S.H. Dudley "Not By A Dam Side" George L. Giefer song LYRICS Not by a dam side Will I live with you
Автор: Tim Gracyk
Загружено: 2023-06-13
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S. H. Dudley sings "Not By a Dam Side" on Victor 1090.
He recorded it on different dates, including November 9, 1901, and September 22, 1903.
He also recorded it for Edison as Standard 7977.
This 1901 song is credited to J. Val. Hamm (is that another name for George L. Giefer? the man who also wrote "Who Threw The Overalls in Mrs. Murphy's Chowder," wrote this "Dam" song?).
This song describes a young man eagerly showing his bride-to-be the home he has bought, but the house is near a mill's dam and she protests that she could never live near a dam, probably worried about flooding ("I won't marry you, I won't live with you, not by a dam side!"). The humor resides in this "little maid" uttering "dam" often and vehemently:
Not by a dam side
Would I live with you
Not by a dam side
Would your love be true
You promise me your tender care
You say that we'll be happy there
My love with you I'll ever share
But not by a dam side
Oaths were sometimes slipped into comic songs at this time. Another one is in Dudley's "Miss Helen Hunt," which offers the punch line "Go to Helen Hunt for it" (recorded in 1899 for Edison, in 1900 for Victor).
On May 23, 1900 Dudley cut another song with "dam" in the title: "Yuba Dam," issued as seven-inch 36 (he cut it again for Victor on July 26, 1904, and also cut it for Edison as Standard 7178). The song is described in the Improved Gram-o-phone catalog as "A very funny play on the Western town of that name." The humor resides in listeners hearing the oath "you be damned." Yuba City in California suffered a century ago from water running over the banks of the Feather and Yuba rivers but no Yuba Dam existed.
S. H. Dudley (15 January 1864 - 6 June 1947) may have been the most popular baritone to record at the turn of the century, his output by 1900 exceeding that of baritone J.W. Myers.
Dudley was in the right place at the right time in that his voice suited the crude recording devices of the time better than most. As a featured solo artist he was in studios regularly from 1898 to 1904, after which there is a noticeable drop-off.
In a letter to Jim Walsh quoted in the May 1946 issue of Hobbies, Dudley even calls himself the Bing Crosby of 1900, stating that "more records were sold of Dudley, Kernell, duets, quartets, than of any other singer of the time."
Dudley adds, "Too bad the days of royalties had not arrived!" The Bing Crosby analogy is misleading since Dudley records did not dramatically outsell those of Arthur Collins, Harry Macdonough, and a handful of other pioneers.
He was born Samuel Holland Rous in Greencastle, Indiana. His father was a professor at Asbury College and then a superintendent of county schools, a position that required constant moving. Rous wrote to Walsh in a letter transcribed in the May 1946 issue of Hobbies, "I never even went through high school, but was forced to get a job at 13 when my father lost his hearing and could no longer teach. Then I jumped into opera without ever having a single voice lesson!"
He had at least one brother since Walsh reports in the June 1963 issue of Hobbies that the Rous of the cylinder company Burke & Rous, of 334 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn, New York, "was the brother of Sam Rous." This company, maker of standard cylinders priced at thirty-five cents as well as "concert" cylinders, was active in late 1904 and early 1905.
The singer adopted the name S. H. Dudley as a stage name early in his career, and this is the name used for most of his Berliner, Victor, and Edison records. Some cylinders from 1898 and early 1899 give the name S. Holland Dudley, including Excelsior cylinders--the three principal Excelsior artists in 1898 were Dudley, Roger Harding, and William F. Hooley. From mid-1899 onward the shorter "S. H. Dudley" was used on records.
On a few Victor discs, he is identified as Frank Kernell, such as on "The Whistling Coon" (1982). When making duets with bird imitator Joe Belmont, he also used the name Kernell. His real name, Samuel Holland Rous, appears as the byline for some editions of The Victor Book of the Opera.
Walsh states in the October 1962 issue of Hobbies that the Edison Quartet (or Edison Male Quartette) was organized "about 1894 to make soft brown wax cylinders.
Original members were Roger Harding, J. K. Reynard, S. H. Dudley, and William F. Hooley."
An 1896 Edison Quartet photograph once owned by John Bieling and duplicated in the September 1979 issue of Hobbies includes Dudley. Dudley recalled for Walsh that Steve Porter, putting together a quartet for recording, recruited Dudley as a second tenor. This is curious since Porter is absent from Walsh's list of original Edison quartet members. Porter did not make records until 1897.
If Porter did recruit Dudley, 1894 is too early a date for the quartet's formation or at least for Dudley's participation.
S.H. Dudley "Not By A Dam Side" comic song by George L. Giefer
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