Edited by Azizi Powell
This post features a sound file of Mississippi John Hurt performing the folk song "Shortnin Bread". This post also contains information about Mississippi John Hurt. Two versions of the lyrics for "Shortnin Bread", and my comments about the meaning of that song are also included in this post.
The content of this post is presented for folkloric, historical, entertainment, and aesthetic purposes.
All copyrights remain with their owners.
FEATURED SOUND FILE
Mississippi John Hurt - Shortnin' Bread.wmv
sambobla·Uploaded on Jan 22, 2011
Born July 3, 1893, Teoc (Carroll County) MS
Died November 2, 1966, Grenada, MS
...Mississippi John Hurt's quiet dignity, humor, superb guitar style, and his tender and expressive voice made him the most popular artist of traditional country blues re discovered by the public in the sixties.
John was not a real blues man but was a collector of popular songs who arranged them to entertain his neighbors on Saturday evenings.
Mississippi John never pursued success. In 1928 a mobile unit of the Vocalion company came to Avalon, Mississippi to look for new talents. An audition in Avalon resulted in John being called several months later to go to New York for a recording session under the direction of Lonnie Johnson. The depression led to the reduction in pressing of records and John stayed in Avalon and lived quietly on his farm with his 14 children.
Guided by the words of one of the titles recorded in 1928 by Hurt, "Avalon My Home Town", the folklorist Tom Hoskins decided in 1963 to go to Avalon. He met Hurt, who was shocked to see that someone remembered his 1928 recordings that had brought him only twenty dollars a song.
John Hurt's new career lasted only three years, but at Newport Festival, on college campuses, and in the folk clubs of Washington D.C., he displayed his talents as storyteller, entertainer, and singer. He overwhelmed the public with his outstanding mastery of the guitar.(Source: Encyclopedia of the Blues by Gerard Herzhaft, 1992 University of Arkansas Press)
LYRICS: SHORTNIN' BREAD
(as sung by Mississippi John Hurt)
Put on the skillet, put on the lid
Mama's gonna cook some shortnin bread
Oh Mammy loves shortnin bread.
[guitar]
Two little boys layin in the bed
One turned over and the other one said
My mama cookin shortnin bread
[guitar]
Two live chickens ?] off that lid.
Pour he [?]
[guitar playing]
Oh, mammy loves shortnin bread.
[guitar]
Two little boys layin in the bed
One turned over and the other one said
My mom's
My mama cookin shortnin bread
-snip-
Transcription by Azizi Powell from the sound file.
Additions and corrections welcome.
****
LYRICS: SHORTNING BREAD
(As published in Dorothy Scarborough's On The Trail Of Negro Folk Songs)
Put on de skillet
Put on de led
Mammy's gwine to make
A li'l short'nin bread
Dat ain't all
That she's gwine to do.
She's gwine to make
A li'l coffee too.
Chorus
Mammy's li'l baby loves short'nin, short'nin,
Mammy's li'l baby loces short'nin bread.
Mammy's li'l baby loves short'nin, short'nin,
Mammy's li'l baby loces short'nin bread.
Three lil N---'
lyin in bed
Two wus sick
An t'other 'most dead
Sent fo' de doctor
An' de doctor said
"Give dem N----
Some short'nin' bread!"
I slipped in de kitchen,
An' slipped up the led,
An' I slipped my pockets
full ob shortn'nin' bread'
I stole the skillet,
I stole de led,
I stole de gal
To make short'nin bread
De caught me wid de skillet,
Dey caught me wid de led,
An' de caught me wid de gal
Cookin' shortn'in bread.
Paid six dollars for de skillet,
Six dollars for de led,
Stayed six months in jail,
Eatin' shortn'in' bread.
-snip-
"N----" is what is the referent for Black people that is now commonly called the "n word".
"led" and "lid" (in Mississipi John Hurt's version) are the covers to the cooking pot (skillet, frying pan).
COMMENTS ABOUT THE FOOD SHORTNIN BREAD AND THE MEANING OF THE SONG
From http://chickensintheroad.com/cooking/shortnin-bread/
"Notice how simple the [Shortnin Bread] ingredients are–cornmeal, flour, salt, egg, baking powder, shortening, molasses, sugar, and water. Slaves would have used the least expensive grain available to them, which would most often be cornmeal, with the addition of some more refined flour in a smaller quantity if they had it. They either used baking soda or baking powder, but may have even made it at times without any leavening agent at all if it wasn’t available, sort of like a fried flatbread. The short’nin’ would have been lard, which they probably just called pig fat. They would have most ready access to some type of unrefined cane, such as molasses, for sweetener, but sugar isn’t entirely out of the question as an ingredient in times and places where it was available. Any sweetener at all is a debatable issue in this recipe as some quarters believe it to be a “poor man’s” cornbread, but the sense of the song tells another story–this was a treat. We’re thinking it was sweet! That, at least, is my theory, based on the song and its era and circumstances, and so is the direction I took when developing this recipe. Notice what the song is telling us. Children love it! SUGAR!! (Froot Loops, anyone?) It makes a man fall in love with a woman who knows how to make it. It’s worth going to jail over!"
I appreciate the information that this blogger wrote but believe that what she didn't consider was that "Shortnin Bread" would have been a treat for enslaved Black people who were near starvation even if that bread wasn't all that sweet.
Although "Shortnin Bread" is now considered a light hearted children's folk song, it's beginning verses point to the very difficult conditions that enslaved Black people in the Southern region of the United States lived under.
In contemporary versions of this song, the first verse is given as "two little boys/laying in bed/one was sick/and the other almost dead". The reason why the boys were in those conditions was because they were sufferring from malnutrition because of the inadequate food rations that enslaved families were given.
In this song, the doctor was called & prescribed that the children be given some food. However, in actuality, during slavery, Black people rarely were cared for by doctors. Also, shortnin bread and coffee was rare, and shortnin bread was a treat.
The scarcity of sugar and sweets like candy in the diet of enslaved African Americans gives added meaning to other songs from that time such as "Who'll Take Sugar In The Coffee-o"; "He Loves {Likes}Sugar & Tea" and other such songs...
Also, Scaborough included versions of "Shortnin Bread" in the lullaby section of her book. Apparently, at some point, this song was became "jazzed" up {made faster}. Versions of this song that I've heard, including Mississipi John Hurt's version) certainly aren't lullabies.
RELATED LINKS
Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2012/07/fats-waller-shortnin-bread-sound-file.html for another post about Fats Waller's version of the song "Shortnin Bread"
**
Click http://cocojams.com/content/food-beverages-mentioned-thomas-w-talley%E2%80%99s-negro-folk-rhymes for a page on my cultural website for another text version of "shortnin' bread" and other songs/rhymes that mention food & beverages in Thomas W. Talley's 1922 book Negro Folk Songs: Wise & Otherwise
Click http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4v5rsEa9vUI for an old sing-along video of this song.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT AND THANKS
Thanks to Mississippi John Hurt for his interpretation of "Shortnin Bread". Thanks also to Dorothy Scarborough and other folklorist for collecting early examples of this song.
My thanks also to the uploader of this sound file and the sound file that is featured in the related links section.
Finally, thank you for visiting pancocojams.
Visitor comments are welcome.
Friday, December 7, 2012
Mississippi John Hurt - Shortnin' Bread (sound files, lyrics, comments)
Posted on 2:39 PM by Unknown
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