Annotation:St. Louis Tickle
X:1 T:St Louis Tickle N:From the playing of the Humphries Brothers (Texas) C:Theron C. Bennett (1904), written under the pseudonym C:Barney & Seymour. N:The tune celebrated the St. Louis Exposition. "Immensely popular with N:contemporary pianists St. Louis Tickle has become an evergreen standard N:recorded right up to the present day. Its popularity rests not only its bright N:infectious strains but perhaps also on the notoriety of the B-strain said to N:have been derived from Funky Butt, whose vulgar lyrics delighted street N:urchins and young men about town alike." M:C| L:1/8 D:OKeh 45464 (78 RPM), The Humphries Brothers (1930) D:Victor 16092-B (78 RPM), The Ossman-Dudley Trio (1906) D: D:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/saint-louis-tickle Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:C e^ded eded|ea-ae g2AB|cBcB cBcB|cefc e2 (3ABc| dcde- ed e2|^f2de- ee-f2|1g2 ba g2f2:|2 g6|| ef|g2g2^f2f2|=ff- f(g/f/) e3((3A/B/c/|d)cAd- dcAc|edec - c2((3A/B/c/)| dcAd- dcA2|G2Ac- cde2|1,3d2e^f- fed2|[B6g6]:|2,4 d2AB- BAG2|[E6c6]|| |:(3dcA|B2B2B2B2|BB2B- BBBA|c2c2c2c2|cc-cc- cccA| B2B2B2B2|BB2B- BBBA|c2c2c2c2|cc-cc- cccB| AGAB cBcd|edeg- gfed|A2AB- BAG2|[E6c6]:|
ST. LOUIS TICKLE. AKA - "Saint Louis Tickle." American, Ragtime (cut time). C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). "St. Louis Tickle" was composed in<tspan x="0" dy="1.2em">celebrartion of the St. Louis Exposition, a grand fair held there in 1904. It was composed two years after he graduated college by pianist, ragtime composer and music publisher Theron C. Bennett, who used the pseudonym Barney & Seymour for the composition. Although born in Missouri, Bennett had removed to Los Angeles by the 1920's, where he formed a jazz band composed of USC students. "St. Louis Tickle" was very popular with pianists and was recorded frequently from the early 20th century; it received a new audience through the arrangement for guitar and popularization by blues and folk performer Dave Van Ronk. The second strain of "St. Louis Tickle" is said to have been derived from Funky Butt, "whose vulgar lyrics delighted street urchins and young men about town alike." See also the stylistically similar “Georgia Stomp.”