zaterdag 29 augustus 2015

Rising Sun Blues (1934) / Rounder's Luck (1935) / House Of The Rising Sun (1941) / In New Orleans (1944) / Le Pénitencier (1964)


"The House of the Rising Sun" is a traditional folk song, sometimes called "Rising Sun Blues". It tells of a life gone wrong in New Orleans; many versions also urge a sibling to avoid the same fate. The most successful commercial version, recorded in 1964 by the English rock group The Animals, was a number one hit.

Like many classic folk ballads, the authorship of "The House of the Rising Sun" is uncertain. Musicologists say that it is based on the tradition of broadside ballads such as The Unfortunate Rake of the 18th century, and that English emigrants took the song to America where it was adapted to its later New Orleans setting. But that's only a theory. " Unfortunate Rake" only bears a thematical resemblance to "House Of The Rising Sun".
The house the song refers to is in most cases unmistakeably a whorehouse, but the original house, the one all these Houses Of The Rising Sun where named after, could also have been a prison, as the ball & chain-verse at the end of most song versions implies.
There is also a mention of a house-like pub called the "Rising Sun" in the classic Black Beauty published in 1877, set in London, England, which may have influenced the title.





In February or March 1925 William S Burroughs send a song, he had learned from a "southerner", to Robert Winslow Gordon, who included it in a 1925 edition of his Adventure magazine column "Old Songs That Men Have Sung". The lyrics are almost identical to the lyrics of the 1964 Animals hit version. Except for the fact that in the course of time the "rounder" became a "rambler" and finally a "gambler".





The oldest known existing recording of the song is by Appalachian artists Clarence Ashley and Gwen Foster and was made in 1933.
Ashley said he had learned it from his grandfather, Enoch Ashley.

(o) Ashley and Foster (1933) (as "Rising Sun Blues")
Gwen Foster, h/g; Thomas C. Ashley, g/v.
Recorded September 6, 1933 in New York
Matrix 13960-1
Released on Vocalion 02576



Lyrics:
There are a house in New Orleans
They call the Rising Sun
Where many poor boys to destruction has gone
And me, oh God, are one

Just fill a glass up to the brim
Let the drinks go merrily around
We'll drink to the life of a rounder, poor boy
Who goes from town to town

All in this world does a rambler want
Is a suitcase and a trunk
The only time he's satisfied
Is when he's on a drunk

Now boys don't believe what a young girl tells you
Let her eyes be blue or brown
Unless she's on some scaffold high
Sayin' "Boys, I can't come down"

I'm going there to New Orleans
For my race is almost run
To spend the rest of my wicked life
Beneath the rising sun

Listen here:




In 1935 Homer Callahan (a member of the Callahan Brothers) recorded "Rounder's Luck" as a solo-effort.
Calling the song “Rounder's Luck” wasn't the Callahans' idea. Homer doesn't remember its original title; though he ended up calling it “House of the Rising Sun" himself, he's not sure if he picked that up after it became popular. As for “Rounder's Luck,” says Callahan, “I have no idea why. I didn't like that title too much. But they didn't ask me.” Callahan figures the longer title wouldn't do commercially. In that context, he says, house was a loaded term that implied the word whore preceded it. This was, remember, the year that Hollywood began enforcing the Hays Code, making movies far tamer than they had been. The two other known versions recorded commercially in the 1930s—by Ashley & Foster and Roy Acuff—reinforce this theory. They were called, respectively, “The Rising Sun Blues” and “Rising Sun” on their labels.


(c) Homer Callahan (1935)  (as "Rounder's Luck")
Homer Callahan, v/y; acc. own g;
Recorded April 11, 1935 in New York
Matrix 17289-2
Released on Perfect 6-02-59 and Melotone 6-02-59



Lyrics:
The only thing that a rounder wants
Is a suitcase and a trunk
And the only time he's satisfied
Is when he's all night drunk

Fill up those glasses up to the brim
Let the drinks go merry round
We'll drink to the health of rounders, poor boy
Who hobos from town to town

My mother she's a seamstress
She cuts and sews on jeans
My daddy he's a gambling man
He gambles in New Orleans

Oh, mama, mama, how could you sew
And treat that rounder so cold?
Rather be that rounder boy with pride
Than wear your crown of gold

There's a place down in New Orleans
That's called "The Rising Sun"
Where many a poor boy to destruction has gone
And me, oh, Lord, for one

Oh, tell my youngest brother
Not to do the things I have done
And to shun that place down in New Orleans
That's called "The Rising Sun"

I'm going back to New Orleans
My race is almost run
Gonna spend the rest of my weeping days
Beneath that rising sun

Listen here:




The song might have been lost to obscurity had it not been collected by folklorist Alan Lomax, who, along with his father, was a curator of the Archive of American Folk Song for the Library of Congress. On an expedition with his wife to eastern Kentucky, Lomax set up his recording equipment in Middlesborough, Kentucky in the house of a singer and activist called Tilman Cadle.
On September 15, 1937 he recorded a performance by Georgia Turner, the 16 year-old daughter of a local miner. He called it "The Rising Sun Blues".



(c) Georgia Turner (1937)  (as "The Rising Sun Blues")
Recorded September 15, 1937 in Middlesborough, Kentucky
AFS Number 1404A1





Or here:




Lomax later recorded a different version sung by Bert Martin and a third sung by Daw Henson, also from Kentucky.

(c) Bert Martin (October 1937)  (as "The Rising Sun Blues")
Recorded October 9, 1937 in Horse Creek, Kentucky
AFS Number 1496B2






(c) Daw Henson (October 1937)  (as "Rising Sun Blues")
Recorded October 9, 1937 in Billy's Branch, Kentucky
AFS Number 1508B2







In his 1941 songbook Our Singing Country, Lomax credits the lyrics to Turner, with reference to Martin's version. According to his later writing, the melody bears similarities to the traditional English ballad "Matty Groves.". To me that's also only a theory.


A page from "Our Singing Country" (1941)






Roy Acuff, who recorded the song in 1938, may have learned the song from Clarence Ashley, with whom he once worked in his medicine shows.

(c) Roy Acuff & His Smoky Mountain Boys (1938) (as "The Risng Sun")
Roy Acuff, v; Clell Summey, sg; Jess Easterday, g/sb; Red Jones, g/sb; Bob Wright, g.
Recorded November 3, 1938 in Columbia, SC.
Released on Vocalion/Okeh 04909



Listen here:




In 1941 the Almanac Singers was the first group to record a version with the more common title "House Of The Rising Sun".

(c) Almanac Singers (1941)  (as "House of the Rising Sun")
Woody Guthrie, harmonica/leadvocal; Peter Hawes, guitar; Pete Seeger, banjo.
Recorded July 7, 1941 at Reeves Sound Studios, New York. Producer: Alan Lomax.
Released as record # 5020B on the General-label as a three 78 rpm record set titled "SOD-BUSTER BALLADS"  (General Album G-21)






Listen here:



Or here:




(c) Josh White (1944) (as "House Of The Rising Sun")
Recorded 1941/1942 in New York City
Released in 1944 as disc #2 (K 542-B) of the 3 part 78 RPM album "Strange Fruit" (Keynote album # K-125)






Or here:





Lonnie Donegan, who launched the British skiffle craze in the 1950s - which was the sound of the early Beatles, said in a 1999 interview with Jennifer Rodger of The Independent, "Josh White's "House of the Rising Sun" inspired me to go into music. This was the first American folk song I heard and the experience kicked off my career, started me singing American blues and folk. I believe Josh started the British rock scene."


Libby Holman, with guitar accompaniment by Josh White, also  recorded a version with the familiar title "House Of The Rising Sun".
Libby and George recorded their version in New York on March 23, 1942.
It was released on the Decca-label (# 18306) and was part of the 3 part 78 RPM album "Blues Till Dawn"

(c) Libby Holman (1942) (as "House Of The Risin' Sun"




Listen here:







Leadbelly recorded two versions in 1944 as "In New Orleans" and in 1948 as "House Of The Rising Sun"

(c) Leadbelly (1944) (as "In New Orleans")
Recorded in New York City, February 17, 1944
Released in 1944 on Musicraft 312 on the B-side of  "(Black Gal) Where Did You Sleep Last Night".

Re-released in 1954 on Allegro Elite 4027:


And also on Royale 18131:


The melody on this version is a little bit different from the common version.

Listen here:





(c) Leadbelly (1948) (as "House Of The Rising Sun")
Recorded in New York City, october 1948.
Released in 1953 on the Folkways album "The Last Sessions Vol 2" (Folkways FP 242)


Listen here:




In 1944 Woody Guthrie re-recorded "HOTRS" as a solo effort.

(c) Woody Guthrie (1944)  (as "House of the Rising Sun")
Recorded April 25, 1944 in New York City for Moses Asch
Matrix MA96
Released in 1962 on the Folkways album "Woody Guthrie sings Folk Songs" (Folkways FA 2483), maybe as an answer to Bob Dylan's 1962 debut-album which contained "House of the Rising Sun".



Listen here:




(c) Hally Wood (1953) (as "House Of The Rising Sun")
Hally Wood got it from the Alan Lomax field recording by Georgia Turner.
Released in November 1953 on the album "O' Lovely Appearance of Death" (Elektra EKL-10)
Production: Jac Holzman and Kenneth S Goldstein.
10-inch LP. Credited to the Elektra-Stratford Record Corp.
Lawless lists this as being titled 'American Folksongs of Sadness and Melancholy', which is the title on the label but the subtitle on the sleeve.




Listen here:




(c) Pete Seeger (1958) (as "House Of The Rising Sun")
Released on the album "American Favorite Ballads Vol 2" (Folkways FA 2321)


Seeger probably was the first one to sing about a gambler instead of a rounder or rambler.

Listen here:



Or here:




As I said earlier in this post Lonnie Donegan was greatly influenced by Josh White, as you also can hear in his version of HOTRS.

(c) Lonnie Donegan (1959) (as "House Of The Rising Sun")


Listen here:




(c) Miriam Makeba (1960) (as "House Of The Rising Sun")



Listen here:




(c) Joan Baez (1960) (as "House Of The Rising Sun")
Joan Baez recorded the song on her debut album



Listen here:




(c) Bob Dylan (1962) (as "House Of The Risin' Sun")
In late 1961, Bob Dylan recorded the song for his eponymous debut album released in March 1962. There is no songwriting credit, but the liner notes indicate that Dylan learned his version of the song from Dave Van Ronk. Literally it says: "House of the Risin' Sun" is a traditional lament of a New Orleans woman driven into prostitution by poverty. Dylan learned the song from the singing of Dave Van Ronk: "I'd always known 'Risin' Sun' but never really knew I knew it until I heard Dave sing it."



Listen here:



In an interview on the documentary "No Direction Home", Van Ronk said that he was intending to record the song, and that Dylan copied his version. He recorded it soon thereafter on "Just Dave Van Ronk".
"I had learned it sometime in the 1950s, from a recording by Hally Wood, the Texas singer and collector, who had got it from an Alan Lomax field recording by a Kentucky woman named Georgia Turner. I put a different spin on it by altering the chords and using a bass line that descended in half steps—a common enough progression in jazz, but unusual among folksingers. By the early 1960s, the song had become one of my signature pieces, and I could hardly get off the stage without doing it".
(Dave Van Ronk)

Listen here:




An interview with Eric Burdon revealed that he first heard the song back in 1959 in a club in Newcastle, England, where it was sung by a Northumbrian folk singer called Johnny Handle .
Eric Burdon also said once that the Animals heard Josh White perform the song in Europe and decided to cover it.
The Animals were on tour with Chuck Berry and chose it because they wanted something distinctive to sing.
This interview denies assertions that the inspiration for their arrangement came from Bob Dylan. The band enjoyed a huge hit with the song, much to Dylan's chagrin when his version was referred to as a cover—the irony of which was not lost on Van Ronk, who went on record as saying that the whole issue was a "tempest in a teapot", and that Dylan stopped playing the song after The Animals' hit because fans accused Dylan of plagiarism. Dylan has said he first heard The Animals' version on his car radio and "jumped out of his car seat" because he liked it so much.
So in December of 1964 Dylan's producer, Tom Wilson, took an alternate take of Dylan's own original 1961 recording session of "Rising Sun" and overdubbed an electric studio band onto it, later included on the Highway 61 Interactive CD-ROM (released in 1995).

Listen here:




So it's a bit unclear where The Animals inspiration came from.
3 possible sources are mentioned: Johnny Handle, Josh White and Bob Dylan.
But in my opinion a 4th source is possible too.
In April 1961 (so even before Dylan's version) Nina Simone recorded a live-version in New York at the Village Gate (the Animals had recorded 2 other songs that were recorded by Nina Simone before: "Don't let me be misunderstood" and "I put a spell on you").

(c) Nina Simone (1962) (as "House Of The Rising Sun"



Listen here:



And here's the version that made the song world famous in 1964:
The Animals hit the Top of the Charts in the UK and then the USA.
The arranging credit went only to Alan Price. According to Burdon, this was simply because there was insufficient room to name all five band members on the record label, and Alan Price's name was first alphabetically. However, this meant that only Price received songwriter's royalties for the hit, a fact that has caused bitterness ever since, especially with Hilton Valentine, who was responsible for the famous electric guitar A minor chord arpeggio, which starts "House of the Rising Sun".

(c) The Animals (1964) (as "House Of The Rising Sun")



Listen here:





(c) Johnny Hallyday (1964) ( as "Le Pénitencier")
Released in October in 1964 "Le Pénitencier" was a French #1 Hit


Listen here to Johnny:




Even the Beatles sang it at the Let It Be sessions on January 9, 1969.

(c) The Beatles (1969) (as "House Of The Rising Sun")


Listen here:




Wyclef Jean used the melody (especially the organ-part) of HOTRS in "Sang Fezi" (1997)

(c) Wyclef Jean (1997) (as "Sang Fezi")



Listen here:





Many many more versions of HOTRS are here:





Alger "Texas" Alexander's "The Risin' Sun" recorded in 1928, is sometimes mentioned as the first recording, but is a completely different song.



Listen here:




And in 1927 Iva Smith recorded "Rising Sun Blues", which is also a different song



Listen here:




Also different versions are
Darby and Tarlton's "Rising Sun Blues" (1930) (on the Columbia-label) and
King David's Jug Band's "Rising Sun Blues" (1930) (on the Okeh-label).




vrijdag 21 augustus 2015

Lonesome Road Blues (1924) / Worried Blues (1924) / Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad (1924) / Blowin' Down This Road (1940) / Chilly Winds (1957)


Going Down The Road Feelin' Bad, also known as the Lonesome Road Blues, is an American traditional song, "a white blues of universal appeal and uncertain origin" (Ralph Rinzler, quoted on Erbsen 2003, p. 118).
Alan Lomax in the Penguin book of American Folk Songs:
This is the great folk song of the depression and New Deal period. In form and origin it is a Negro blues, but millions of Oakies, Arkies, southern "crackers", all homeless and jobless, made it the blues of the Grapes of Wrath people. It can be sung solo with guitar, it makes a good square-dance tune for fiddle, guitar and banjo; and it sounds fine with three-part harmony, hymn-style.

It was recorded by many artists through the years; the first known is Henry Whitter in 1924 as "Lonesome Road Blues". Others who made cover versions include Samantha Bumgarner (as "Worried Blues"), Cliff Carlisle (as "Down In The Jail On My Knees"), Woody Guthrie (as "Blowin' Down This Road" or "I Ain't Gonna Be Treated This Way"), Bill Monroe, Earl Scruggs, Roy Hall, Elizabeth Cotten and the Grateful Dead.
It also circulated as the fiddle tune "Chilly Wind(s)", which was recorded by Wade Ward in 1925.







The song turns up on page 242 of the 1947 book Folk Song U.S.A. by John A. Lomax and Alan Lomax, edited by son Alan. It is in the key of D and the tempo is described as "moderately fast." Here are all the verses from that version: "Goin' Down the Road Feelin' Bad"

I'm goin' down this road feelin' bad,
Lord, I'm goin' down this road feelin' bad,
Well, I'm goin' down this road feelin' bad, Lord, Lord,
An' I ain't gonna be treated thisaway.

I ain't got but one old lousy dime,
Lord, I ain't got but one old lousy dime,
Well, I ain't got but one old lousy dime, Lord, Lord,
But I'll find me a new dollar some old day.

A two dollar shoe won't fit my feet,
Lord, a two dollar shoe won't fit my feet,
Well, a two dollar shoe won't fit my feet, Lord, Lord,
'Cause I ain't gonna be treated thisaway.

Takes a ten dollar shoe to fit my feet,
Lord, takes a ten dollar shoe to fit my feet,
Well, takes a ten dollar shoe to fit my feet, Lord, Lord,
'Cause I ain't gonna be treated thisaway.

I'm goin' where the climate suits my clothes,
Lord, I'm goin' where the climate suits my clothes,
Well, I'm goin' where the climate suits my clothes, Lord, Lord,
'Cause I ain't gonna be treated thisaway.

I'm goin' where the water tastes like wine,
Lord, I'm goin' where the water tastes like wine,
Well, I'm goin' where the water tastes like wine, Lord, Lord,
'Cause this water round here tastes like turpentine.

I'm tired of lyin' in this jail,
Lord, I'm tired of lyin' in this jail,
Well, I'm tired of lyin' in this jail, Lord, Lord,
An' I ain't gonna be treated thisaway.

Yes, they feed me on cornbread and beans,
Lord, they feed me on cornbread and beans,
Well, they feed me on cornbread and beans, Lord, Lord,
And I ain't gonna be treated thisaway

Who'll stir your gravy when I'm gone?
Lord, who'll stir your gravy when I'm gone?
Well, who'll stir your gravy when I'm gone? Lord, Lord,
When I'm gone to my long, lonesome home

Also included in the Frank C Brown Collection vol 5 (song # 441 on page 297)





First recorded by Henry Whitter in 1923

(o) Henry Whitter (1923) (as "Lonesome Road Blues")
Recorded on December 10, 1923 in New York
Released on Okeh 40015.





Lyrics
Oh I’m goin’ down this road feelin’ bad (3x)
And I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way

Oh I’m goin’ where the chilly wind never blows (3x)
And I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way.

Oh (I’m) way down in jail on my knees, (3x)
And I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way.

Oh they feed me on cornbread and peas (3x)
I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way.

Yes, I’m goin’ where the climate suits my clothes, (3x)
I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way

Yes I’m goin’ if I never come back, (3x)
And I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way.

Listen here:





(c) James Barton (1924)  (as "I'm Going Where The Climate Fits My Clothes")
Recorded May 1, 1924 in New York
Released on Okeh 40136.





Henry Whitter was also the first one to record the song with the more familiar title "Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad".

(c) Henry Whitter (1924)  ( as "Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad")
Recorded on July 16, 1924
Released on the Okeh 40169



Lyrics
Oh I’m goin’ down this road I'm feelin’ bad (3x)
And I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way

Oh it's one dollar won't buy me no shoes (3x)
And I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way

Oh a two dollar shoe hurt my feet (3x)
And I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way

Yes some five dollar shoe fits on me (3x)
And I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way

Oh and snap out your finger get your load (3x)
And I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way

( I couldn't figure out the sixth verse. Anyone ?)

Oh I’m goin’ down this road I'm feelin’ bad (3x)
And I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way

( I couldn't figure out the eigth verse either. Anyone ?)

Oh it's mama said i can't live with you (3x)
And I think by myself for the way you do

Listen here:




"Worried Blues" is a song that is very closely connected to "Lonesome Road Blues" / "Going Down The Road Feeling Bad".


Samantha Bumgarner was the first one to record that variation

(o) Samantha Bumgarner (1924) (as "Worried Blues")
Samantha Bumgarner, voc, bj
Recorded April 23, 1924 in New York
Released on Columbia 166-D


Lyrics
Got the worried blues (x3)
Can't be worried this a-way.

See you when your troubles are like mine (x3)
See you when you can't change a dime

Got the worried blues (x3)
Can't be worried this a-way

Bound down in the jail (x3)
No one to go my bail 

Honey babe would you [or "won't you"] go my bail (x3)
Can't be worried this a-way 

Goin' down this long lonesome road (x3)
Can't be worried this a-way 

Honey babe, don't leave me here (x3)
Unless you leave a dime for beer

Got the worried blues (x3)
Can't be worried this a-way

Goin' down this long lonesome road (x3)
Can't be worried this a-way

Goin' down this long lonesome road (x3)
Can't be worried this a-way

Listen here:




On September 1, 1925 in Asheville, NC. renowned banjo player Wade Ward recorded this traditional as a clawhammer banjo instrumental for the Okeh-label.
His version was titled "Chilly Wind" (after one verse from "Lonesome Road Blues")
Ward's 1925 version was never released.



In 1939 he re-recorded the song under supervision of Alan Lomax and Pete Seeger and this ended up on a 1942 release:



Listen here:



Listen here to a version from 1958 by Wade Ward:





(c) Hill Billies (1926) (as "Goin Down The Road Feeling Bad")
Tony Alderman, f; Fred Roe, f; Charles Bowman, bj; Al Hopkins, p/v; Joe Hopkins, g/v; Henry Roe, g; John Hopkins, u/v.
Recorded on October 23, 1926 in New York
Released on Vocalion 5021



Lyrics
Goin' down this road feelin' bad, (3x)
And I ain't gonna be treated this-away

Way down in jail on my knees, (3x)
And I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way.

Feed me on cornbread and peas (3x)
I ain’t gonna be treated this a-way

Mama won't find me no cure ? (3x)
And I ain't gonna be treated this-away.

Goin' down this road feelin' bad, (3x)
And I ain't gonna be treated this-away.

Listen here:




(c) Frank Hutchison (1927)  (as "Worried Blues") the familiar melody, with his own lyrics.
Hutchison recorded the song twice:
once on September 28, 1926, at his first recording session,
Released on Okeh 45064




Listen here:



or here:


Hutchison re-recorded the song on April 29, 1927, released on Okeh 45114



Listen here:



or here:




(c) Fiddlin John Carson (1929)  (as "You Can't Get Milk From A Cow Named Ben")
Recorded March 16, 1929 in Atlanta, GA
Released on Okeh 45321


Listen here: last instrumental part of the song at 2 minutes and 2 sec





(c) Fiddlin John Carson and Moonshine Kate (1929)
(as "Down South Where The Sugar Cane Grows")
Recorded March 16, 1929 in Atlanta, GA
Released on Okeh 45338



Lyrics
Going where the Sugar cane grows (3x)
And I ain't got no trouble at my knees.

Going where the climate suits my clothes (3x)
And I ain't got no trouble at my knees.

Etc, Etc

Listen here:





Fiddlin John Carson and his Virginia Reelers also recorded this song as an instrumental

(c) Fiddlin'  John Carson and His Virginia Reelers (1930)
(as "Goin' Where The Climate Suits My Clothes")
Recorded April 24, 1930 in Atlanta, GA
Released on Okeh 45498




Listen here:




Cliff Carlisle recorded 2 versions of this songcluster:

(c) Cliff Carlisle (1930) (as "Down In The Jail House On My Knees")
Recorded February, 25, 1930 in Richmond, IND
Released on Gennett 7153 and Champion 15969



Listen here:



(c) Cliff Carlisle (1933) (as "Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad")
Recorded July 28, 1933 in New York
Released on various labels such as Conqueror, Panachord and Oriole



Listen here:




(c) Riley Puckett (1934) (as "K. C. Railroad")
Recorded March 30, 1934 in San Antonio, Texas
Released on Bluebird 5471 and Montgomery Ward 4508





Listen here:




In 1940 the song "Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad" is sung by Eddie Quillan, in his character of Conny Rivers, in a nighttime scene at a labor camp, in the movie "Grapes Of Wrath" (1940).

SEE THE SCENE HERE (at 39 min and 46 seconds in the next film)


The song seems to be tailormade for Woody Guthrie, so shortly after the "Grapes of Wrath" premiered, Woody also recorded a version of the song.


(c) Woody Guthrie (1940) (as "Goin’ Down The Road Feelin’ Bad")
Woody Guthrie, vocal and guitar.
Recorded by Alan Lomax at the Department of the Interior radio facility in Washington, D.C., on March 22, 1940.

Woody Guthrie introduced the song this way:
Well, one of the most popular, uh, Alan, was the one that they chose for the Grapes of Wrath picture. “I’m Going Down that Road Feelin’ Bad.” That’s got two or three names. A lot of people call it the “Lonesome Road Blues.” Others call it “Goin’ Down the Road Feelin’ Bad.” It’s got all kinds of names. Anyway, in the picture, they, they sing it pretty classical. I don’t know whether the Okies and the hobos will recognize it or not but then I’m not worried about that because I don’t think that they’ll be spendin’ a quarter to get to see a bunch of grapes or stuff…I don’t know whatever the devil that means, “grapes of wrath.”
Here’s the ole song. It was wrote, uh, by, uh, a colored slave that run off from his master and went back up North. He was a Southern slave and he run up North and it was pretty cold up there. So, uh, he worked ‘round up there a little bit and stayed in jails and everythin’ and was treated like a dog, and so awful cold up North and so he wrote this song or got it started:

Listen here:



(c) Woody Guthrie (1940) (as "Blowin' Down the Road")
Sometime later in 1940 Woody recorded his own adaptation of the song for the RCA Victor label.
RCA asked Woody to record 12 Dust Bowl Ballads to respond to the enormous success of the Grapes Of Wrath book and film.
Using only guitar and vocals, the album follows the exodus of Midwesterners headed for California and mirrors both Guthrie’s own life and John Steinbeck’s novel The Grapes of Wrath.

Woody Guthrie, v; acc. own h/g.
Recorded April 26, 1940 in New York
Released on Victor 26619


Also released as part of the Dust Bowl Ballads-album



Listen here:




(c) Almanac Singers (1942)  (as "Goin' Down the Road Feelin' Bad")
Woody Guthrie: harmonica and vocals / Pete Seeger: banjo
January 1942 "Home Disc Recordings" made by the Almanac Singers in New York
Accessioned by the Library Of Congress in February 1942 on glass-base records
Tape copy on LWO 3493 / reel 41A /  Matrix 6105A
Unissued till now





(c) Weavers (1957)  (as "Goin' Down the Road Feelin' Bad")
Unissued version by the Weavers from the Pete Seeger era.
Finally released in 2003 on the Vanguard album "Rarities From The Vanguard Vault"


Listen here:




(c) Hally Wood (1956)  (as "Worried Blues")
Released on her album "Hally Wood Sings Texas Folk Songs" (Stinson SLP 73)
On the liner-notes of her album, credits go to Samantha Bumgarner (see earlier on in this post)






Or here: 




(c) Odetta (1957)  (as "Chilly Winds")



Listen here:




(c) Elizabeth Cotten (1958) (as "Going Down the Road Feeling Bad")



Listen here:




(c) Nina Simone (1959) (as "Chilly Winds Don't Blow")


Listen here:




(c) Cisco Houston (1960) (as "Chilly Winds")


On the album "Cisco Special" (Vanguard: VRS 9057)


Listen here:





(c) Jack Burchett (1961)  (as "Chilly winds")
Jack Burchett (vocal and banjo)
Recorded July 1961 in Saltville, Virginia.
Released on the next album:


Read linernotes here: SFW40029.pdf

Listen here:




(c) Bob Dylan (1962) (as "Worried Blues")
Recorded Jul 9, 1962 during the Freewheelin' sessions
Released on The Bootleg Series 1-3 (1991)

According to the next site Bob had learned it from Hally Wood, who had learned it from Samantha Bumgarner (according to the liner-notes on her album "Hally Wood Sings Texas Folk Songs" (Stinson SLP 73)




Lyrics
I got those worried blues (4x)
Lord, I'm a-going where I never been before.

I'm going where the chilly winds don't blow (4x)
I'm going where the climate suits my clothes.

Honey babe don't leave me now (4x)
I got trouble in my mind.

Listen to that cold whistle blow (4x)
I'm going where I'm never been before.

So I got those worries blues, lord (4x)
I'm a-going where I never been before.

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It is also one of the Dylan/Band Basement Tapes songs -
(as "Going Down the Road Feeling Bad" or "No Shoes On My Feet").



Listen here:




The song was part of a medley on the 1970 Delaney & Bonnie album "To Bonnie From Delaney"


Listen here (at 2 min and 25 sec in the YT below) :



The track also appears on the 1971 Delaney & Bonnie album Motel Shot 

(c) Delaney & Bonnie (1971) (as "Going Down the Road Feeling Bad")


Listen here:




This song became a concert staple for the Grateful Dead, and Jerry Garcia related that he picked it up from Delaney Bramlett of Delaney and Bonnie during the Dead’s trans-Canada rock ‘n’ roll train trip in 1970, beautifully captured in the "Festival Express" movie.




Garcia and Bramlett can be seen jamming on the tune, with Janis Joplin singing along with Bramlett, in the movie Festival Express.



Subsequently the song appeared as a medley on Grateful Dead’s so-called “Skull & Roses” album ( the 1971 live double LP "Grateful Dead".)





Listen here (at about 5 min in the YT below) :


Grateful Dead's version may be influenced by Woody Guthrie, as well as other renditions by Bill Monroe (1960), Elizabeth Cotton (1958), and Cliff Carlisle (1933).



(c) Bruce Springsteen (as "Blowin' Down The Road")

In 1993 and 1996 Bruce Sprigsteen sang the Woody Guthrie-adaptation of the song on a few gigs


Listen here:




(c) U2 (2011)   (as "Worried Blues")

And in May 2011 U2 sang it on a few gigs.


Listen here:





(c) John Mayer (2013)  (as "Going Down The Road Feeling Bad")

And in 2013 John Mayer sang it live in the David Letterman Show. His version was inspired by the version of the Grateful Dead.



Plans even are John Mayer might join the remaining Dead members on a Halloween-show at New York's Madison Square Garden. For the occasion the bandname will be dubbed Dead & Company.






The tune was also used in other traditional songs:

-"New River Train" also recorded by Henry Whitter in 1924




-"I Wish I Was A Mole In The Ground" first recorded by Bascom Lamar Lunsford in 1924




-"Roll On Buddy" recorded by Charlie Bowman (1928)
  (besides the tune there are floating lyrics from "I Wish I Was A Mole In The Ground")





-"My Last Gold Dollar" - Bascom Lamar Lunsford (who had learned it from Samantha Bumgarner and Moonshine Kate)


Listen here:






Different songs with similar titles:

In 1925 Papa Charlie Jackson recorded the song "I'm Going Where the Chilly Winds Don't Blow"
This is another song

Listen here:




In 1931 Sam Collins recorded a song called "Lonesome Road Blues (I'm Goin' Down That Lonesome Road)"
This is also another song.

Listen here: