Undid revision 443269298 by 24.163.39.217 (talk) early 1900s date precludes copyright, source was provided |
24.163.39.217 (talk) No evidence this is the 1900 version, or that this version is not under copyright. AGAIN, see the previous discussion on the talk page. Undid revision 443269727 by Yworo (talk) Tag: section blanking |
||
Line 12:
[[Curly Seckler]], who played with [[Flatt and Scruggs]] and with [[Charlie Monroe]], was interviewed by Frank Stasio on the December 26, 2008 edition of The State of Things (http://www.wunc.org/programs/tsot/). He was asked about the origin of the name "Salty Dog", and says he was told {{Who|by who?|date=July 2011}} it was the name of a locally produced soft drink.
==References==
|
Revision as of 00:48, 6 August 2011
"Salty Dog Blues" is an early 1900s[1] folk song. It has been recorded by blues, jazz, country music, bluegrass groups and other styles. A common version of the lyrics of the chorus of the song go: Let me be your salty dog/ Or I won't be your man at all/ Honey let me be your salty dog.
Performances
It has been performed by Kokomo Arnold, Papa Charlie Jackson, Lead Belly, Roger McGuinn, Kingston Trio, Kentucky Faith, Flatt and Scruggs, Hot Tuna, Ross Nickerson, Jelly Roll Morton, Rick Nelson, Mississippi John Hurt, The Morris Brothers, Blind Willie McTell, Reverend Gary Davis, Johnny Cash, Cat Power, Bo Carter, Freddie Keppard, Leon Redbone, and many others.
The song appears in an episode of "The Andy Griffith Show" featuring a band called "The Dillards." In the show they were known as the Darling family, and did a wonderful rendition with Andy Griffith himself.
History
In his Library of Congress interviews, Jelly Roll Morton recalled a three-piece string band led by Bill Johnson playing the number to great acclaim, probably before 1910.
Curly Seckler, who played with Flatt and Scruggs and with Charlie Monroe, was interviewed by Frank Stasio on the December 26, 2008 edition of The State of Things (http://www.wunc.org/programs/tsot/). He was asked about the origin of the name "Salty Dog", and says he was told [who?] it was the name of a locally produced soft drink.