Edited by Azizi Powell
In the rare event that any racial demographics are given online for these songs, they are using only attributed to White Americans. That attribution ignores the extensive cross pollination that occurred between Black & White Southern & Appalachian residents regarding dance tunes & songs, play party songs, and minstrel songs.
In 1967 when I first happened upon Thomas W. Talley's 1922 book Negro Folk Songs: Wise & Otherwise, I thought that the inclusion of those songs or rhymes in that book meant that African Americans originally composed all of those examples "from scratch", without those songs being based, inspired by, or were portions of any previously composed song. I now know that that assumption is just as much mistaken as the belief that no Southern or Appalacian American secular dance or play party song was created in whole or in part by Black Americans. "Charlie's A Dandy" is an example of a Southern & Appalachian play party song that has both Black versions & White versions.
"Charley He's A Dandy" is an alternative title for play party songs that may be most often known as "Weevily Wheat". Those songs are also known as "Four In The Middle", "Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss”, "Coffee Grows On White Oak Trees", and "Over The River (or "The Water") To Charley".
Links to some other pancocojams posts about those songs are found in the Related Links section below.
The content of this post is presented for folkloric, historical, and recreational purposes.
All copyrights remain with their owners.
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TEXT EXAMPLES OF "CHARLEY'S HE'S A DANDY" SONGS
Example #1:
From http://www.gutenberg.org/files/27195/27195-h/27195-h.htm electronic book version of Thomas W. Talley's 1922 book Negro Folk Rhymes [pages 84-85]
HE LOVES SUGAR AND TEA
Mistah Buster, he loves sugar an' tea.
Mistah Buster, he loves candy.
Mistah Buster, he's a Jim-dandy!
He can swing dem gals so handy.
Charlie's up an' Charlie's down.
Charlie's fine an' dandy.
Ev'ry time he goes to town,
He gits dem gals stick candy.
Dat N***ah, he love sugar an' tea.
Dat N***ah love dat candy.
Fine N***ah He can wheel 'em 'round,
An' swing dem ladies handy.
Mistah Sambo, he love sugar an' tea.
Mistah Sambo love his candy.
Mistah Sambo; he's dat han'some man
What goes wid sister Mandy.
-snip-
Editor's comments
The n word
What is now known as "the n word" was fully spelled out in this example.
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"jim-dandy"
From http://www.thefreedictionary.com/jim-dandy
"One that is very pleasing or excellent of its kind.
Jim (nickname for James) + dandy."
From http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/jim-dandy
"Jim-dandy! First Known Use: 1887: something excellent of its kind"
Simply put, using contemporary African American colloquialism, a "dandy" is a "sharp dresser", a man who is very attentive to fashion.
I wonder if this word came from the 1843 minstrel song “Dandy Jim from Caroline”. Click http://www.pdmusic.org/1800s/43djoc.txt for lyrics for that song. WARNING: Lyrics Include a form of the n word.
Note that the word "jim dandy" and the name Dandy Jim probably influenced the title of 1960s R&B Jim Dandy songs such as "Jim Dandy To The Rescue". However, the characterization of the "Jim Dandy" in those 1960s songs is different from the older characterizations.
**
The phrase "He likes (or "loves") sugar & tea" lives on in the children's singing game "Here's Stands A Bluebird". However, my sense is that, like most other singing games since at least the 1970s, "Here Stands A Blue Bird" is usually taught and performed in school music classes or other school classes and isn't self-initiated by children.
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Example #2:
From http://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=97222
"Origins: Weevily Wheat"
CHARLIE'S SWEET
From EFFSA Cecil Sharp
Sung by Mrs. Laura V. Donald
Dewy Va. June 10, 1918
As I come over we trip together,
It's in the morning early.
Heart and hand I give to thee,
So true I love thee dearly.
I won't have none of your weavil wheat,
And I won't have none of your barley.
Give to me the good old wheat,
To bake a cake for Charlie.
Charlie he's a nice young man,
Charlie he's a dandy.
Charlie he's the very one
That sold his daddy's brandy.
I've got a sweet little wife,
A wife of my own choosing.
Hug her neat and kiss her sweet,
And no more go a-courting.
-snip-
Editor's note:
"Trip together" probably means "skip together".
A number of other lyrics of this song are found on that Mudcat discussion thread.
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Example #3:
From http://www.bluegrassmessengers.com/coffee-grows-on-white-oak-trees.aspx [No date given]
FOUR IN THE MIDDLE; COFFEE GROWS ON WHITE OAK TREES
Sung by: Emma Puterbaugh Medlin
Listen: http://web.lyon.edu/wolfcollection/songs/medlincoffee1261.mp3
Coffee grows on white oak trees,
The river flows with brandy o’er.
Go choose you one to roam with you,
As sweet as sugar and candy, too.
Rally-ally-um-bum, sugar and tea.
Rally-ally-um-bum, candy.
Rally-ally-um-bum, sugar and tea,
Swing your little miss so handy.
Handy, handy, handy
Candy, candy, candy.
NOTES [from that link] : This is part of the large Western Country family of songs that includes “Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss," "Four in the Middle" and “Wheevily Wheat.” The versions from Wolf Folklore collected in the 1950s and 1960s are listed Coffee Grows (Four in the Middle) showing the relationship with the play-party song "Four in the Middle." Also found in Randolph, Vol. III, #524, "Four in the Middle"; Brown, Vol. III, #78, "Coffee Grows on White Oak Trees." Randolph's Ozark version gives the tune as "Skip to My Lou."..."
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FEATURED SOUND FILE
Ray Heatherton - Weevily Wheat
boyjohn, Uploaded on Sep 3, 2010
From the Playtime records 78 rpm #369.
-snip-
"Weevily wheat" means wheat that has weevils in it.
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RELATED LINK
Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/08/coffee-grows-on-white-oak-trees-four-in.html
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Thanks to the composers of these featured songs & thanks to those who collected them. Thanks also to those who are quoted in this post.
Thanks for visiting pancocojams.
Visitor comments are welcome.
Saturday, August 17, 2013
Black & White Versions Of "Charley He's A Dandy"
Posted on 7:40 AM by Unknown
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