Edited by Azizi Powell
This post includes a song file & lyrics of the ring shout "Good Lord" (also known as "Run Old Jeremiah").
The content of this post is presented for historical, educational, and aesthetic purposes.
All copyrights remain with their owners.
My thanks to the unknown composer/s of that song. My thanks also to the vocalists who sung this song & the collectors who recorded and published this song.
Thanks also to the producers of these featured sound files & videos.
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INFORMATION ABOUT RING SHOUTS
From http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5759/:
"“Run Old Jeremiah”: Echoes of the Ring Shout
Spirituals and work songs, rooted in both the slavery era and the West African societies from which most African-American slaves were originally taken, provided cultural sustenance to African Americans in the midst of intense racial oppression. Folklorists first began collecting traditional southern music in the late-19th century. By the 1920s and 1930s, John and Alan Lomax were recording southern musicians (African-American, white, and Mexican-American) for the Library of Congress. “Run, Old Jeremiah,” sung by Joe Washington Brown and Austin Coleman in Jennings, Louisiana, in 1934, was a ring-shout, a religious song using a West African dance pattern, where the performers shuffled single file, clapping out a complex counter-rhythm. The ring-shout was common during slavery and remained popular well into the 20th century as a means of emotional and physical release during religious worship. The lyrics of the ring-shout spoke of escape from the travails of the present."
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LYRICS OF "GOOD LORD" (RUN OLD JEREMIAH)
[composer/s unknown]
Likely lyrics:
By myself. (5)
You know I've got to go.
You got to run.
I've got to run.
You got to run.
By myself. (3)
I got a letter, (2)
Ol' brownskin.
Tell you what she say.
"Leavin' tomorrow,
Tell you goodbye."
O my Lordy. (6)
Well, well, well. (2)
O my Lord. (2)
O my Lordy. (2)
Well, well, well. (2 )
I've got a rock.
You got a rock.
Rock is death.
O my Lordy.
O my Lord.
Well, well, well.
Run here, Jeremiah. (2)
I must go
On my way. (4)
Who's that ridin' the chariot? (2)
Well, well, well . . .
(New Leader:)
One mornin'
Before the evening
Sun was goin' down (3)
Behind them western hills. (3)
Old number 12
Comin' down the track. (3)
See that black smoke.
See that old engineer.
See that engineer. (2)
Tol' that old fireman
Ring his ol' bell
With his hand.
Rung his engine bell. (2)
Well, well, well. (2 )
Jesus tell the man,
Say, I got your life
In My Hand;
I got your life
In My Hand. (2 )
Well, well, well.
0l' fireman told,
Told that engineer,
Ring your black bell,
Ding, ding, ding,
Ding, ding, ding, ding.
0l' fireman say
——?—- -
——?—- -
——?—- -
That mornin',
Well, well, well, (2)
0l' fireman say,
Well, well,
I'm gonna grab my
Old whistle too.
Wah, wah, ho,
Wah, wah, wah, wah, ho,
Wah, wah, ho,
Wah, wah, wah, ho. (etc.)
Mmmmmmm
Soon, soon, soon,
Wah——— -o.
Well, well, well,
0l' engineer,
I've got your life
In my hands. (2)
Tol' your father, (2)
Well, well, well,
I was travellin', (2)
I was ridin' (3)
Over there. (2)
Ol' engineer.
This is the chariot. (2)
Source: Afro-American Spirituals, Work Songs, and Ballads, ed. Alan Lomax (Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress Archive of Folk Song, AFS L3). Sung by Joe Washington Brown and Austin Coleman at Jennings, Louisiana, 1934. Recorded by John A. and Alan Lomax.
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5759/:
FEATURED SOUND FILE
Ring Shout: Good Lord (Run Old Jeremiah)
Uploaded by reverendmeds on Mar 30, 2011
By Austin Coleman, Joe Washington Brown & Group.
Alan Lomax field recording, 1934
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RELATED LINK
http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/05/african-american-ring-shouts-origins.html
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