Old Dan Tucker
This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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Published versions
edit"The Original Old Dan Tucker", Boston: Charles H. Keith, 1843:
- OLD DAN EMMIT's
- ORIGINAL BANJO MELODIES
- EMMIT, BROWN, WHITLOCK, PELHAM
- The Original
- OLD DAN TUCKER
- As sung by the Virginia Minstrels
- Words by Old Dan. D. Emmit
- I come to town de udder night,
- I hear de noise an saw de fight,
- De watchman was a runnin roun,
- Cryin Old Dan Tucker's come to town.
- Gran' Chorus.
- So get out de way! Get out de way!
- Get out de way! Old Dan Tucker.
- Your to late to come to supper.
- Tucker is a nice old man,
- He use to ride our darby ram,
- He sent him wizzen down de hill,
- If he hadn't got up he'd lay dar still.
- Chorus
- Here's my razor in good order,
- Magnum bonum—jis had bought 'er,
- Sheep sell oats, Tucker shell de corn,
- I'll shabe you soon as de water get warm.
- Chorus
- Old Dan Tucker an I got drunk,
- He fell in de fire an kick up a chunk,
- De charcoal got inside he shoe,
- Lor bless you honey how de ashes flew.
- Chorus
- Down de road foremost de stump,
- Massa make me work de pump;
- I pump so hard I broke de sucker,
- Dar was work for ole Dan Tucker.
- Chorus
- I went to town to buy some goods
- I lost myself in a piece of woods,
- De night was dark I had to suffer,
- It froze de heel of Daniel Tucker.
- Chorus
- Tucker was a hardened sinner,
- He nebber said his grace at dinner;
- De ole sow squeel, de pigs did squal
- He 'hole hog wid de tail and all.
- Chorus[1]
New York: Atwill's, 1843:
- I come to town de udder night,
- I hear de noise den saw de fight,
- De watchman was a runnin roun,
- Cryin Old Dan Tuckeer's come to town,
- Chorus:
- So get out de way!
- Get out de way!
- Get out de way! Old Dan Tucker,
- Your too late to come to supper.
- Tucker is a nice old man,
- He use'd to ride our darby ram,
- He sent him whizzin down de hill,
- If he had 'nt got up he'd laid dar still,
- Chorus
- Tucker on de wood pile--can't count 'lebben,
- Put in a fedder bed--him gwine to hebben,
- His nose so flat, his face so full,
- De top ob his head like a bag ob wool,
- Chorus
- High hold on de holler tree,
- He poke his bill in for to see,
- De lizzard cotch 'im by de snout,
- He call old Tucker to pull 'im out,
- Chorus
- Tucker he had cash a plenty,
- Dressed to death--his old trunk empty,
- To kiss de galls he thot was useless,
- 'Cept he kissed wid a sway-back-looseness,
- Chorus
- Here's my razor in good order,
- Magnum-bonum--jis hab bought 'er,
- Sheep shell de oats, ole Tucker shell de corn,
- I'll shade you all when de water gets warm,
- Chorus
- I went to meetin de udder day,
- To hear old Tucker preach and pray,
- Dey all got drunk, but me alone,
- I make ole Tucker--walk-jaw-bone,
- Get out de way, Get out de way,
- Get out de way you hard'end sinner,
- Your too late to come to dinner.[2]
"The Latest Version of Old Dan Tucker", Deacon Snowball's Negro Melodies, 1843, includes this alternate verse:
- We are de boys from old Virginia,
- And take de shine from Pagannini [sic],
- Wid our old banjo and jaw bone,
- We drive all udder music home.[3]
Galbreath presents this version as "authentic":
- I came to down de udder night,
- I heard de noise, den saw de sight,
- De watchmen dey (was) runnin' roun'
- Cryin' "Ole Dan Tucker's come to town."
- Chorus:
- Git outen de way
- Git outen de way
- Git outen de way, Ole Dan Tucker,
- You's too late to come to supper.
- Sheep an' hog a walkin' in de pasture,
- Sheep says, "hog can't you go faster?"
- Hush! hush! honey, hear de wolf growlin',
- Ah, ah, de Lawd, bull dog growlin'.
- Chorus
- Here's my razor in good order,
- Magnum bonum—jis hab bought 'er;
- Sheep shell oats, an' Tucker sell de corn,
- I'll shabe ye soon as de water gits warm.
- Chorus
- Tucker went roun' hickry steeple,
- Dar he meet some colored people,
- Some was black, some was blacker,
- Some was de color ob brown tobackur.
- Chorus
- Jay bird in de martin's nest,
- To sabe he soul he got no rest.
- Ole Tucker in de foxe's den,
- Out come de young ones nine or ten.
- Chorus
- Tucker on de wood pile can't count lebben,
- Put 'im in a fedder bed goin' to hebben;
- His nose so flat, his face so full.
- De top ob his head like a bag ob wool.
- Chorus
- High-hold on de holler tree,
- He poke his bill in for to see,
- De lizard cotch 'im by de snout,
- He call for Tucker to pull 'im out.
- Chorus
- I went to de meetin' de udder day . .
- To hear old Tucker preach and pray;
- Dey all got drunk but me alone,
- I make ole Tucker walk jaw bone.
- Chorus[4]
Political versions
editWilliam Jennings Bryan used the tune for his campaign song in the 1900 Democratic National Convention in Kansas City:
- Voters, come and hear my ditty,
- What was done at Kansas City:
- David Hill, the New York lion,
- Nominated Billy Bryan.
- Chorus:
- Get out of the way, you Grand Old Party,
- Get out of the way, you Grand Old Party,
- Get out of the way, you Grand Old Party,
- You're so old, you're getting warty.
- For running mate there was a pull,
- But 'twas no use, the woods were full;
- And then and there to still the noise
- They gave the job to Illinois.
- Chorus
- Still your boss is Mark A. Hanner,
- He looks just like a stockyard's tanner.
- Is the ring our hats we're shying,
- Whoop! Hurrah! For Billy Bryan.
- Chorus
- Keep the banners ever flying;
- Follow always Billy Bryan.
- Onward now and all keep steady,
- 'Cause we're after Mack and Teddy.
- Chorus[5]
Marion Harland recorded another political version from a Whig rally in 1844:
- The moon was shining silver bright, the stars with glory crowned the night,
- High on a limb that 'same old Coon' was singing to himself this tune:
- Chorus:
- Get out the way, you're all unlucky; clear the track for Ole Kentucky!
- Now in a sad predicament the Lokies are for President;
- They have six horses in the pasture, and don't know which can run the faster.
- Chorus
- The Wagon-Horse from Pennsylvany, the Dutchmen think he's the best of any;
- But he must drag in heavy stages his Federal notions and low wages.
- Chorus
- They proudly bring upon the course an old and broken-down war-horse;
- They shout and sing: 'Oh! rumpsey dumsey, Colonel Johnson killed Tecumsey!
- Chorus
- And here is Cass, though not a dunce, will run both sides of the track at once;
- To win the race will all things copy, be sometimes pig and sometimes puppy.
- Chorus
- The fiery Southern horse, Calhoun, who hates a Fox and fears a Coon,
- To toe the scratch will not be able, for Matty keeps him in the stable.
- Chorus
- And here is Matty, never idle, a tricky horse that slips his bridle;
- In forty-four we'll show him soon the little Fox can't fool the Coon.
- Chorus
- The balky horse they call John Tyler, we'll head him soon or burst his boiler;
- His cursed 'grippe' has seized us all, which Doctor Clay will cure next fall.
- Chorus
- The people's fav'rite, Henry Clay, is now the 'fashion' of the day;
- And let the track be dry or mucky, we'll stake our pile on Ole Kentucky.
- Get out of the way, he's swift and lucky; clear the track for Ole Kentucky![6]
Version from the Civil War:
- Old Abe is coming down to fight,
- And put the Democrats to flight;
- He's coming with the wedge and maul
- And he will split 'em one and all.
- Chorus:
- Get out the way, you little giant
- Get out the way, you little giant
- Get out the way, you little giant
- You can't come in, you're too short and pliant.
- Abe, he lives in a big log hut,
- Can drive the wedge and use the glut;
- He swings the maul and when he hits,
- It goes in the ground or else it splits.
- Chorus
- Old Abe knows how to drive the team,
- Because he never goes by steam;
- But now the ox-goad he will use,
- And dust the giant in his shoes.
- Chorus
- Look the prairie's all on fire,
- If poor Douglas had grown higher;
- He might have seen the smoke and stuff,
- But his short legs can't run fast enough.
- Chorus[7]
Folk versions
editSlave version from 1850s Orange County, North Carolina:
- Marster and Missus look' might fine—
- Gwine to take a journey, gwine whar dey gwine,
- Crab grass a-dyin', red sun in de west,
- Saturday's comin', nigger gwine to rest.[8]
Slave version remembered by Dora Franks of Aberdeen, Mississippi:
- Old Dan Tucker was a mighty mean man,
- He beat his wife with a fryin' pan.
- She hollered and she cried, "I'se gwine to go,
- Dey's plenty o' men won't beat me so."[9]
North Carolina version:
- Ole Aunt Dinah she got drunk,
- Felled in de fire and kicked up a chunk.
- Red hot coal popped in her shoe—
- Lordy a-mighty! How de water flew?[10]
Another North Carolina version:
- Ole Dan'l Tucker clomb a tree,
- His Lord an' Marster for to see.
- De limb hit broke an' Dan got a fall—
- Nuver got to see his Lord at all!
- Miss Tucker she went out one day,
- To ride with Dan in a one horse sleigh.
- De sleigh was broke, and de horse was blind—
- Miss Tucker she got left behind.
- As I come down de new cut road,
- I spied de peckerwood and de toad,
- And every time de toad would jump
- De peckerwood hopped upon de stump.
- And next upon de gravel road,
- I met Br'er Tarypin and Br'er Toad.
- And every time Br'er Toad would sing
- Br'er Tarrypin cut de pigeon wing.
- Ole Dan and me we did fall out,
- And what d'ye reckon it was about?
- He trod on my corn and I kicked him on the shins;
- That's jest the way this row begins.
- If Ole Dan he had corn to buy,
- He'd mo'n and wipe his weepin' eye;
- But when Ole Dan had corn to sell,
- He was as sassy as all hell.[11]
Miscellaneous stanzas from the folk tradition:
- I came to town de udder night,
- I hear de noise, an' I saw de fight.
- De watchman wuz a-runnin' roun'
- Cryin' "Old Dan Tucker's come to town."
- Old Dan Tucker he went to de mill,
- To git some meal to put in de swill;
- The miller swo' by de point of his knife
- He nebber had seed such a man in his life.
- Dan Tucker and I we did fall out,
- And what do you think it was about?
- He tread upon corn; I kicked him on de chin,
- An' dat's de way dis row begin.
- Old Dan began in early life,
- To play de banjo an' de fife;
- He play de niggers all to sleep,
- An' den into his bunk he creep.(Lomax 261)
- Old Daniel Tucker wuz a mighty man,
- He washed his face in a fryin' pan;
- Combed his head wid a wagon wheel
- And he died wid de toofache in his heel.
- And now Old Dan is a gone sucker,
- And never can go home to supper.
- Old Dan has had his las' ride,
- An' de banjo's buried by his side.(Lomax 262)
Chorus:
- So, git outa de way for old Dan Tucker,
- He's come too late to git his supper.
- Supper's over and breakfast cookin',
- Old Dan Tucker standin' lookin'.[12]
Michigan, 1920::
- Here's old Dan, he comes to town;
- He swings the ladies round and round.
- He swings one east, he swings one west,
- He swings with the one he loves the best.[13]
Pineville, Missouri, 4 June 1927:
- Old Dan Tucker down in town,
- Swingin' the ladies all around,
- First to the right an' then to the left,
- An' then to the one that you love best.
- Chorus:
- Git out of the way for old Dan Tucker,
- He's too late to git his supper,
- Supper's over an' breakfast a-cookin',
- An' old Dan Tucker standin' a-lookin'.
- Chorus
- Old Dan Tucker down in town,
- A-ridin' a foat an' a leadin' a hound.
- The hound give a howl an' the goat give a jump,
- An' throwed Old Dan a-straddle of a stump.
- Chorus
- Old Dan Tucker he got drunk,
- Fell in the fire an' kicked out a chunk,
- Fire coal got in Dan's old shoe,
- Oh my golly how the ashes flew!
- Chorus[14]
Bentonville, Arkansas, 21 November 1935:
- Old Dan Tucker is a fine old man,
- Washing his face in the fryin' pan,
- Combed his hair with a wagon wheel,
- An' died with a toothache in his heel![15]
Rolla, Missouri, 5 April 1938:
- I went to town the other night,
- I heard the noise and I saw the fight,
- The watchman was a-running round,
- Cryin Old Dan Tucker's come to town!
- Old Dan he worked in the cotton field,
- He got a stone bruise on his heel,
- He left the field and went through the woods
- To the little pond where the fishin's good
- Old Dan he went down to the mill
- To get some meal to put in the swill,
- The miller he swore by the point of his knife,
- He never seen such a man in his life.
- And now old Dan is a done gone sucker,
- And never will go home to his supper,
- Old Dan he has had his last ride,
- And the banjo's buried by his side.[16]
Australia:
- Old Danny Tucker was a dirty old man,
- He washed his face in the frying pan,
- Combed his hair with the leg of a chair,
- Died with a toothache in his hair.[17]
Miscellaneous stanzas, source unknown:
- Old Dan Tucker was a fine old man
- He washed his face in a frying pan
- He combed his hair with a wagon wheel
- And died with a toothache in his heel.
- Chorus:
- So get out of the way for old Dan Tucker
- He's too late to get his supper
- Supper's over and dinner's cookin'
- Old Dan Tucker just stand there lookin'.
- I come to town the other night
- I heard the noise and saw the fight
- The watchman was a-runnin' round
- Crying "Old Dan Tucker's come to town."
- Old Dan Tucker is a nice old man
- He used to ride our darby ram
- He sent him whizzing down the hill
- If he hadn't got up, he'd lay there still.
- Old Dan begun in early life
- To play the banjo and the fife
- He played the children all to sleep
- And then into his bunk he'd creep.[18]
Reed Springs, Missouri, 1847:
- Old Dan Tucker was a fine old man,
- Washed his face in a fryin' pan,
- Combed his head with a hickory stick,
- Layed down to die with a limber prick.
- Old Dan Tucker down in town,
- A-lookin' up an' a lookin' down,
- Huntin' a grass-widder for to fuck,
- Poor old Dan didn't have no luck.[19]
Benton County, Arkansas, c. 1910s:
- Old Dan Tucker was a fine old soul,
- Buckskin belly and a rubber ass-hole,
- Swallowed a barrel of cider down
- And then he shit all over town.[20]
Alternate chorus from San Francisco, c. 1955:
- Git out the way for Old Dan Tucker,
- He's too late to git his supper,
- Supper's over an' the dishes are washed,
- Nothin's left but a piece of squa-ash.[21]
Notes
edit- ↑ Quoted in Mahar 229, Nathan, and Waltz.
- ↑ From Pre-1852 Minstrel Songs.
- ↑ Quoted in Cockrell 156.
- ↑ Galbreath 542-3.
- ↑ Welsch 78-9.
- ↑ Harland 137.
- ↑ Quoted in Forcucci 131.
- ↑ Avriett, The Old Plantation, 140-46, quoted in Abrahams, Singing the Master, 236-37. Quoted in Mahar 259.
- ↑ Franks 129.
- ↑ McCulloch-Williams, Martha. Letter to the editor of the New York Sun. Quoted in Lomax 258.
- ↑ McCulloch-Williams, Martha. Letter to the editor of the New York Sun. Quoted in Lomax 259-61.
- ↑ Lomax 261.
- ↑ Gardner 116.
- ↑ Randolph, Vance. Ozark Folksongs, Volume III. P. 302. Quoted in Waltz.
- ↑ Randolph, Vance. Ozark Folksongs, Volume III. P. 303. Quoted in Waltz.
- ↑ Randolph, Vance. Ozark Folksongs, Volume III. P. 303. Quoted in Waltz.
- ↑ Meredith, John, and Anderson, Hugh. Folk Songs of Australia. P. 263. Quoted in Waltz.
- ↑ Quoted in Waltz.
- ↑ Randolph 431.
- ↑ Randolph 431.
- ↑ Randolph 433.
References
edit- Cockrell, Dale (1997). Demons of Disorder: Early Blackface Minstrels and Their World. Cambridge University Press.
- Crawford, Richard (2001). America's Musical Life: A History. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
- Forcucci, Samuel L. (1984). A Folk Song History of America: America through Its Songs. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc.
- Franks, Dora (2000). Interview printed in Yetman, Norman R., ed. (2000). Voices from Slavery: 100 Authentic Slave Narratives. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, Inc.
- Galbreath, C. B. (1901). "Song Writers of Ohio". Ohio Archæological and Historical Publications. Vol. XIII.
- Gardner, Emelyn E. (1920) "Some Play-party Games in Michigan". The Journal of American Folk-lore Vol. 33. Lancaster, Pennsylvania: The American Folk-lore Society.
- Harland, Marion (1910). Marion Harland's Autobiography: The Story of a Long Life. New York City: Harper & Brothers Publishers.
- Lomax, John A., and Lomax, Alan (1934). American Ballads and Folk Songs. New York: The Macmillan Company.
- Mahar, William J. (1999). Behind the Burnt Cork Mask: Early Blackface Minstrelsy and Antebellum American Popular Culture. Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
- Nathan, Hans (1962). Dan Emmett and the Rise of Early Negro Minstrelsy. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
- Vance, Randolph (1992). Roll Me in Your Arms: "Unprintable" Ozark Folksongs and Folklore. Vol I: Folksongs and Music. Fayetteville: The University of Arkansas Press.
- Waltz, Robert (4 August 2005). "Oral Transmission". A Site Inspired by the Encyclopedia of New Testament Textual Criticism. Accessed 14 January 2006.
- Welsch, Roger L. (1966). A Treasury of Nebraska Folklore. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.