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PLEDGE WEEK: “Blue Yodel #9” by Jimmie Rodgers

PLEDGE WEEK: “Blue Yodel #9” by Jimmie Rodgers

FromA History of Rock Music in 500 Songs


PLEDGE WEEK: “Blue Yodel #9” by Jimmie Rodgers

FromA History of Rock Music in 500 Songs

ratings:
Released:
Jul 15, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Welcome to the third in the Pledge Week series of episodes, putting up old bonus episodes posted to my Patreon in an attempt to encourage more subscriptions. If you like this, consider subscribing to the Patreon at http://patreon.com/join/andrewhickey .

This one is about "Blue Yodel #9" by Jimmie Rodgers, but it's really about two great women who shaped twentieth century popular music without much credit -- Lil Hardin and Elsie McWilliams

Click the cut to view a transcript of this episode:



Welcome to the latest episode of the Patreon-only bonus podcasts. For this episode, we're going to do something different from what we've normally done. In the main series, I've been going strictly chronologically -- each episode covers a fairly long period of time, but each song I've dealt with has come chronologically after the song before.

This time, we're going to go right back in time, to the beginnings of country music. I'll be doing that kind of thing a lot more on these Patreon episodes, because the short length gives me the freedom to look at any time period I want, and to jump back and forth in the story.

Today, we're going to talk about two great women who don't get as much credit as they deserve for the work of the great men they were behind.

Lil Hardin was the piano player for King Oliver's jazz band in the 1920s, when he hired a new second cornet player, a young musician called Louis Armstrong. Armstrong was a promising musician, with a lot of ability, but he was also a bit of a hick -- badly-dressed, with a bad haircut, and with no understanding of how to present himself on stage. He also had no ambition – he just wanted to play with his hero. Lil Hardin saw something in him, though, and tidied him up, showed him how to act on stage, how to dress and how to do his hair. She persuaded him that while he loved just playing in the same band as King Oliver, he could become a star himself.

The two of them both divorced their respective spouses and married, and when the time came for Louis Armstrong, who had been only second cornet when he'd met Lil, to become the leader of his own band, the Hot Five, Lil Hardin Armstrong was its piano player. The recordings by Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five were the records that built Louis' reputation as a musician, and which still to this day are regarded as the peak of New Orleans jazz. And Lil Hardin is all over them.

[Excerpt: Louis Armstrong and the Hot Five, "Muskrat Ramble"]

Meanwhile, in North Carolina, Jimmie Rodgers had had to retire from his job on the railway due to tuberculosis, and was trying to make a living as a singer.

I've mentioned Jimmie Rodgers a few times, and if I'd decided to start the narrative in the 1920s rather than in 1938 he would almost certainly have had a full episode devoted to him. He was probably the first big superstar of country music, but he influenced people in all sorts of other fields as well -- for example Howlin' Wolf developed his vocal style by attempting to imitate Rodgers' trademark yodel.

In 1927 he began his recording career with records like "Sleep Baby Sleep":

[Excerpt: Jimmie Rodgers, "Sleep Baby Sleep"]

Rodgers is the credited songwriter on most of his work, but many of his songs were written or co-written by his sister in law, Elsie McWilliams, who had played piano in his band and who he asked to help him whip his ideas into shape when he got a recording contract. McWilliams wanted to make sure her sick brother-in-law and his family would have money, so she only got credited on about half the songs she wrote or co-wrote, giving Rodgers the credit on the rest. And when she did get credited, she often gave Rodgers the actual money anyway.

Much later she said, “I didn’t want a penny for those songs, you understand, if there was any money coming, I wanted him to have it. He was sick and broke and I loved ‘em both so very much.

He kept after me to sign a contract, but I wouldn’t, I didn’t want any of his money. But he kept after m
Released:
Jul 15, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Andrew Hickey presents a history of rock music from 1938 to 1999, looking at five hundred songs that shaped the genre.