Dar's No One Lak' Jesus/There 's No One Like Jesus
Traditional Old-Time Gospel;
ARTIST: Howard W. Odum, "Religious Folk-Songs of the Southern Negroes" (American Journal of Psychology and Education, vol. iii, pp. 307, 364) 1909.
CATEGORY: Traditional and Public Domain Gospel;
DATE: 1800s; 1909 Odum;
RECORDING INFO: Dar's No One Lak' Jesus
Odum, Howard W., "Religious Folk-Songs of the Southern Negroes" (American Journal of Psychology and Education, vol. iii, pp. 307, 364) 1909.
RELATED TO:
OTHER NAMES: "There's No One Like Jesus" "Dere's No One Lak' Jesus."
SOURCES: Howard W. Odum, "Religious Folk-Songs of the Southern Negroes" (American Journal of Psychology and Education, vol. iii, pp. 307, 364) 1909.
NOTES: "Dar's No One Lak' Jesus" or "Dere's No One Lak' Jesus" or "There's No One Like Jesus" is a traditional African-American spiritual collected by Howard W. Odum, and published in "Religious Folk-Songs of the Southern Negroes" (American Journal of Psychology and Education, vol. iii, pp. 307, 364) in 1909.
Odum remarks: "Dere's No One Lak' Jesus." The chorus-line was common in the old songs; the verses of the song of today are different.
Dar's No One Lak' Jesus- Odum 1909
I think I heard a rumblin' in de sky,
Dar's no one lak Jesus.
It mus' be mer Lord passin' by,
Dar's no one lak Jesus.
Stan' still, walk study, keep de faith,
Dar's no one lak' Jesus.
Sister Mary went up on de mount'n top,
Dar's no one lak' Jesus.
She sung a li'l song an' she never did stop,
Dar's no one lak' Jesus.
She argued wid de Fadder an' chatter'd wid de Son,
Dar's no one lak' Jesus.
She talk'd erbout the ole worl' she cam frum,
Dar's no one lak' Jesus.
|