Baby Mine- Original Lyrics

Baby Mine- Original lyrics 1874

Baby Mine/Going Round the World, Baby Mine/Banjo Pickin’ Girl/Baby


Painting by Richard Matteson

Old-time Bluegrass song, widely known.

ARTIST: “Baby Mine” Words Charles Mackay; Music Achibald Johnson CATEGORY: Fiddle and Instrumental Tunes

DATE: 1874 First Published as “Baby Mine” Words Charles Mackay; Music Achibald Johnson in 1874. Reprinted in Heart Songs (Chapple) 1909; Memory Melodies- Middle Tennessee Folk-Songs- 1947: "This (Baby) was a fiddle tune common in the "nineties," (1890s) in the territory where the other songs of this collection were found. The inpromptu verses coined were endless in number."

RECORDING INFO: 1.Coon Creek Girls. Early Radio Favorites, Old Homestead OHS 142, LP (1982), cut# 10 2.Coon Creek Girls. Banjo Pickin' Girl, Rounder 1029, LP (1978), cut# 16 3.Coon Creek Girls. Going Down The Valley; Vocal & Instrumental Music from the South, New World NW 236, LP (1977), cut# 17 4.Fink, Cathy. Leading Role, Rounder 0223, LP (1985), cut#B.05 5.Hazel And Alice. Hazel Dickens and Alice Gerrard, Rounder 0054, LP (1976), cut# 11 6.Ledford, Lilly Mae. Banjo Pickin' Girl, Greenhays GR 712, LP (1983), cut# 1 7.Rutherford, Ernest; and the Gold Hill Band. Old Cap'n Rabbit, Heritage (Galax) 080, Cas (1989), cut# 9 8.Sexton, Lee "Boy". Whoa Mule, June Appal JA 0051, LP (1987), cut# 8 (Going Round This World) 9.Skirtlifters. Somewhere in Dixie, Skirtlifters, Cas (1987), cut#B.06 (Goin' Around the World (Baby Mine)) 10.Stamper, I.D.. Red Wing, June Appal JA 0010, LP (1977), cut# 8 (Going Round This World) R. D. Burnett & Lynn Woodard, "Going Around the World" (recorded for Gennett 1929, but unissued; on BurnRuth01); Coon Creek Girls, "Banjo-Pickin' Girl" (Vocalion 04413/OKeh 04413, 1938; on GoingDown); Pete Steele, "Goin' Around This World, Baby Mine" (on PSteele01)

RELATED TO: "Crawdad (Sugar Babe)" "New River Train" “I’m Going Back to Jericho”

OTHER NAMES: Baby Mine; Baby; Going round the World Baby Mine; Banjo Pickin’ Girl; Going Round This World; Living on the Mountain Baby Mine; Going Away From Home;

SOURCES: Ceolas; Mudcat Café; Liner notes; Silber-FSWB, p. 54, "Baby Mine" (1 text); Roud #11519; Memory Melodies- 1947;

NOTES: The song, Going ‘Round the World Baby Mine/Banjo Pickin’ Girl, originated from the popular song “Baby Mine” from the late 1800’s or a similar folk song--after all Mackay and Johnson's song is based on a folk song. The song form used in “Baby Mine” published in 1874 as “Baby Mine” with words by Charles Mackay and music by Archibald Johnson is similar to the Captain Kidd/Froggy Went A-Courtin’ family of songs. These songs have a repeated part: ("Oh my name is Captain Kidd, as I sailed, as I Sailed") (Froggy went a courtin’ and he did ride un-huh, un-huh); "Sam Hall" ("My name it is Sam Hall, it is Sam Hall"); the hymn "Wondrous Love" ("Oh, what wondrous love this is, O my soul, O my soul").

 

There are several bluegrass/folk songs that have evolved from Baby Mine with the “baby mine” tag: "Banjo-Pickin' Girl" and “Crawdad Song.” Sometimes there isn’t a tag “I wish I was a Mole (Tempy)” or the tag has been changed to “sugar babe:”

"I'm Going Back to Jericho" by Dock Walsh

I'm goin' back to Jericho, sugar babe,
I'm goin' back to Jericho, sugar babe,
I'm goin' back to Jericho, 
And I'm getting married 'fore I go, Sugar babe.

From Stewie: In their notes to the Rounder album, 'Banjo Pickin' Girl', Charles Wolfe and Patricia A. Hall mentioned the 'Baby Mine' song. It seems clear that Lily Mae Ledford and the Coon Creek Girls were responsible for entrenching 'Banjo Pickin' Girl' in southern tradition. The pertinent passage in the Wolfe/Hall notes is as follows:

Norm Cohen has described 'Banjo Pickin' Girl' as a song that 'conjures up the image of another fun-loving, wanderlusting mountain girl - the Appalachian equivalent of the jazz age's flapper'. In this respect, it shares much of the spirit of Roba Stanley's 'Single Girl', Moonshine Kate's 'Poor Girl's Story' and the Bowman Sisters' 'Old Lonesome Blues'. Parts of this song have been traced to the middle of the sixteenth century and the melody is related to a cluster of mountain banjo songs like 'Crawdad' and 'Sugar Baby'. The 'baby mine' refrain is found in a pop song from 1879 of that name. Another Kentucky variant of the song is performed by Dick Burnett on Rounder 1004.

The Burnett piece referred to is 'Going Around the World' (1929) for which he claimed authorship, albeit a parody of 'Baby Mine'. Emry Arthur recorded a song of the same title in 1928. The Coon Creek girls recorded 'Banjo Pickin' Girl' in 1938.

Here are the lyrics to "Baby Mine": 

BABY MINE
Words Charles Mackay; Music Achibald Johnson 1874

I’ve a letter from thy sire, baby mine, baby mine, 
I could read and never tire, baby mine, baby mine; 
He is sailing o’er the sea, he is coming back to me, 
He is coming back to me, baby mine, baby mine, 
He is coming back to me, baby mine. 

Oh I long to see his face baby mine, baby mine,
In his old accustom’d place baby mine, baby mine,
Like the rose of May in bloom, like a star mid the gloom,
Like the sunshine in the room, baby mine, baby mine,
Like the sunshine in the room, baby mine.

I’m so glad I cannot sleep baby mine, baby mine,
I’m so happy I could weep baby mine, baby mine,
He is sailing o’er the sea, he is coming back to me, 
He is coming back to me, baby mine, baby mine, 
He is coming back to me, baby mine.