Annotation:Higher Up the Monkey Climbs
X:1 T:Higher up the Monkey Climbs M:2/2 L:1/8 N:A version of "Seneca Square Dance" or vice-versa. S:Bob Larkan (1867-1942, Prairie County, central Arkansas) D:OKeh 45205 (78RPM), Bob F:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/higher-monkey-climbs Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:Bb Bc|d2d2d3e|f2d4 Bc|d2dcd3B|c2 B4Bc| d2dcd3e|f2d4d2|cdcB G2A2|[D6B6] || (f2|b2){b}c'2b2g2|f2d2[D4B4]|b2b2 f2f2|g6(g2| b2)bc'b2g2|f2d4Bc|dedB G2A2|B3cB2|]
HIGHER UP THE MONKEY CLIMBS. AKA and see "Seneca Square Dance." American, Reel (cut time). B Flat Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. The tune, a version of (and perhaps precursor to) the well-known "Seneca Square Dance," is from "Uncle" Bob Larkan (1867-1942), of Prairie County, central Arkansas. Gus Meade notes that "the tune of the chorus for the song is 'Shoot that Turkey Buzzard', which also contains the monkey motif."
His obituary notes that Larkan was an avid sportsman and a champion skeet shooter. He also was proclaimed 'champion fiddler of Arkansas' after a poll of radio audiences 1927. "Higher up the Monkey Climbs" "became notorious for its suggestive, ribald lyrics"[1], however the only verse to make it on the recording was:
The higher up the monkey climbs,
The higher up the monkey climbs;
The higher up the monkey climbs,
The greater he shows his…Yak yak yada daddy de da.
The singer was not credited on the recording, but was either Larkan or one of his daughters. The phrase "the higher up the monkey climbs, the more he shows his tail is a version of the folk rhyme:
The higher up the mountainside
The greener grows the grass.
The higher up the monkey climbs
The more he shows his ass.
Anthony Trollope, Victorian novelist, has one of his characters utting: “The higher up the monkey climbs - well, you know the saying.”
- ↑ Welky & Keckhaver, Enclyclopedia of Arkansas, 2013, p. 90.