
And pass de bottle when he dry,
And brush away dat Blue tail Fly.
Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care, &c.

Arter dinner massa sleep,
He make dis nigga wigil keep,
And when he go to shut his eye,
He tell me watch dat Blue tail Fly.
Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care, &c.

Ole massa ride in de arter noon,
I follow wid de hickory broom;
De poney [sic] being berry shy,
When bitten by dat Blue tail Fly.
Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care, &c.

Ole massa ride around de farm,
De flies so numerous did swarm,
One bit de pony on de thigh,
De debil take dat Blue tail Fly.
Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care, &c.

De pony run, he jump, he pitch,
He tumbled massa in de ditch;
He was dead and de jury wondered why,
De verdict was de Blue tail Fly.
Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care, &c.

Dey laid him beneath the simmon tree;
His epitaph is dere, to see,
Beneath dis stone inforced to lie,
All by de means ob de Blue tail Fly.
Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care, &c.

Ole massa's dead, oh let him rest,
Dey say all tings are for de best,
I nebber shall forget until I die,
Ole massa and dat Blue tail Fly.
Oh, Jim Crack Corn don't care, &c.

Quite the same text, ”Blue Tail Fly,” except for some additional dialect spellings, appears in The (Charleston, S.C.) Courier (July 19, 1853), p. 4, but there the “Jim Crack Corn” refrain is replaced by “Oh. Mr. Booker, do Mr. Booker, wake up Katy,/ Or I’ll scratch you with a briar.”


05 Feb 21 - 02:35 PM (#4091653)
Subject: RE: Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Steve Gardham

Hi Jon,
Great stuff! That tune reminds me of 'Old Joe Clark' but it might be partly because of the style of playing. So 1838 in a play in Nashville it is 'Tail'd' rather than 'Tail'. Pity we don't have that text yet.

Couple of points about that 1846 Yazoo text. It has the look of a new version and 'Jim Crack Corn' all has capitals implying possibly that it's a one-off pseudonym/nick-name like 'Jim Crow'. Also the lack of 'and I' presents the same possibility. Further it adds sense, saying this Jim Crack Corn didn't care about what happened to his master.


05 Feb 21 - 04:30 PM (#4091662)
Subject: RE: Origin: Jimmy Crack Corn and I Don't Care
From: Lighter

Steve, I like your interpretation of capitalized "Jim Crack Corn."

Check out some of the other 2nd S.C String Band's music. They do a bang-up job on almost everything. No one could sound too much more enthusiastic or "authentic."