Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Round

Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me 'Round
Civil Rights Version

Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around/Keep on Walkin'/ 

Traditional Old-Time, Gospel and African-American Spiritual;

ARTIST: Guy and Candie Carawan (Sing Out Corporation, 1990, 1992) (pp. 62-63)

CATEGORY: Traditional Gospel;

DATE: 1800s; Blind Willie McTell recorded the song first in April 1935 for Decca. There's a chance Jimmy Davis, who recorded it under the title "I Ain't Gonna Let Ol' Satan Turn Me Round" in 1936 Davis, picked it up from him or someone who also knew the song. It was recorded by Fairfield Four as "Don't Let Nobody Turn You Around" backed by "Standing in The Safety Zone," on Dot in 1947-1948.

RECORDING INFO:
Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around

Carawan, Guy & Candie / Sing for Freedom, Sing Out, sof (1990), p 62
Winds of the People, Sing Out, Sof (1982), p 32
Blood, Peter; and Annie Patterson (eds.) / Rise Up Singing, Sing Out, Sof (1992/1989), p 58
Freedom Singers. We Shall Overcome, Mercury MG 20879, LP (1963), trk# b.01
Lester, Julius. Freedom Is a Constant Struggle, Folk Era FE 1419, CD (1994), trk# 1.09 [1994] 
Pete Seeger, "Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me 'Round" (on Selma)
Jimmie Davis "I Ain't Gonna Let Ol' Satan Turn Me Round" (Decca 5235, 1936)

OTHER NAMES: "Don't Let Nobody Turn You Around," "Keep On a-Walkin'" "I Ain't Gonna Let Ol' Satan Turn Me Round"

SOURCES: Folk Index; Ballad Index
REFERENCES (3 citations):
Scott-BoA, pp. 374-375, "Keep On a-Walkin'" (1 text, 1 tune)
Silber-FSWB, p. 303, "Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Round" (1 text)
cf. Greenway-AFP, p. 234, "Don't Turn Around" (1 text, probably a union adaption of this song)

NOTES: This traditional spiritual was adapted by the Civil Rights movement in Albany (Georgia) by Reverend Ralph Abernathy during the summer of 1962 when mass arrests and demonstrations erupted for the second time. He taught it one night to a mass meeting of the Negro community at Mount Zion Baptist Church. It immediately caught on and became widely used in the demonstrations. A nationally televised CBS documentary showed spirited students rhythmically clapping and singing "ain't gonna let Chief Pritchett turn me 'round" while the policemen picked them up, two to a student, and carried them into the paddy wagons. "...anybody who thinks this town is going to settle back and be the same as it was, had got to be deaf, blind, and dumb."
-an African-American woman in Albany, Georgia

It was first printed in White's 1927, Forty Negro Spirituals as "Don't Let Nobody Turn You Around."

Blind Willie McTell recorded the song first in April 1935 for Decca. Jimmy Davis, who recorded it under the title "I Ain't Gonna Let Ol' Satan Turn Me Round" in 1936adapted it from McTell or someone who also knew the song. It was recorded by Fairfield Four as "Don't Let Nobody Turn You Around" backed by "Standing in The Safety Zone," on Dot in 1947-1948. Besides it's popularity in the 1960's it was a rock hit for Steve Miller.

AIN'T GONNA LET NOBODY TURN ME 'ROUN'- Traditional

Ain't gonna let nobody turn me 'roun'
Turn me 'roun'
Ain't gonna let nobody turn me 'roun'
I'm gonna wait until my change comes.

Don't let nobody turn you 'roun'
Turn you 'roun'
Don't let nobody turn you 'roun'
Wait until your change comes

I say I'm gonna hold out
Hold out, hold out
I say that I'm gonna hold out
Until my change comes

AIN'T GONNA LET NOBODY TURN ME 'ROUND- Civil right's adaptation
Source: Sing for Freedom: The Story of the Civil Rights Movement through its songs, edited and compiled by Guy and Candie Carawan (Sing Out Corporation, 1990, 1992) (pp. 62-63)

Ain't gonna let nobody (Lordy) turn me 'round,
turn me 'round, turn me 'round,
Ain't gonna let nobody turn me 'round;
I'm gonna keep on a-walkin'
Keep on a-talkin',
Marching up to freedom land.

Ain't gonna let Nervous Nelly turn me 'round.... (term applied to typical segregationist)

Ain't gonna let Chief Pritchett...

Ain't gonna let Mayor Kelly...

Ain't gonna let segregation...

Ain't gonna let Z.T.... (Z.T. Mathews, sheriff of Terrell County, Georgia)

Ain't gonna let no jail house...

Ain't gonna let no injunction... (after a federal injunction prohibiting further demonstations)

Additional verses from Everybody Says Freedom, by Pete Seeger and Bob Reiser:
Ain't gonna let no police dogs...
Ain't gonna let no Uncle Tom...
Ain't gonna let no fire hose...