Blue-Tail Fly
Breakdown and song tune by Daniel Decatur Emmett;
ARTIST: Bradley Kincaid
Listen: Bradley Kincaid; Blue-Tail Fly
Listen: Leadbelly; Blue-Tail Fly
Listen: Burl Ives; Blue-Tail Fly
CATEGORY: Fiddle and Instrumental Tunes; DATE: 1844;
RECORDING INFO: Pete Seeger, "Jim Crack Corn" (on PeteSeeger03, PeteSeegerCD03); "The Blue Tail Fly" (on PeteSeeger17). Molsky, Bruce; and Big Hoedown. Bruce Molsky and Big Hoedown, Rounder 0421, CD (1997), cut#15; Cooney, Michael. Steamboat Coming, National Geographic Soc. 07787, LP (1976), cut# 13; Gellert, Dan. American Fogies. Vol. 1, Rounder 0379, CD (1996), cut#12; Ives, Burl. Burl Ives, Vol. 3, Decca DL 5093, LP (195?), cut#A.04; Ives, Burl. Burl Ives Sings for Fun, Decca DL 8248, LP (195?), cut#A.07; Kincaid, Bradley. Mountain Ballads and Old Time Solos. Album Number Three, Bluebonnet BL 109, LP (1963), cut#B.01; McCoy, Paul (B.). Allegheny Trails, Jewel LPS 504, LP (1975), cut#B.01; North Fork Ramblers. Gee Ain't It Grand, Fretless FR 140, LP (1979), cut#B.03; Okun, Milt. America's Best Loved Folk Songs, Baton BL 1293, LP (1957), B.08; Parker, Chet. Hammered Dulcimer, Folkways FA 2381, LP (1966), cut# 1c; Parker, Chet. Hammered Dulcimer, Folkways FA 2381, LP (1966), cut# 1d; Stracke, Win. Songs of Early Times, Early Times, LP (1961), cut#A.05
OTHER NAMES: Jim Crack Corn; Jimmie Crack Corn; Gimme Cracked Corn (Perhaps “Jimmie Crack Corn” is dervived from Give Me (Gimme) Cracked Corn (Whiskey).
SOURCES: Lomax-FSNA 267, "The Blue-Tail Fly" Native American Balladry, Amer. Folklore Society, Bk (1964), p256; Laws I19, "The Blue-Tail Fly"; Friedman, p. 453, "The Blue-Tail Fly"; RJackson-19CPop, pp. 91-92, "Jim Crack Corn or the Blue Tail Fly"; Arnett, p. 66, "Jim Crack Corn (Blue-Tail Fly)"; Botkin-SoFolklr, p. 709, "The Blue-Tail Fly"; PSeeger-AFB, p. 12, "The Blue-Tail Fly"; Silber-FSWB, p. 30, "The Blue-Tail Fly"; Fuld-WFM, p. 312, "Jim Crack Corn".
NOTES: Same chorus as "Shoo Fly". Credited to Daniel Emmett by Spaeth but it’s likely that if he wrote it from other sources. One of the earliest publications was in a series credited to him -- but the absence of his name on the earliest copies goes far toward discrediting his authorship. The subtext for this song is that the slave in fact killed the master himself, blaming it on the blue-tail fly. This is hinted at, to varying degrees, in some versions of the song.
CRACK CORN? The Civil War song, Jimmy Cracked Corn, was one of Abe Lincoln's favorite songs! However, in the song, Jimmy wasn't really cracking corn. He was sleeping, and "cracking corn" was another term for snoring.
"Jimmy Crack Corn" was slang for "gimme cracked corn" or corn liquor. "Jimcrack o' corn and I don't care" "Jimcrack" is a measure of whiskey.
"Cracking corn" for telling jokes or tall tales: "I should explain to your Lordship what is meant by crackers; a name they have got from being great boasters; they are a lawless bunch of rascals on the frontiers of Virginia, Maryland, the Carolinas and Georgia, who often change their places of abode. G. Cochrane, 1766, in "Letters," 27 June. OED; The term comes from the Scottish-northern English word crack (crake), meaning boasting, which has been used in that sense from 1460 in print. See OED, 1971 and later eds. Georgia apparntly was first called the Cracker State in print in 1808, in "Balance," Verses by a Cracker Planter.
According to "The Cassel Dictionary of Slang" "Crack-Corn" referred to White People and originally meant the White natives of Kentucky. It was apparently a variation of "corncracker" which meant a poor white farmer and was apparently applied to the natives of Florida, Georgia, Kentucky or Tennessee possibly because of their dependance on corn or maize. Corn in the British Isles refers to wheat, oats or barley as distinct from the American meaning. (From Mudcat Discussion Forum)
BLUE-TAIL FLY- Bradley Kincaid
Listen: Bradley Kincaid; Blue-Tail Fly
When I was young I used to wait
On master and give him the plate
And pass the bottle when he got dry
And brush away the blue-tail fly.
CHORUS: Jimmy crack corn and I don’t care
Jim crack corn and I don’t care
Jim crack corn and I don’t care
My master’s gone away.
Then after dinner master'd sleep
He bid me vigilance to keep.
And when he want he'd shut his eye
He'd tell me watch the blue-tailed fly. CHORUS:
And when he’d ride in the afternoon
I’d follow with a hickory broom
The pony being very bit shy
When bitten by a blue-tail fly. CHORUS:
One day when ride around the farm
The flies so num'rous they did swarm.
One chanced to bite him on the thigh,
The Devil take the blue-tail fly. CHORUS:
The pony jump, he run, he pitch
He tumbled master in the ditch
He died and the jury wondered why
The verdict was: the blue-tail fly. CHORUS:
They laid him under the 'simmon tree
His epitaph was there to see
Beneath this stone I’m forced to lie
A victim of a blue tail fly. CHORUS:
Ol’ master’s dead and gone to rest
They say all things is for the best
I’ll never forget till the day I die
Ol’ massy and the blue-tail fly. CHORUS:
There's many kinds of insect things,
From many souces they do spring.
Some hatch in June andd some in July
But August fetch the blue-tail fly. CHORUS:
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