Georgia Railroad- Version 1 (Gid Tanner)

Georgia Railroad (Gid Tanner)- Version 1

Georgia Railroad (Gid Tanner)

Traditional Old-Time, Breakdown & Song;

ARTIST: Gid Tanner- Recorded September 11, 1924 Columbia 15019 – D; Released March 1925.

CATEGORY: Fiddle and Instrumental Tunes DATE: Early 1900’s;

RECORDING INFO: Blake, Norman and Nancy. Just Gimme Something I'm Use To, Shanachie 6001, Cas (1992), cut# 2. Block, Allan; and Ralph Lee Smith. Allan Block & Ralph Lee Smith, Meadowlands MS 1, LP (1971), cut#B.06. Carson, Fiddlin' John. Fiddlin' John Carson. Vol 4, Document DOCD 8017, CD (1997), cut# 3 (Peter Went Fishing). Forrester, Howdy. Devil's Box, Devil's Box DB, Ser (196?), 26/1, p40 (Peter Went a Fishing). Ledford String Band. Ledford String Band, Rounder 0008, LP (1972), cut# 3. Luckiamute River String Band. Waterbound, Lucks '94, Cas (1994), cut#A.02. Possum Hunters. Death on Lee Highway, Takoma A-1010, LP (196?), cut# 6 (Peter and I Went Fishing). Spence, Bill. Saturday Night in the Provinces, Front Hall FHR-005, LP (1975), cut# 5. Tenenbaum, Molly. And the Hillsides Are All Covered with Cakes, Cat Hair, Cas (1994), cut# 15

OTHER NAMES: Peter Went a Fishing; Gary Dawson's Tune

SOURCES: Tom McCreesh [Brody and Kuntz]; Alan Block [Phillips]. Brody (Fiddler's Fakebook), 1983; pg. 118. Kuntz (Ragged but Right), 1987; pg. 319-320. Miller & Perron (101 Polkas), 1978; No. 63. Phillips (Traditional American Fiddle Tunes), 1994; Kuntz, Fiddler's Companion, http://www.ceolas.org/tunes/fc; pg. 96. Front Hall 05, Fennigs All Stars- "Saturday Night in the Provinces."

NOTES: The fast fiddle breakdown is usually played in A Major, standard tuning. The form is AABB and usually sung to the A part only. The song was recorded first in 1924 by Gid Tanner of Skillet Licker fame. The recording was done before the Skillet Lickers were formed when Gid traveled with Riley Puckett to New York City for a recording session with Columbia organized by Frank Walker. Tanner played fiddle and sang, Pucket certainly played guitar and an unknown banjo player (possibly Fate Norris) was featuerd on the cut. It was later recorded by the Skillet Lickers and also Skillet Licker, Clayton McMichen.

This song is frequently titled "Peter and I went Fishing" or by Fiddlin' John Carson as "Peter Went A-Fishing." Carson's 1926 version for Okeh only used one verse:

Late last night, Peter went a-fishing
Cally -um, cally- um day.
Caught a big mud-cat, put him in the kitchen,
Cally -um, cally- um day.

 

LYRICS by Gid Tanner:

Instumental-

Peter and I we went a-fishin'
Georgia Railroad I am bound;
Catch a big mud-cat, put him in the kitchen,
Georgia Railroad, I am bound.

Instumental-

Walked down the road ‘til it got right muddy,
Georgia Railroad I am bound;
*But I'm so drunk I can't stand steady,
Georgia Railroad, Georgia gal.

I got drunk and fell in a gully
Georgia Railroad I am bound;
I got drunk but I never got muddy.
Georgia Railroad, Georgia gal.

Instumental-

Walked down the road ‘til it got right muddy,
Georgia Railroad I am bound;
*But I'm so drunk I can't stand steady,
Georgia Railroad, Georgia gal.

*Not sure of the lyrics here.