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Wednesday, 11 December 2013

Lead Belly - "Gonna Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" (comments & lyrics)

Posted on 03:04 by mukhiya
Edited by Azizi Powell

This post provides a sound file of a portion of a 1940 recorded interview that singer, musician Lead Belly had with folklorist/collector Alan Lomax. Lead Belly sang "Gonna Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" & "It's Tight Like That" during that recorded interview.

A transcript of that specific portion of that interview is included in this post. Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/12/leadellys-comments-about-shoo-fly-other.html for the complete transcription of that interview.

This post also includes a link to a Mudcat folk discussion thread that includes several transcription attempts for Lead Belly's version of "It's Tight Like That".

This content of this post is presented for folkloric, historical, cultural, entertainment, and aesthetic purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

****
FEATURED SOUND FILE: Lead Belly - Dig a Hole & Tight Like That



sherpa285, Uploaded on Dec 10, 2011

From an old vinyl 3 LP set that I bought years ago in a used record store. I've never heard either of these versions elsewhere. I believe that this is from a session with either Alan or John Lomax. Both songs are amazing. If anyone know any of the words, please post. I've been trying to figure some of them out for years.

****
TRANSCRIPTION OF THAT INTERVIEW
From http://anthrocivitas.net/forum/showthread.php?t=1737&page=3 "American Folk Songs Of Black Origin"
Magneto, 12-15-2010, 03:55 PM Post #28

"In the following conversation, recorded by Library of Congress folklorist Alan Lomax in Washington in 1940, Huddie gives us some idea of all the dancing going on at a sukey jump, circa 1900. The conversation is being recorded onto discs which contain perhaps three or four minutes each, and are spinning around at 78 revolutions per minute. There is no time for long pauses or considered answers. While the interview sounds a bit like a word association game, it does gives an impression of what the dances were like...

Lomax: Huddie, did they have any real fast numbers at these dances? Do you remember any of those?

Ledbetter: They'd pick 'em up.

Lomax: When they'd do the hoedown and. . .

Ledbetter: They'd pick 'em up, you know, they'd have some fast ones when they'd just go, like, "Green Corn, Come Along Charlie," "Gonna Dig a Hole to Put the Devil In," and, "Tight Like That," sometimes they'd holler, say, "Tight like this!"
[They are both talking at once through here.]

Lomax: What did they mean by that Huddie, really? I mean, tell us confidentially what they mean by "tight like that."

[Lomax may have been fishing for some sexual innuendo, but Huddie wasnt playing along, perhaps realizing there was nothing confidential about this interview.]

Ledbetter: "Tight like that" means when you got your partner, grab and hug her tight, and keep her going, but when it comes time the boy grab his partner, he grab her and giving her a hug, he says, "Tight like this, it was tight like this, but now it's tight like this." And the boys'd be jumping on "Tight like that."

Lomax: What were some of the dance steps, Huddie, when they were playing some of these fast tunes?

Ledbetter: Well, ain't no dance steps you could do but "breakdown," and that's a fast number. You can't dance no tap dance, I don't think, a fast breakdown number, course you might, but that's where all the tap dances [Huddie is talking very fast, as though he's afraid of being interrupted] . . . all the tap dances come from the old "buck and wing" what they used to do. Well, the breakdown dance, nobody do 'em now, but I don't guess nobody know nothing about it very much, but me, and I do the breakdown. When you do it you got to do it real fast, and when you breakdown you ain't tapping, you just working your legs. Now, a long time ago my grandfather, great-grandfather, say, "you ain't dancing til you cross your legs." So I guess now, nobody dancing because they don't cross their legs hardly ever. But when you do that old breakdown, and wing down, and green corn and that old ground shovel and, uh . . .

Lomax: What about "knocking the pigeon wing?"

Ledbetter: . . . pigeon wing and . . .

Lomax: . . . cutting the back step?

Ledbetter: . . . cutting the short dog, well, you got to cross your legs.

Lomax: Huddie, play us one of those tunes, something like "Gonna Dig a Hole to Put the Devil In," and tell us what it means, too, you know.

Ledbetter: "Gonna Dig a Hole to Put the Devil In" - long years ago, that was when they see the boss coming, you know? And the boys would see the boss coming, well, they didn't like him, you know, but they'd be together, nothing but negroes all piled up there together. When they'd see him coming, they'd say, "Well, we're gonna dig a hole to put the devil in," boy they'd start a-jumping. [plays "Gonna dig a hole. . ." with very fast accompaniment on guitar.]"...
-snip-
Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/12/leadellys-comments-about-shoo-fly-other.html for the full transcript Library of Congress transcript of that interview.

****
LYRICS: GWINE DIG A HOLE PUT THE DEVIL IN
(as sung by Lead Belly in the 1940 interview with Alan Lomax) This recording occurs at 2:07- 3:37 of the video given above.

Yeeee! They go down a hollerin to one another.

Yeee hoo!

Gwine* dig a hole put the devil in
Gwine dig a hole put the devil in
Gwine dig a hole
Gwine dig a hole
Letta dig a hole**
Letta dig a hole**

Yee ha! They all clappin and shoutin. The devil comin now. He don't know what it's all about, but they do.

Gwine dig a hole
Gwine dig a hole
Let me dig a hole to put the devil in
Let me dig a hole
Let the devil in
Let the devil in

Then they start

Gimme little bit of dram***
Little bit of dram
Little bit of dram
Little bit of dram

When the boss is gone they startin

I don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
I don't give a damn.

Yee Hoo!

I dig a hole put the devil in
I dig a hole
I dig a hole
I dig a hole
I dig a hole and put the devil in

Wake Jake days a breakin
Peas in the pot
and the hoe cakes' bakin
Gwine dig a hole
Gwine dig a hole
I dig a hole
I dig a hole

I don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
I don't give a damn.
-snip-
Transcription by Azizi Powell. Additions and corrections are welcome.

*Gwine is a no longer used Southern regional (USA) dialectic word which means "gonna".

**This word sounds like "pole" but I think that Lead Belly meant "hole".

***dram - a portion of an alcoholic drink

****
EDITORIAL COMMENTS ABOUT THIS VERSION OF THIS SONG [revised on December 12, 2013]

In that 1940 recorded interview Lead Belly shared how "Gonna Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" was sung by "negroes" who saw their "boss" coming. ("Negroes" is no longer used as a referent for Black Americans and even before that referent was retired, many Black people and other people considered it offensive to spell that word with a small "n". Lead Belly said that this song was sung this way "a long time ago". I'm not sure if "the boss" here means the slave master or the person who was in charge of men who were working post-slavery.)

In my opinion, Lead Belly's recollection of how "Gonna Dig A Hole" was sung demonstrates how Black people masked their true feelings about their life situations in front of White people while they insulted them in coded form right in front of White people's faces. Combining the religious song "Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" with a familiar fiddler song "Give The Fiddler A Dram" masked the fact that the workers considered "the boss" to be "the devil". Notice that after the boss leaves, the song changes to the defiant verse "I don't give a damn". Also, notice how Lead Belly says that the boss didn't understand that the "dig a hole" song was sung as an insult. "They all clappin and shoutin. The devil comin now. He don't know what it's all about, but they do."

It's interesting that the White folklorist Alan Lomax doesn't appear to have caught the hidden purpose of those lyrics as sung by those men, and the defiant nature of their "don't give a damn" lines.

That said, it's important to clarify that, in contrast to some Black militants in the late 1960s and 1970s's use of "the devil" as a referent for a White person, it appears to me that in Lead Belly's recollections of that song, the boss was equated with the devil, not because of his race, but because of his role as a boss (or a owner of slaves).
-snip-
Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/12/lead-bellys-and-several-other-versions.html for another pancocojams posts that includes this Lead Belly version of "Gonna Dig A Hole".

Click http://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=126852
for a Mudcat folk discussion thread that includes several transcription attempts for Lead Belly's version of "It's Tight Like That".

Also, click http://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=137600 "Origins: Dig a hole to put the devil in" for a Mudcat discussion thread that documents that the "dig a hole, put the devil in" line was known in England. That discussion thread includes other songs that contain that "dig a hole" line.

"Stomping the devil on his head" is a related saying that is closely associated with the Pentecostal denomination. People who are "shouting" (doing the holy dance) are said to be "stomping
the devil in his head".

Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2012/06/its-tight-like-that-videos-lyrics-part.html for a pancocojams post on "It's Tight Like That" (Videos & Lyrics) Part I: Georgia Tom & Tampa Red (1928)

****
Thanks to Lead Belly for his musical legacy. Thanks also
to Alan Lomax for his role in collecting and disseminating these
songs, and thanks to Magneto for posting that Library of Congress transcript. Thanks also to the publisher of this sound file on YouTube.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.

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  • Nicaraguan music and dance
  • Niger
  • Nigeria culture
  • Nigerian clothing
  • Nigerian Creole
  • Nigerian culture
  • Nigerian Gospel music
  • Nigerian music
  • Nigerian music and dance
  • Nigerian pidgin English
  • Nigerian religious music
  • Nina Simone
  • North Carolina Moral Monday
  • noteworthy Pancocojams text posts
  • novelty song
  • Nyabinghi Drumming
  • Nyahbinghi
  • Odetta
  • Olatunji
  • old school dances
  • old time music
  • old time music song
  • Old Time Music songs
  • old time song
  • Olodum
  • Omega Psi Phi Fraternity
  • One more river to cross
  • one stringed fiddle
  • Oral Literature In Africa
  • Osun
  • Owu-Aru-Sun Festival
  • Pacific Island music and dance
  • Palmares
  • Palo de Mayo
  • Pan African Orchestra
  • Pan-African Flags
  • pancocojams blog meta
  • pancocojams traffic searches
  • pantsula dance
  • pantsula dancing
  • Parang music
  • parenting customs
  • parodies
  • Paul Robeson
  • Paul Robinson
  • Pentecostal
  • Peter Tosh
  • Pharoah Sanders
  • pick up lines
  • pigeon wing
  • play party song
  • play party songs
  • poetry
  • political song
  • politics
  • Pop
  • pop and locking
  • Pop-Rap music
  • popular culture
  • Portugal
  • praise brea
  • praise breaks
  • praise poetry
  • praise singers
  • protest chants
  • protest song
  • protest songs
  • Putting On The Black
  • quadrille
  • quadrille music and dance
  • Quelbe music
  • race and racism
  • racial stereotypes
  • racialized versions of children's rhymes
  • Rags
  • Ragtime music
  • rake and scrap music
  • Ras Shorty I
  • Rastafarian culture
  • Rastafarian culture/words
  • Ray Charles
  • Reggae
  • Reggae music
  • religious music
  • Rev James Cleveland
  • Rev. Charles H. Nicks
  • rhyme sources
  • rhymes about violence
  • Rhythm and Blues
  • Rhythm and Blues and Hip Hop dances
  • ring shout
  • Road march song
  • Roaring Lion
  • Roberta Martin
  • Rock 'n' Roll
  • Roots Reggae
  • Rosa Parks
  • roustabouts
  • rumba
  • RuPaul's Drag Race
  • Rythmn and Blues
  • Salsa
  • Samba
  • sambo
  • Santeria
  • saxophone instrument with traditional African music
  • Scat singing
  • scatting
  • sea shanties
  • Sega music
  • Senegal
  • Senegal history
  • Senegal music and dance
  • Senegal music and dance.
  • Senegalese history and religion
  • Senegalese music and dance
  • Senegalese myths and history
  • Senegalese myths and religion
  • Senegalese names
  • shake sugaree
  • shakin my head gesture
  • shanties
  • shave and a hair cut
  • Shelton Brooks
  • Shim Sham Shimmy
  • Shirley Caesar
  • shortnin bread
  • shout
  • Shouting John
  • show me your motion games
  • side eye
  • Sisiva
  • Ska
  • Ska music
  • skanking
  • slang origins
  • smh
  • Soca
  • Soca music
  • soccer chants
  • Soloman Islands
  • Solomon Island
  • Somalian songs
  • son (music)
  • songs about chicken
  • songs about hunger
  • songs about infectious diseases
  • songs about justice
  • songs about mother-in- laws
  • songs about Noah
  • songs from American movies
  • songs from movies
  • sookie jumps
  • soukous
  • Soukous music
  • soul food
  • soul music
  • Soul train
  • soundies
  • South Africa
  • South Africa music and dance
  • South African culture
  • South African Gospel
  • South African Gospel music
  • South African history and culture
  • South African music
  • South African music and dance
  • South African spoken word
  • South American music and culture
  • South American music and dance
  • South Sudan
  • South Sudan music and dance
  • South Sudanese culture
  • South Sudanese music and dance
  • Southern African music and dance
  • Southern Soul Blues
  • spankngs
  • Spirituals
  • Spirituals about Gabriel's Trumpet
  • spoken word
  • spoken word poetry
  • sports events
  • sports songs
  • spraying money
  • step shows
  • Steppin
  • Stomp and shake cheerleading
  • stomp cheers
  • stomping the devil in his head
  • stratch music
  • street dances
  • street vendor calls
  • struggle songs
  • Strut
  • such is life songs
  • suck teeth
  • Sudanese Gospel song
  • Sudanese music and dance
  • sukey jumps
  • Surely I Will
  • Sweet Honey In The Rock
  • Tabu Ley
  • take a peach take a plum
  • tap dancing
  • Tassa drums
  • taunting rhymes
  • that's life songs
  • The Bahamas Jonkanoo
  • The Bahamas Jonkanoo parades
  • The Caravans
  • the dozens
  • The Gambia
  • the Lindy Hop
  • The Love Circle.
  • the Virginia Reel
  • the Wailers
  • Thomas Mapfumo
  • Thomas W Talley Negro Folk Rhymes
  • Thomas W. Talley
  • Thomas W. Talley Negro Folk Rhymes
  • throwing shade
  • Timne ethnic group
  • Tonga
  • topical song about current events
  • toyi toyi
  • traditional music instruments
  • traditonal music instruments
  • Trinidad & Tobago Music
  • Trinidad & Tobago proverbs
  • Trinidad and Tobago
  • Trinidad and Tobago music
  • Trinidad carnival
  • Truckin
  • Tulululu
  • twitter
  • Uganda
  • Uganda history
  • Uganda music and dance
  • Ugandan music and dance
  • Uncle Tom and Aunt Jemima
  • United States history
  • United States Virgin Islands
  • university fight songs
  • using parental terms as nicknames
  • vernacular referents
  • video games
  • vine videos
  • violence in children's rhymes
  • Virgin Island Jazz
  • Virgin Island music
  • Viviane Chidid Ndour
  • voguing
  • waacking
  • Wabash Rag
  • wearing hats in church
  • wedding songs
  • West Africa
  • West African history
  • wheel and turn
  • When Pebbles Was A Baby
  • whooping cough
  • whooping cougn
  • Willie Dixon songs
  • Wilson Pickett
  • word origin and meanings
  • Word origins and meanings
  • work songs
  • Yoruba culture
  • Yoruba language
  • Yoruba names
  • Yoruba orishas
  • Yoruba poetry
  • Yoruba religion
  • Yoruba religion; Santeria
  • YouTube user names
  • YouTube viewer comment threads
  • Zamacueca
  • Zambian Gospel music
  • Zambian music and dance
  • Zimbabwe music and dance
  • Zimbabwean Gospel music
  • Zimbabwean music
  • Zip Coon
  • zoot suit
  • Zydeco music

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (437)
    • ►  December (10)
    • ►  November (18)
    • ►  October (34)
    • ►  September (39)
    • ►  August (32)
    • ►  July (53)
    • ►  June (39)
    • ►  May (33)
    • ►  April (30)
    • ►  March (44)
    • ►  February (50)
    • ►  January (55)
  • ▼  2013 (63)
    • ▼  December (37)
      • Black Sorority Members' Memories Of Children's Ris...
      • Billy Preston - "Nothing From Nothing" (video, lyr...
      • My Favorite Pancocojams Posts (2013)
      • Mama, Bake That Johnny Cake, Christmas Comin’ (exa...
      • A Traditional Caribbean Jonkonoo Song & Three Cont...
      • Five South African Wedding Songs By Platform One
      • The Charms (Jamaican Ska) - Hill And Gully Rider (...
      • Lord Composer (Jamaican Mento) - "Hill 'N Gully Ri...
      • Hill And Gully Rider (General Information & Folk L...
      • Old Dan Tucker - Minstrel Song & Play Party Song
      • "Eeny Meenie Sisaleenie" Rhymes That Include The "...
      • Here's Who Else Is White! (excerpt from a tongue i...
      • The Christmas Song "Behold That Star" & Its Africa...
      • Soweto Gospel Choir - Tribute To Nelson Mandela At...
      • Harold Melvin The Blue Notes (featuring Teddy Pend...
      • "The Negro General" & "Going To Ohio" songs from t...
      • Lead Belly's And Several Other Versions Of "Give T...
      • Sangalala by Zambian Gospel Group Higher Calling ...
      • What Would You Do? Video - White Girlfriend In Har...
      • Lead Belly - "Gonna Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" ...
      • Musa Okwonga - Mandela Will Never, Ever Be Your Mi...
      • Lead Belly's Comments About "Shoo Fly" & Other 19t...
      • Raise A Ruckus Tonight (examples & comments)
      • I Am A Pretty Little First Grader (a variant form...
      • Miracle Tabernacle COGIC's Praise Generation - "Lo...
      • Bishop G. E. Patterson - COGIC Song "I'm So Glad ...
      • The Original Five Blind Boys Of Mississippi - I'm ...
      • Brenda Fassie - My Black President (A Tribute To N...
      • Maya Angelou - His Day Is Done (A Tribute To Nelso...
      • Old School Gospel Song "I'm So Glad That The Lord ...
      • Johnny Clegg & Savuka - Asimbonanga (videos & lyrics)
      • "Cut A Step" And Other Black Pentecostal Words, Ph...
      • "Cut A Step" And Other Black Pentecostal Words, Ph...
      • "More Work For The Undertaker" Song (sound file, l...
      • #RacismEndedWhen Tweets That I Really Like
      • "When Billy Boy Was One" & "Poor Pinocchio" Hand C...
      • Video Collage Of A Modern Ghanaian Wedding
    • ►  November (26)
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mukhiya
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