A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 3: “Ida Red” by Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys

Episode Date: October 21, 2018

Welcome to episode three of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs. Today we’re looking at Bob Wills and “Ida Red”. (more…)...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 A History of Rock Music in 500 songs By Andryrd. Episode 3 Ida Red Rock and Roll Why man? That's the same kind of music we've been playing since 1928. We didn't call it rock and roll back when we introduced it as our style back in 1928.
Starting point is 00:00:26 And we don't call it rock and roll the way we play it now. But it's just basic rhythm and has gone by a lot of different names in my time. It's the same, whether you just follow a drumbeat like in Africa, or surround it with a lot of instruments. The rhythm's what's important. Bob Wills said that in 1957, and it brings up an interesting question. What's in a name? Genre names are a strange thing, aren't they?
Starting point is 00:00:52 In particular, did you ever notice how many of them had the word and in them? Rock and roll. rhythm and blues, country and western. There's sort of a reason for that. Rock and roll is a special case, but the other two were names that were coined by Billboard magazine, and they weren't originally meant to be descriptors of a single genre, but of collections of genres.
Starting point is 00:01:22 They were titles for Billboard's different charts. Rhythm and Blues is a name that was used to replace the earlier name, race records, because that was thought a bit demeaning. It was for the chart of music made by black people, basically. Whatever music those black people were making, so they could be making rhythm records, or they could be making blues records. Only once you give a collection of things a name,
Starting point is 00:01:50 the way people's minds work, they start thinking because those things share a name, they're the same kind of thing. And people start thinking about rhythm, and blues records as being a particular kind of thing. And then they start making rhythm and blues records. And suddenly it is a thing. And the same thing goes for country and western. That was, again, two different genres. Country music was the music made by white people who lived in the rural areas of the eastern US, basically. People like the Carter family, for example. Let's have a listen to them.
Starting point is 00:02:30 Always on the sunny side Keep on the sunny side of life It will help us every day It will brighten all the way If we'll keep on the sunny side of life We'll hear a little bit more about the Carter family in the future But that's what country music was Not country and western
Starting point is 00:02:50 Just country And that was the music made in Appalachia Especially Kentucky and Tennessee And especially in Nashville Western music was a bit different. That was the music being made in Texas, Oklahoma and California, and it tended to use similar instrumentation to country music, violins and guitars and so on.
Starting point is 00:03:13 But it had different subject matter, lots of songs about cowboys and outlaws and so on. And at the time we're talking about, the 30s and 40s, it was a little bit slicker than country music. This is odd in retrospect, because not many years later, the Western musicians influenced people like Johnny Cash, Buck Owens, and Merle Haggard,
Starting point is 00:03:34 who made very gritty, raw, unpolished music compared to the country music coming out of Nashville. But the 30s and 40s were the heyday of singing cowboy films, with people like Gene Autry and Roy Rogers becoming massive, massive stars. And so there was a lot of Hollywoodization of the music, lots of crooning and orchestras, and so on. Western music was big, big, business, and so was swing music. And so it's perhaps not surprising that there was a new genre that emerged around that time called Western Swing.
Starting point is 00:04:10 Western Swing is, to simplify it ridiculously, swing music made in the west of the USA. But it's music that was made in the West, largely in places like California, by the same kinds of people who in the East were making country music and with a lot of the same influences. It took the rhythms of swing music, but played them with the same instrumentation as the country musicians were using. So you'd get hot jazz-style performances, but they'd be played on fiddle, banjo, guitar, and stand-up bass. There were a few other instruments that you'd usually get included as well, the steel guitar, for example. Western Swing also usually included a drum kit, which was one of the big ways it differed from country music as it was then. The drum kit was, in the early decades of the
Starting point is 00:04:57 20th century, primarily a jazz instrument, and it was only because Western Swing was a hybrid of jazz and Western music that it got included in those bands. And for a long time, drum kits were banned from country music shows like the Grand Ole Opry, and when they did finally relent and let Western Swing bands play there, they made the drummers hide behind a curtain. They would also include other instruments that weren't normally included in country or western music at that time, like the piano. Less often, you'd have a saxophone or a trumpet, but basically the typical Western swing line-up would be a guitar, a steel guitar, a violin or two, a piano, a bass and drums.
Starting point is 00:05:43 Again, as we saw in the episode about Flying Home, where we talked about non-Western swing, You can see the rock band lineups starting to form. It was a gradual process, though. Take Bob Wills, the musician whose drummer had to hide behind a curtain. Wills originally performed as a black-faced comedian. Sadly, black-faced performances were very, very common in the US in the 1930s. But then, they were common in the UK well into my lifetime. I'm not judging the US in particular here.
Starting point is 00:06:14 But he soon became more well-known as a fiddle player and occasional singer. In 1929, Wills, the singer Milton Brown and guitarist Herman Arnspiger, I may well be pronouncing that wrong, got together to perform a song at a Christmas dance party. They soon added Brown's brother Derwood on guitar and fiddle player John Dunham and became the Lightcrust doughboys. That might seem like a strange name for a name for a band, but it had been the name they chose themselves, but it wasn't. Their name was originally the Aladdin Laddies, as they got sponsored by the Aladdin Lamb Company to perform on WBAP radio under that name. But when that sponsorship fell through, they performed for a while as the Will's Fiddleman before they found a new sponsor, Papio Daniel.
Starting point is 00:07:39 You may know that name, as the name of the Governor of Mississippi in the film, Oh, Brother, Where Art Thou? And that was not an entirely inaccurate portrayal, though the character in that film definitely wasn't the real man. The real Papio Daniel didn't actually become governor of Mississippi, but he did become the governor of Texas in the 1940s. But in the late 1920s and early 30s, he was the head of advertising for Boris Mill and Elevator Company, who made light crust flour, and he started to sponsor the show. The band became immensely successful, but they were not particularly well paid. In fact, O'Daniel
Starting point is 00:08:18 insisted that everyone in the band would have to actually work a day job at the mill as well. Bob Wills was a truck driver, as well as being a fiddle player, and the others had different jobs in the factory. Pappy O'Daniel at first didn't like this hillbilly music being played on the radio show he was paying for. In fact, he wanted to cancel the show after two weeks. But Wills invited him down to the radio station to be involved in the broadcasts, and O'Doniel became the show's MC, as well as being the band's manager and the writer of their original material. O'Donial even got his own theme song, Pass the Biscuits Pappy. Music played by the real hillbilly band
Starting point is 00:09:01 I like bread and biscuits Big white fluffy biscuits My dear old ma'all just make some grand We like to sing and play And try to make folks happy We hope you'll say Please pass the biscuits, Pappy I like Mounted Music
Starting point is 00:09:16 Good old Mountain Music Played by the real hillbilly band That's not the light for Stoweboys Playing the song That's the Hillbilly Boys Another band Papio Daniel Hired a few years later when Boris Mill fired him, and he formed his own company, Hillbilly Flower.
Starting point is 00:09:32 But that's the song that the Lightcrust Doughboys used to play for O'Doniel, and the singer on that recording, Leon Huff, sang with the Doughboys from 1934 onwards, so you get the idea. In 1932, the Lightcrust Doughboys made their first recording, though they did so under the name the Fort Worth Doughboys. Papio Daniel didn't approve of them doing anything which might take them out of his control, so they couldn't use the name. Nancy. of the light crust doughboys
Starting point is 00:10:38 can be seen as the prototypical example of the singer-gatarist creative tension in rock music, except here it was a tension between the singer and the fiddle player. Milton Brown, by all accounts, wanted to experiment more with the jazz style, while Bob Wills wanted to stick with a more traditional hillbilly
Starting point is 00:10:55 string band sound. That creative tension led them to create a totally new form of music. To see this, we're going to look forward a little bit to 1936 to a slightly different line-up of the band. Take a listen to this, for example, Dinah. And this, Limehouse Blues. Listen to Django Reinhardt playing Dinah, Limehouse Blues. A few years after the Light Cross Doe Boys versions, but you can see the similarities. The Light Cross Doe Boys were doing the same things as Stefan Grapelli and Django Reinhart,
Starting point is 00:12:43 years before them, even though we would now think of the Light Grustdoboys as being a country band, while Grapelli and Reinhardt are absolutely in the jazz category. Now, I said that that's a different line-up of the Like Grust Do-Boys, and it is. A version of the Light Grust Do-Boys continues today, and one member, Smoky Montgomery, who joined the band in 1935, continued with them until his death in 2001. Smokey Montgomery is on those tracks you just heard. but Bob Wills and Milton Brown weren't.
Starting point is 00:13:16 They both left because Pappy O'Daniel was apparently not a very good person to work for. In particular, O'Doniel wouldn't let the doughboys play any venues where alcohol was served, or play dancers generally. O'Donial was only paying the band members $15 a week, and they could get $40 a night playing gigs, and so Brown left in 1932 to form his own band, The Musical Brownies. The musical Brownies are now largely forgotten, but they're considered the first band ever to play proper Western swing,
Starting point is 00:13:49 and they introduced a lot of things that defined the genre. In particular, they introduced electric steel guitar to the Western music genre, with the great steel player Bob Dunn. For a while, the musical Brownies were massively popular, but sadly Brown died in a car crash in 1936. Bob Wills stayed in the Do-Boys for a while longer as the band's leader, as O'Daniel gave him a raise to $38 a week, and he continued to make the kind of music he'd made when Brown was in the band. Both Brown and Wills clearly recognised that what they'd come up with together was something better and more interesting than just jazz or just Western. Wills recruited a new singer, Tommy Duncan. But in 1933, Wills was fired by O'Daniel. partly because of rouse over will's wanting his brother in the band and partly because wills's drinking was already starting to affect his professionalism he formed his own band and took duncan and bass player kermit whalen with him
Starting point is 00:14:51 the doe boys steel guitar player leon mccorliff soon followed and they became bob wills and his texas playboys they advertised themselves as formerly delight cross doe boys although that wasn't entirely true as they weren't the whole band, though they were the core of it, and Papio Daniel sued them unsuccessfully. And the Texas Playboys then became the first Western swing band to add a drum kit and become a more obviously rhythm-oriented band. The Texas Playboys were the first massively, massively successful Western swing band, and their style was one that involved taking elements from everywhere and putting them together. They had the drums and horns that a jazz band would have. The guitars and fiddles that country or western bands would have, to steal guitar that a Hawaiian band would have,
Starting point is 00:15:40 and that meant that they could play all those styles of music if they wanted to. And they did. They mixed jazz and western and blues and pop, and came up with something different from all of them. This was music for dancing. And as music for dancing, it had a lot of aspects that would later make their way into rock and roll. In particular, it had that backbeat we talked about in episode two,
Starting point is 00:16:03 although here it was swung less. When you listen to them play with a heavy backbeat but with the fiddle as the main instrument you can hear the influence of polka music which was a big influence on all the Western swing musicians and through them on rock and roll polka music is performed in two-four time and there's a very very strong connection
Starting point is 00:16:23 between the polka beat and the backbeat I won't go into that too much more here I already talked about the backbeat quite a bit in episode two but while researching these episodes I found a hugely informative but very detailed look at the development of the rock backbeat, so on his PhD thesis from 20 years ago, 400 pages just on that topic, which I will link in the web page if you want a much more detailed explanation.
Starting point is 00:16:47 Now, by looking at the lineup of the Texas Playboys, we can see how the rock band lineup evolved. In 1938, the Texas Playboys had a singer, two guitars, one doubling on fiddle, Three fiddlers, a banjo player, steel guitar, bass, drums, piano, trumpet, trombone and two saxes. A huge band, and won at least as swing as it was Western. But around that time, Will's started to use electric guitars. Electric guitars only really became a thing in 1938, musically, and a lot of people started using them at the same time. like Benny Goodman's band, as we heard about in the first episode.
Starting point is 00:17:29 Wills' band was one of the first to use them, and Western musicians generally were more likely to use them, as they were already using amplified steel guitars. We talked in episode two about how the big bands died between 1942 and 1944, and Wills was able to make his band considerably smaller with the aid of amplification, so by 1944 he'd got rid of most of his horn section apart from a single trumpet. having his electric guitars play what would previously have been horn lines. So by 1944, the band would consist of two fiddles, two basses, two electric guitars, steel guitar,
Starting point is 00:18:07 drums and a trumpet. A smaller band, an electrified band, and one which, other than the fiddles and the trumpet, was much closer to the kind of line-ups you would get in the 50s and 60s. A smaller, tighter band. Now, Wills's band quickly became the most popular band in the genre, and he became widely known as the King of Western Swing. But Wills' music was more than just swing. He was pulling together elements from country, from the blues, from jazz, from anything that could make him popular. And sadly, that would sometimes include plagiarism. Now, the question of black influence on white music is a fraught one, and one that will come up a lot in the course of this history. and a lot of the time people get things wrong. There were, of course, white people who made their living
Starting point is 00:18:59 by taking black people's music and watering it down. There were also, though, plenty of more complicated examples and examples of mutual influence. There was a constant bouncing of ideas back and forth between country, western, blues, jazz, swing. All of these genres were coded as belonging to one or other race, but all of them had musicians who were listening to one another. This is not to say that racism was not a factor in who was successful.
Starting point is 00:19:29 Of course it was, and this episode is, after all, about someone who started out as a blackface performer. Race was a massive factor, and sadly still is. But the general culture among musicians at the time was that good musicians of whatever genre respected good musicians of any other genre, and there were songs that everyone, or almost everyone played in their own styles, simply because a good song was a good song, and at the time there wasn't the same tight association of performer and song that there is now.
Starting point is 00:20:01 You'd sometimes have five or six people in the charts with hit versions of the same song. You'd have a country version and a blues version and a swing version of a song, not because anyone was stealing anyone else's music, but because it was just accepted that everyone would record a hit song in their own style. and certainly, in the case of Bob Wills, he was admired and admired musicians across racial boundaries.
Starting point is 00:20:27 The white jazz guitarist Les Paul, of whom we'll almost certainly be hearing more, used to tell a story. Paul was so amazed by Bob Wills' music that in 1938 he travelled from Waukesha, Wisconsin, where he was visiting his mother, to Tulsa, Oklahoma, to hear Wills' band play, after his mother made him listen to Wills on the radio. Paul was himself a famous guitarist at the time, and he got drawn on stage to jam with the band. And then, in an interval, a black man in the audience. Presumably this must have been an integrated audience, which would have been very unusual in 1938 in Oklahoma. But this is how Les Paul told the story, and other parts check out so he should probably take his word for it. Came up and asked for Les Paul's autograph. He told Paul that he played the guitar, and Paul said for the young man to show him what he could.
Starting point is 00:21:19 could do. The young man did, and Paul said, Jesus, you are good. You want to come up and sit with us. And he did. That was the first time that Les Paul met his friend Charlie Christian, shortly before Christian got the offer from Benny Goodman, hanging out and jamming at a Bob Wills gig. So we can, for the most part, safely put Bob Wills into the mutual respect and influence category. He was someone who had the respect of his peers, and he was part of a chain of influence. crossing racial and stylistic boundaries. It gets more difficult when you get to someone like Pat Boone a few years later, who would record sound-alike versions of black musicians' hits,
Starting point is 00:22:00 specifically to sell to people who wouldn't buy music by black people and act as a spoiler for their records. That's ethically very, very dodgy, plus Boone was a terrible musician. But what I think we can all agree on is that just outright stealing a black musician's song, crediting it to a white musician, and making it a massive hit is just wrong. And sadly that happened with Bob Wills' band at least once.
Starting point is 00:22:26 Now, Leon McCorliff, the Texas Playboy's steel guitar player, is the credited composer of steel guitar Ragh, which is the instrumental which really made the steel guitar a permanent fixture in country and western music. Without this instrumental, country music would be totally different. That's from 1936. Now in 1927, the guitarist Sylvester Weaver made a pioneering recording, which is now often called the first recorded country blues,
Starting point is 00:23:10 the first recorded blues instrumental, and the first slide guitar recording. As I've said before, there is never a first, but Weaver's recording is definitely important. That track is called Guitar Rag, and, well, Leon McCorleyf always claimed he'd never heard Sylvester Weaver's song and came up with steel guitar rag independently. Do you believe him? So, the Texas Playboys were not averse to a bit of plagiarism.
Starting point is 00:23:58 But the song we're going to talk about for the rest of the episode is one that would end up plagiarized itself very famously. Ida Redd is an old folk song, first recorded in 1924. In fact, structurally, it's a Hocum song. As is often the case with this kind of song, it's part of a massive family tree of other songs. There are blues and country songs with the same melody, songs with different melodies but mentions of Ida Red, songs which contain different lines from the song. Many folk songs aren't so much songs in themselves as they are labels you can put on a whole family.
Starting point is 00:24:31 There's no one song Ida Red. There's a whole bunch of songs which are, to a greater or lesser extent, Ida Red. Ida Red is just a name you can slap on that family, something you can point to. Most versions of Ida Red had the same chorus. Ida Red, Ida Red, I'm Plum Fool about Ida Red, but different lyrics, often joking, improvised ones. Here's the first version of Ida Red to be recorded. Oddly, this version doesn't even have the chorus, but it does have the chorus melody played on the fiddle. This is fiddle in Powers and Family, singing about Ida Red who weighs 340 pounds in 1924.
Starting point is 00:25:29 Will's version is very differently structured. It has totally different lyrics. It has the familiar chorus, but the verse. verses are totally different and have nothing to do with the character of Ida Red. Lights in the parlour, fires in the grate, clock on the mantel says it's a getting late, curtains on the window, snowy white, the parlour's pleasant on Sunday night. Lighten the parlour, four in the great clock on the mantel's in it's getting late, curtains on the window, snow and white, the parlour's pledding on Sunday night.
Starting point is 00:25:58 Ida Red, I'd a Red, I'm plumb fool about. Those lyrics, and all the other lyrics in Wills's version except the chorus, from an 1878 parlour song called Sunday Night by George Frederick Root, a Civil War-era songwriter who is now best known as the writer of the melody we now know as Jesus loves the little children. They're cut down to fit into the fast-patter do-doce style of the song, but they're still definitely the same lyrics as Roots. Ida Red was one of many massive hits for Will's and the Texas Playboys, who continued to be hugely successful through the 1940s, at one point becoming a bigger live draw than Benny Goodman or Tommy Dorsey. Although the back
Starting point is 00:26:51 Fans' success started to decline when Tommy Duncan quit in 1948 over Will's drinking. Wills would often miss shows because of his binge drinking, and Duncan was the one who had to deal with the angry fans. Wills replaced Duncan with various other singers, but never found anyone who had had the same success with him. Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys had a couple of hits in the very early 1950s. One of them, indeed, was a sequel to Ida Red. Ida Red likes the boogie, a novelty boogie song of the type we discussed. last week. And think back to what I said then about the boogie fad persisting much longer than it should have. Ida Red likes the boogie was recorded in 1949 and went top 10 in 1950,
Starting point is 00:27:32 yet those boogie novelty songs I talked about last week were from 1940. There's learning how to do the boogie-moogie, they're learning how to shuffle and prance, but the cutest little trick to boogie out of the sticks is Ida red with their boogie dance, Ida Red likes to do the boogie-woogie. Ida Red likes to do the boogie-woogie. She doesn't one step or two-step or do the minuet, but she does a better boogie dance than anyone get, and I'm a fool. But even as his kind of music was getting more into fashion under the name Rock and Roll,
Starting point is 00:28:10 Wills himself became less popular. The band was still a popular live attraction through most of the 1950s, but they never again reached the heights of the 30s and 40s, and Wills' deteriorating health, and the band's lack of success, made them split up in 1965. But before they'd split, Wills' music had had a lasting influence on rock and roll, and not just on the people you might expect.
Starting point is 00:28:32 Remember how I talked about plagiarism? Well, in 1955, a musician went into Chess Studios with a slight rewrite of Ida Redd that he called Ida May. Leonard Chess persuaded him to change the name because otherwise it would be too obvious where he stole the tune. And we will talk about Mabeline by Chuck Berry in a few weeks' time. A history of rock music and 500 songs is written produced and performed by Andrew Hickey. Visit 500Songs.com, that's 50000, the numbers, songs.com, to see transcriptions, liner notes,
Starting point is 00:29:05 and links to other materials, including a mixed cloud stream of all songs excerpted in this episode. A history of rock music and 500 songs is supported by the backers on my Patreon. Visit patreon.com slash Andrew Hickey to support it. Patreon backers also get early access to my books and also support my blog and my other podcasts If you've enjoyed this episode Please by all means subscribe in iTunes or your favourite podcast app And rate it
Starting point is 00:29:36 But more importantly please tell just one other person about this podcast Word of mouth is the best way to get information out About any creative work So please if you like this tell someone Thank you very much

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