All Night Long/Richmond Blues/Paul and Silas
Old-time, bluegrass, jazz song. Widely known.
ARTIST: Joe Hickerson: The Folksmiths Traveling Folk Workshop - We've Got Some Singing to Do
CATEGORY: Fiddle and Instrumental Tunes
DATE: 1958 Earliest printed date- song by Shelton Brooks 1912. Earliest recording by Roba & Bob Stanley- 1924.
RECORDING INFO: [Clarence] Ashley & [Gwen] Foster, "Baby, All Night Long" (Vocalion 02780, 1934) Burnett & Rutherford, "All Night Long Blues" (Columbia 15314-D, 1928; rec. 1927; on BurnRuth01) Oscar Craver [pseud. for Byrd Moore], "All Night Long" (Conqueror 7259, 1929) Clint Howard & Fred Price, "The Richmond Blues" (on Ashley02, WatsonAshley01) Frank Hutchison, "All Night Long" (OKeh 45144, 1927) Earl Johnson & his Dixie Entertainers, "All Night Long" (OKeh 45383, 1929; rec. 1927) Miles & Bob Pratcher, "If It's All Night Long" (on LomaxCD1703) Roba & Bob Stanley, "All Night Long" (OKeh 40295, 1925; rec. 1924) Blizard, Ralph; & John Lilly. Blue Highway, Blizard BH4591, Cas (1991), trk# 8 (Richmond Blues) Burnett and Rutherford. Mountain Songs, County 504, LP (196?), trk# A.05 [1927/11/03] Bursen, Howard (Howie). Building Boom, Flying Fish FF 441, LP (1988), trk# A.01 (Richmond Blues) Fly By Night String Band. Fly By Night String Band, Fretless 146, LP (1980), trk# B.02 (Richmond Blues) Foghorn Stringband. Old-Time Portland Potluck, Bubbaguitar, CD (2005), trk# 1b Folksmiths. We've Got Some Singing to Do, Folkways FA 2407, LP (1958), trk# B.09 Howard, Clint; and Fred Price. Old-Time Music at Clarence Ashley's. Part 1, Folkways FA 2355, LP (1961), trk# 5 [1962ca] (Richmond Blues) Johnson, Earl; and his Clodhoppers. Southern Dance Music, Vol. 2, Old-Timey LP 101, LP (1965), trk# 2 [1927/10/07] New Lost City Ramblers. Cohen, John, Mike Seeger & Hally Wood / Old Time String Band Songbook, Oak, Sof (1976/1964), p172 (Baby, All Night Long) Perry County Music Makers. Going Back to Tennessee, Davis Unlimited DU 33024, LP (1974), trk# A.04 Pratcher, Miles and Bob. Southern Journey. Vol. 3: 61 Highway Mississippi, Rounder 1703, CD (1997), trk# 22 [1959/09/21] (If It's All Night Long) Pratcher, Miles and Bob. Sounds of the South, Atlantic 7-82496-2, CD( (1993), trk# 2.04 [1959/07ca] Rossbach, John. From the Mountains to the Mills, Chestnut CRCD 103, CD (2002), trk# 6 (Richmond Blues) Rutherford and Foster. Fiddle Band Music from Kentucky, Vol.1, Wink the Other Eye, MorningStar 45003, LP (1980), trk# A.04 [1929/04/11] (Richmond Blues) Stanley, Roba. Banjo Pickin' Girl, Rounder 1029, LP (1978), trk# A.03 [1924/12ca] Tobacco Tags. Songs of the Tobacco Tags, Vol. 1, Old Homestead OHCS 156, LP (1984), trk# 7 (Good Gal Remember Me)
RELATED TO: “Paul and Silas”; "Mary Wore Three Links of Chain" “Tupelo Blues;” “Oh My Lawd” “Charmin' Bessie”
OTHER NAMES: “Baby, All Night Long;” “Richmond Blues;” “Let Your Shack Burn Down;” “Baby All Night Long;” “Oh Sweet Mama;” “It’s All Night Long.”
PRINT SOURCES: “All Night Long” by Shelton Brooks Publication: Chicago: Will Rossiter, 1912 Call Number: M1 .D48 Box: 153 Item: 002; Cohen/Seeger/Wood, pp. 172-173, "Baby, All Night Long" (1 text, 1 tune); Silber-FSWB, p. 74, "All Night Long" (1 text); BrownIII 170, "It's All Night Long" (1 text); Sing Out! Reprints, Sing Out, Sof (196?), 1, p23; Leisy, James F. (ed.) / Songs for Pickin' and Singin', Gold Medal Books, sof (1962), p 34
NOTES: The “All Night Long” songs are a group of songs ending with “all night long/ baby all night long” etc. The traditional old-time country versions musically resemble the fiddle tune "Back Up And Push" for example:
Key G: C/ G / D/ G or the pattern is IV-I-V-I
“Paul and Silas” is an example of traditional spiritual “All Night Long” song.
The earliest published version is the verse found in “All Night Long” written by the African-American composer Shelton Brooks. The extent that Brooks song is based on traditional material is unknown but in my opinion it certainly seems to be a rewrite of a traditional spiritual that used the "all night long" tag. The verse of Brooks popular song (sheet music can be viewed on-line) could be the basis for later versions including the 1927 versions by Burnett & Rutherford and also Earl Johnson. Other titles called “Richmond Blues,” (Doc Watson) "Paul and Silas" (Ralph Stanley) were recorded much later.
A gospel song related lyrically to "Paul and Silas bound in jail" appeared in Charlotte Forten's, "Life on the Sea Islands" The Atlantic Monthly, May and June, in 1864:
Maurice’s especial favorite is one of the grandest hymns that we have yet heard: —
De tallest tree in Paradise
De Christian calls de Tree of Life,
An’ I hope dat trumpet blow me home
To my New Jerusalem.
CHORUS: “Blow, Gabriel! trumpet, blow louder, louder!
An’ I hope dat trumpet blow me home
To my New Jerusalem!
“Paul and Silas jail-bound
Sing God’s praise both night and day,
An’ I hope dat trumpet blow me home
To my New Jerusalem.
This is close to:
“Paul and Silas bound in jail-
Sing God’s praise all night long"
The gospel song was recorded as "Paul and Silas in Jail" by Washington Phillips in 1927 and as "Paul and Silas" by Snowball and Sunshine in 1932- ARC. “Paul and Silas” also became a popular bluegrass gospel song (Red Allen- 1953/The Country Gentlemen/Stanley Brothers and others).
Similar lines appear in the old spiritual "Keep Your Hand on the Plow" also known as "Hold On":
Took Paul and Silas, put 'em in the jail,
Had no one to go their bail.
Keep your hands on the plow, hold on.
The tag, "hold on" is similar to "All night long" and was one of a number of floating response lines that were sung after a line of a spiritual.
Excerpt from “Shelton Brooks- A Profile” by Thomas Morgan
Shelton Brooks was born to Native American & Black parents in Amherstburg, Ontario, on May 4, 1886. His father was a preacher and as a child he played the organ in his father's church, while his older brother pumped, since the bellows were below his reach. When he was 15, his family moved to Detroit and it was there that he had his first professional music job playing self-taught piano. In 1910, Sophie Tucker's maid introduced the singer to both Brooks and the song which would become Tucker's theme when she insisted that Brooks be brought to sing for her employer in Tucker's dressing room in a Chicago vaudeville theater. It was the start of a friendship was to last a lifetime in the process enabling more than a few musical careers.
The song was Some of These Days, which Tucker liked and began using immediately. I've turned it inside out, she was to write, singing it every way imaginable, as a dramatic song, as a novelty number, as a sentimental ballad, and always audiences have loved it and asked for it. In 1911, Brooks appeared in his first musical comedy, Dr. Herb's Prescription, or It Happened in a Dream. Performed in Chicago's famous African-American owned Pekin Theater, the comedy was produced by its star, Jesse Shipp, who had previously been involved in the Williams and Walker shows in New York.
Brooks quickly became known as an outstanding entertainer whose talents included singing, piano playing, and mimicking his fellow black vaudevillian Bert Williams. He also traveled as a trap drummer with Danny Small's Hot Harlem Band for several months during this period. The second decade of the twentieth century was an era of tango teas where whisky, not tea, was the drink of choice, and parties that lasted til dawn, and Brooks's songs captured its moods perfectly. His 1912 publication, All Night Long, evoked the nightclubs that literally never closed their doors; in fact, their owners often did not even have front door keys. His 1916 instrumental called Walkin' The Dog inspired a dance that swept dance-mad Manhattan and the rest of the country as well.
Brooks's most famous song was Darktown Strutter's Ball. Published in 1917 and introduced to the public on record by The Original Dixieland Jazz Band, it became an instant success. Along with W. C. Handy and William Grant Still, the dean of black classical composers, Brooks was honored in San Francisco at the ASCAP-sponsored Festival of American Music in 1940. He died in Los Angeles on September 6, 1975.
Joe Offer: This version comes from Joe Hickerson: The Folksmiths Traveling Folk Workshop - We've Got Some Singing to Do (1958) - Joe was part of the group, which often used this song to conclude their performances. The song was introduced to folk singing circles by Barry Kornfeld and Tony Saletan. Kornfeld got it from Roy Berkeley of New York, who apparently got it from an old hillbilly record.
Here are the lyrics to “All Night Long:”
ALL NIGHT LONG
[CHORUS]
(Singing) All night long, all night long,
All night long, from midnight on. [twice]
Went down to the station (down to the station)
Ready to go (ready to go)
If the train don't come (if the train don't come)
Something's wrong down the road
(something's wrong down the road)
[CHORUS]
If I live
And don't get killed
I'll make my home
In Louisville
In Louisville, in Louisville
That's if I live and don't get killed
[CHORUS]
If anyone asks you
Who made this song
Tell 'em it was me
And I'll sing it all night long
[CHORUS]
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