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RUBBER DOLLY (BREAKDOWN) [1]. AKA - "Rubber Dolly Rag." AKA and see "[[Back Up and Push (1)]]." Bluegrass, Old-Time; Breakdown. USA; Texas, Arkansas, North Carlolina, Virginia, New York State. C Major (Phillips): A Major (Bronner). Standard or AEae tuning (fiddle). AA (Bronner): AA'BB' (Phillips). The popular melody variously called "Rubber Dolly" or "Back up and push" by old=time and bluegrass musicians was the product of composer Jens Bodwalt Lampe [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Bodewalt_Lampe] (1869–1929), a Danish-born violinist, composer, arranger, performer and band-leader of ragtime and syncopated dance music. He was a child prodigy, and by the age of sixteen had secured a position as first chair violinist for the Minneapolis Symphony. Lampe married and moved to Buffalo, N.Y., in the 1890's where he led a dance band. and continued to compose and publish. His most famous composition is a piece called "Creole Belles," published in 1900, a year after the success of Scott Joplin's "Maple Leaf Rag". It is a rag or cakewalk (the sheet music says it is a "Ragtime march" or "March-two-step") that became the second major hit of ragtime that sold more than a million copies in sheet music, and was recorded by John Philip Sousa's band in 1902 and again four subsequent times in the decade 1902-1912). "Creole Belles" became a staple of brass and jazz bands and ragtime pianists, in part because the piece was versatile and could be employed as a march, two-step, and ragtime cakewalk.
RUBBER DOLLY (BREAKDOWN) [1]. AKA - "Rubber Dolly Rag." AKA and see "[[Back Up and Push (1)]]," "Wubba Dolly." Bluegrass, Old-Time; Breakdown. USA; Texas, Arkansas, North Carlolina, Virginia, New York State. C Major (Phillips): A Major (Bronner). Standard or AEae tuning (fiddle). AA (Bronner): AA'BB' (Phillips). The popular melody variously called "Rubber Dolly" or "Back Up and Push" by old=time and bluegrass musicians was the product of composer Jens Bodwalt Lampe [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Bodewalt_Lampe] (1869–1929), a Danish-born violinist, composer, arranger, performer and band-leader of ragtime and syncopated dance music. He was a child prodigy, and by the age of sixteen had secured a position as first chair violinist for the Minneapolis Symphony. Lampe married and moved to Buffalo, N.Y., in the 1890's where he led a dance band. and continued to compose and publish. His most famous composition is a piece called "Creole Belles," published in 1900, a year after the success of Scott Joplin's "Maple Leaf Rag". It is a rag or cakewalk (the sheet music says it is a "Ragtime march" or "March-two-step") that became the second major hit of ragtime that sold more than a million copies in sheet music, and was recorded by John Philip Sousa's band in 1902 and again four subsequent times in the decade 1902-1912). "Creole Belles" became a staple of brass and jazz bands and ragtime pianists, in part because the piece was versatile and could be employed as a march, two-step, and ragtime cakewalk.
rmingling   
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"Creole Belles", particularly the lyrical second strain, was quickly absorbed into the repertoire of amateur musicians, including rural fiddlers in the first two decades of the 20th century.  It came into the repertoire of a number of string bands in the early 78 RPM recording era, and was recorded often, including versions under various titles by The Skillet Lickers, Uncle Bud Landress with the Georgia Yellow Hammers, Perry Bechtel and His Boys, and others.
"Creole Belles", in particular the lyrical second strain, was quickly absorbed into the repertoire of amateur musicians, including rural fiddlers and guitarists in the first two decades of the 20th century.  It came into the repertoire of a number of string bands in the early 78 RPM recording era, and variants were recorded often, including versions by The Skillet Lickers, the Georgia Yellow Hammers (1929), Perry Bechtel and His Boys (1931), and others. A further adaptation of the "Creole Belles" was by Mississippi blues-man John Hurt, and became one of his most famous pieces. Hurt adapted the second strain, called it "Creole Belle" and sang these words to it:
 
Some of the most often quoted lyrics are from the Light Crust Dough Boys, a band that featured one of the greatest Texas swing fiddlers of the time – Cecil Brower.
 
This tune represents one of the most amazing of the many cultural cross-pollinations in our American musical history. After Western Swing bands and Texas Style fiddlers adopted and popularized the tune with its characteristic swing and ragtime rhythms, the great African American jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald recorded it using the white string-band lyrics. Fitzgerald’s “Wubba Dolly” was recorded in 1939. Famed African American blues guitarist and singer Mississippi John Hurt, who often collaborated with Anglo American fiddler Willie Narmour in the early 1920s, brought the original title of this tune to the forefront again by adapting the lyrics of “My Creole Belle” to the new tune and rhythm. Hurt was known for playing square dance and ragtime music during the same period that he was recording early blues music for Okey Records. His interest in different styles of American music resulted in this tune being introduced to a much wider audience. The lyrics of “My Creole Belle” are often sung to the tune of “Rubber Dolly Rag.”
 
 
 
And the cross-pollination doesn’t end there! Whereas the original “Rubber Dolly” lyrics probably derive from Anglo American children’s games of the late 1800s, they made their way into a Top-10 record in 1965. In that year, African American soul singer Shirley Ellis recorded the Rubber Dolly lyrics used by the Light Crust Dough Boys and other Appalachian string bands as “The Clapping Song.” Folk music pioneer Woody Guthrie, as well as many others, recorded the Creole Belle version also adding to the popularity of the tune among the newer generations.
 
The appearance of alternate versions of lyrics in American songs, especially originating from different racial groups, is a long-standing American music tradition. However, in this case, having both versions of the lyrics covered by both black and white singers for over a century is particularly interesting. From its very beginning, fiddlers continued to play this tune from coast to coast and generation to generation, establishing it as one of the truly classic examples of the American Music System.
 
From Book III of the O'Connor Method.
www.oconnormethod.com
 
 
The title appears in a list of traditional Ozarks Mountains fiddle tunes compiled by musicologist/folklorist Vance Randolph, published in 1954. According to Bronner (1987), "Rubber Dolly" was first collected as a Anglo-American children's game with the following words or variants (which may have come from a music-hall song of the 1890's):
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''My Mommy told me, she's going to buy a rubber dolly,''<br>
''My Creole Belle, I love her well''<br>
''If I was good, So don't you till her I kissed a feller/soldier''<br>
''My darling baby, my Creole Belle''<br>
''Or she won't buy me a rubber dolly.''<br>
''My Creole Belle, I love her well'<br>
''My darling baby, my Creole Belle.''<br>
<br>
''When the stars shine, I'll call her mine''<br>
''My darling baby, my Creole Belle''<br>
''My Creole Belle, I love her well''<br>
''My darling baby, my Creole Belle.''<br>
<br>
''My Creole Belle, I love her well''<br>
''My darling baby, my Creole Belle''<br>
''When the stars shine, I'll call her mine''<br>
''My darling baby, my Creole Belle. ''<br>
</blockquote>
Hurt is known to have played with white musicians as well as black in his home county, including Willie Narmour.
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Versions of the tune were recorded twice in 1929 under the title "Back Up and Push," days apart; first, in Richmond, Indiana, by the Augusta Trio, and then in Atlanta by the Georgia Organ Grinders. The first recording of the tune under the "Rubber Dolly" title was by Gordon County, Georgia, banjo and fiddle player Uncle Bud Landress (1882-1966) with his group the Georgia Yellow Hammers, in Atlanta in November, 1929, as "Rubber Dolly Rag," with vocals:
<blockquote>
''My mama told me, If I'd be goody''<br>
''That she would buy me, a rubber dolly''<br>
''But if you tell her, I have a fellow''<br>
''Then she won't buy me, no rubber dolly''<br>
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''My mama told me, If I'd be goody''<br>
''That she would buy me, a rubber dolly''<br>
''But if you tell her, I have a fellow''<br>
''Then she won't buy me, no rubber dolly''<br>
</blockquote>
The "Rubber Dolly" title appears in a list of traditional Ozarks Mountains fiddle tunes compiled by musicologist/folklorist Vance Randolph, published in 1954. According to Bronner (1987), "Rubber Dolly" was first collected as a Anglo-American children's game with the following words or variants which may have derived from a music-hall song of the 1890's (so far not traced). By the 1950's they were ensconced in British children's jump-rope play as "My Mummy Told Me":
<blockquote>
''My mummy told me, if I was goody,''<br>
''That she would buy me a rubber dolly;''<br>
''My aunty told her I kissed a soldier,''<br>
''Now she won't buy me a rubber dolly.''<br>
''Clap, clap, clap, clap.''<br>
</blockquote>
</blockquote>
Bronner also says the tune has a similarity to an older British Isles melody called "[[Lord Alexander's Reel]]/Hornpipe," though he must have consulted other versions of the melody for his sources' version is somewhat obscure. It has been a favorite Texas or western swing piece in the 1930's and 40's, and has also been collected in the northeast.  
Bronner also says the tune has a similarity to an older British Isles melody called "[[Lord Alexander's Reel]]/Hornpipe." It has been a favorite Texas or western swing piece in the 1930's and 40's, and has also been collected in the northeast. It is one of a handful of American old-time tunes in the Northern Cree fiddling tradition.  
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== Additional notes ==
== Additional notes ==
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<font color=red>''Source for notated version''</font>: - Charley Hughes (New York State, 1973) [Bronner].  
<font color=red>''Source for notated version''</font>: - Charley Hughes (New York State, 1973) [Bronner].  
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<font color=red>''Printed sources''</font> : - Bronner ('''Old-Time Music Makers of New York State'''), 1987; No. 40, pp. 146-147 (includes variations). Phillips ('''Fiddlecase Tunebook'''), 1989; p. 37.  
<font color=red>''Printed sources''</font> : -
Bronner ('''Old-Time Music Makers of New York State'''), 1987; No. 40, pp. 146-147 (includes variations).
Phillips ('''Fiddle Case Tunebook: Old Time Southern'''), 1989; p. 37.  
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<font color=red>''Recorded sources'': </font> <font color=teal> - CMH Country Classics 9027, Johnny Gimble - "Texas Fiddle Collection," 1981. Disc D110, Woody Guthrie - "Hard Travellin.'" Old-Timey LP-101, Uncle Bud Landress "Old Time Southern Dance Music." Old-Timey LP-105, Harry Choates - "Western Swing." Victor 17252 (78 RPM), Sousa's Band (1912).</font>
<font color=red>''Recorded sources'': </font> <font color=teal> - CMH Country Classics 9027, Johnny Gimble - "Texas Fiddle Collection," 1981. Disc D110, Woody Guthrie - "Hard Travellin.'" Fort Worth 25318 (78 RPM), Light Crust Doughboys" (2939, as "Little Rubber Dolly," with vocals). Old-Timey LP-101, Uncle Bud Landress "Old Time Southern Dance Music: The Stringbands, vol. 2." Old-Timey LP-105, Harry Choates - "Western Swing." Ozit-Morpheus Records ‎BS-OZIT CD302, Georgia Yellow Hammers - "Gimme Dat Harp Boy! - Roots Of The Captain" (2002, various artists). Victor 17252 (78 RPM), Sousa's Band (1912).</font>
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See also listing at:<br>
See also listing at:<br>
See/hear an excellent bluegrass learning version [https://bluegrassdaddy.com/rubber-dolly-fiddle-lesson/]<br>
See/hear an excellent bluegrass learning version [https://bluegrassdaddy.com/rubber-dolly-fiddle-lesson/]<br>
See Lampe's piano score fpr "Creole Belles" [https://musescore.com/user/3224/scores/3329596]<br>
See Lampe's piano score fpr "Creole Belles" [https://musescore.com/user/3224/scores/3329596]<br>
Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [http://www.ibiblio.org/keefer/r10.htm#Rubdo]<br>
Hear the Georgia Yellow Hammer's 1929 recording on youtube.com [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RP2Vj45sLwo]<br>
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Latest revision as of 05:09, 16 November 2021


X:1 % T:Rubber Dolly (1) M:4/4 L:1/8 R:Reel N:Drone 'a' and 'e' strings liberally K:A c/c/ c/B/A||c2 c2-cc/c/ c/B/A|F2 F2-Fc/c/ c/B/A/|E2 (E2 E)c/c/ c/B/A|[c2e2]B2- Bc/c/ c/B/A:|...



RUBBER DOLLY (BREAKDOWN) [1]. AKA - "Rubber Dolly Rag." AKA and see "Back Up and Push (1)," "Wubba Dolly." Bluegrass, Old-Time; Breakdown. USA; Texas, Arkansas, North Carlolina, Virginia, New York State. C Major (Phillips): A Major (Bronner). Standard or AEae tuning (fiddle). AA (Bronner): AA'BB' (Phillips). The popular melody variously called "Rubber Dolly" or "Back Up and Push" by old=time and bluegrass musicians was the product of composer Jens Bodwalt Lampe [1] (1869–1929), a Danish-born violinist, composer, arranger, performer and band-leader of ragtime and syncopated dance music. He was a child prodigy, and by the age of sixteen had secured a position as first chair violinist for the Minneapolis Symphony. Lampe married and moved to Buffalo, N.Y., in the 1890's where he led a dance band. and continued to compose and publish. His most famous composition is a piece called "Creole Belles," published in 1900, a year after the success of Scott Joplin's "Maple Leaf Rag". It is a rag or cakewalk (the sheet music says it is a "Ragtime march" or "March-two-step") that became the second major hit of ragtime that sold more than a million copies in sheet music, and was recorded by John Philip Sousa's band in 1902 and again four subsequent times in the decade 1902-1912). "Creole Belles" became a staple of brass and jazz bands and ragtime pianists, in part because the piece was versatile and could be employed as a march, two-step, and ragtime cakewalk.

"Creole Belles", in particular the lyrical second strain, was quickly absorbed into the repertoire of amateur musicians, including rural fiddlers and guitarists in the first two decades of the 20th century. It came into the repertoire of a number of string bands in the early 78 RPM recording era, and variants were recorded often, including versions by The Skillet Lickers, the Georgia Yellow Hammers (1929), Perry Bechtel and His Boys (1931), and others. A further adaptation of the "Creole Belles" was by Mississippi blues-man John Hurt, and became one of his most famous pieces. Hurt adapted the second strain, called it "Creole Belle" and sang these words to it:

My Creole Belle, I love her well
My darling baby, my Creole Belle
My Creole Belle, I love her well'
My darling baby, my Creole Belle.

When the stars shine, I'll call her mine
My darling baby, my Creole Belle
My Creole Belle, I love her well
My darling baby, my Creole Belle.

My Creole Belle, I love her well
My darling baby, my Creole Belle
When the stars shine, I'll call her mine
My darling baby, my Creole Belle.

Hurt is known to have played with white musicians as well as black in his home county, including Willie Narmour.
Versions of the tune were recorded twice in 1929 under the title "Back Up and Push," days apart; first, in Richmond, Indiana, by the Augusta Trio, and then in Atlanta by the Georgia Organ Grinders. The first recording of the tune under the "Rubber Dolly" title was by Gordon County, Georgia, banjo and fiddle player Uncle Bud Landress (1882-1966) with his group the Georgia Yellow Hammers, in Atlanta in November, 1929, as "Rubber Dolly Rag," with vocals:

My mama told me, If I'd be goody
That she would buy me, a rubber dolly
But if you tell her, I have a fellow
Then she won't buy me, no rubber dolly

My mama told me, If I'd be goody
That she would buy me, a rubber dolly
But if you tell her, I have a fellow
Then she won't buy me, no rubber dolly

The "Rubber Dolly" title appears in a list of traditional Ozarks Mountains fiddle tunes compiled by musicologist/folklorist Vance Randolph, published in 1954. According to Bronner (1987), "Rubber Dolly" was first collected as a Anglo-American children's game with the following words or variants which may have derived from a music-hall song of the 1890's (so far not traced). By the 1950's they were ensconced in British children's jump-rope play as "My Mummy Told Me":

My mummy told me, if I was goody,
That she would buy me a rubber dolly;
My aunty told her I kissed a soldier,
Now she won't buy me a rubber dolly.
Clap, clap, clap, clap.

Bronner also says the tune has a similarity to an older British Isles melody called "Lord Alexander's Reel/Hornpipe." It has been a favorite Texas or western swing piece in the 1930's and 40's, and has also been collected in the northeast. It is one of a handful of American old-time tunes in the Northern Cree fiddling tradition.

Additional notes

Source for notated version: - Charley Hughes (New York State, 1973) [Bronner].

Printed sources : - Bronner (Old-Time Music Makers of New York State), 1987; No. 40, pp. 146-147 (includes variations). Phillips (Fiddle Case Tunebook: Old Time Southern), 1989; p. 37.

Recorded sources: - CMH Country Classics 9027, Johnny Gimble - "Texas Fiddle Collection," 1981. Disc D110, Woody Guthrie - "Hard Travellin.'" Fort Worth 25318 (78 RPM), Light Crust Doughboys" (2939, as "Little Rubber Dolly," with vocals). Old-Timey LP-101, Uncle Bud Landress "Old Time Southern Dance Music: The Stringbands, vol. 2." Old-Timey LP-105, Harry Choates - "Western Swing." Ozit-Morpheus Records ‎BS-OZIT CD302, Georgia Yellow Hammers - "Gimme Dat Harp Boy! - Roots Of The Captain" (2002, various artists). Victor 17252 (78 RPM), Sousa's Band (1912).

See also listing at:
See/hear an excellent bluegrass learning version [2]
See Lampe's piano score fpr "Creole Belles" [3]
Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [4]
Hear the Georgia Yellow Hammer's 1929 recording on youtube.com [5]



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