Jinny Git Around- Lomax 1937

Jinny Get Around 

Jinny Get Around/Jenny Get Around 

Traditional Old-Time, Breakdown.

ARTIST: From Lomax "Our Singing Country"

Listen: John Morgan Salyer 1941- Jenny Get Around

CATEGORY: Fiddle and Instrumental Tunes DATE: Early 1900’s (recording 1937 Lomax) As "Old John Tyler" 1841 -Lomax (Our Singing Country)

RECORDING INFO: Jinny Get Around

Cazden, Norman (ed.) / Book of Nonsense Songs, Crown, Sof (1961), p 81
Jinny Git Around

Rt - Sugar Hill
Mullins, James. Lomax, John A. & Alan Lomax / Our Singing Country, Dover, Sof (2000/1941), p 63 [1937]
Ritchie, Jean. Singing Family of the Cumberlands, Riverside RLP 12-653, LP (1957), trk# B.03b (Goin' to See My True Love)
Ritchie, Jean. Ritchie, Jean / Singing Family of the Cumberlands, Oak, sof (1955), p193 (Goin' to See My True Love)
Seeger, Pete. Seeger, Pete / How to Play the Five String Banjo, Seeger, sof (1962), p32 
 
RELATED TO: “Goin' to See My True Love;” "Sugar Hill" “Jinny Go Round and Around (lyrics)”

OTHER NAMES: “Goin' to See My True Love,” "Jenny Get Around;"

SOURCES: Folk index; Singing Family of the Cumberlands; Our Singing Country

Notes From Andrew Kuntz: JENNY GET AROUND. Old-Time, Song and Breakdown. USA, Kentucky. A Major. AEae tuning. AABB. Jeff Titon (2001) says the tune is related to one of the “Liza Jane” melody types, and points out similarities between the ‘A’ part of “Jenny Get Around” and the ‘B’ part of Clyde Davenport’s “Liza Jane.” Mark Wilson points out relationships between “Jenny…” and the “Sugar Hill” tune family. Titon calls it a regional eastern Kentucky tunes and finds it listed twice on the Berea, Kentucky, tune lists of 1915. It is often sung, with banjo accompaniment and was collected as a song by John and Alan Lomax, appearing in their book Our Singing Country (1941, pgs. 63-65). Source for notated version: John M. Salyer (Salyersville, Magoffin County, Ky., 1941) [Titon]. Titon (Old-Time Kentucky Fiddle Music), 2001; No. 74, pg. 103. Berea College Appalachian Center AC003, “John M. Salyer: Home Recordings 1941-1942, vol. 2” (1993). Jim Martin Productions JMP201, Gerry Milnes (et al) – “Gandydancer.” June Apal 0051, Lee Sexton – “Whoa Mule” (1988). June Apal 0055, Morgan Sexton – “Rock Dust” (1989). Mudthumper Music MM-0030, Clare Milliner and Walt Koken – “Just Tunes.”


NOTES: "Jinny Get Around" is as a banjo and fiddle tune from the Kentucky mountain region. It was collected by Alan Lomax from James Mullins in Florress, Ky. in 1937 and appears with music. The Ritchie family of Kentucky also knew a version they titled, “Goin' to See My True Love,” the first verse and chorus are:

The days are long and lone-some,
The nights are a-get-tin'cold,
I'm goin' to see my true love
'Fore I get too old.
 
CHORUS: 0 get around, Jenny get around
0 get around I say.
0 get around, Jenny get around
Long summers day

According to Jean Ritchie the tune was in the repertoire of Kentucky fiddler Cleve Hamilton and resembles "Napoleon Crossing The Rockies." Her father and other knew the lyrics. "Jenny Get Around" was recorded by fiddler John M. Salyer, Salyersville, Magoffin County, Kentucky, December 1941. The tunes was also in the repertoire of Hiram Stamper, father of Art Stamper. 

In his book, The Mountain, the Miner, and the Lord and Other Tales from a Country Law Office, Harry M. Caudill give the chorus and tell as about KY fifer Sie Cornett who was 85 in 1935 when Caudill knew him. According to Sie, the tuen was a favorite among the Rebel troops during the Civil War. Sie sang these standard words for the chorus:

Oh, get around, Jinny, get around,
Oh, git around, I say.
Oh, git around, Jinny, git around, 
On a long summer's day.

The Lomax version has floating lyrics found in "Sugar Hill" and the songs are somewhat related melodically. There is also some connection to at least with the lyrics to the chorus of “Jinny Go Round and Around” also known as "Where'd you Get Your Whisky" or "Rockingham Cindy":

Verse:  Where did you get your whiskey?
        Where did you get your dram?
        I got it from a little girl
        Way down in Rockingham.

Chorus: Jinny go round an' around
        Jinny go round an' around
        Jinny go round an' around
        Way down in Rockingham.


JINNY GIT AROUND (A banjo tune)
 Acc. on banjo and sung by James Mullins, Florress, Ky., 1937.

* The banjo interludes occur between chorus 2 and each succeeding stanza. The form of the song would appear, therefore, to be "stanza, chorus 1, chorus 2," in spite of the fact the song begins with chorus 1.

Chorus 1: Oh, git around, Jinny, git around,
Oh, git around, I say,
Oh, git around, Jinny, git around,
All on a summer day.

Chorus 2:
Want to git your eye knocked out,
And want to git your fill,
Want to git your eye knocked out,
Git on the mountain mill.

1. My true love up on the mountain,
Bowing up and down,
If I had my broadax here,
I'd hew the mountain down. (Chorus 1 and 2.)