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See See Rider

"See See Rider", also known as "C.C. Rider", "See See Rider Blues" or "Easy Rider", is a popular American 12-bar blues song that became a standard in several genres.[1] Gertrude "Ma" Rainey was the first to record it on October 16, 1924, at Paramount Records in New York.[2] The song uses mostly traditional blues lyrics to tell the story of an unfaithful lover, commonly called an "easy rider": "See see rider, see what you have done", making a play on the word "see" and the sound of "easy".

"See See Rider Blues"
Single by Ma Rainey
A-side"Jealous Hearted Blues"
Released1924 (1924)–1925
RecordedOctober 16, 1924
GenreBlues
Length3:16
LabelParamount
Songwriter(s)Ma Rainey, Lena Arant
Ma Rainey singles chronology
"Booze and Blues"
(1924)
"See See Rider Blues"
(1924)
"Cell Bound Blues"
(1924)

Background edit

"See See Rider" is a traditional song that may have originated on the black vaudeville circuit. It is similar to "Poor Boy Blues" as performed by Ramblin' Thomas.[3] Jelly Roll Morton recollected hearing the song as a young boy sometime after 1901 in New Orleans, Louisiana, when he performed with a spiritual quartet that played at funerals. Older band members played "See See Rider" during get-togethers with their "sweet mamas" or as Morton called them "fifth-class whores".[4]

Big Bill Broonzy claimed that "when he was about 9 or 10—that is, around 1908, in the Delta (Jefferson County, Arkansas)—he learned to play the blues from an itinerant songster named "See See Rider", "a former slave, who played a one-string fiddle ... one of the first singers of what would later be called the blues."[5] Lead Belly and Blind Lemon Jefferson performed the song in Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas area between 1912 and 1917.[6]

The song is possibly connected to the Shelton Brooks composition "I Wonder Where My Easy Rider's Gone" (1913) that was inspired by the mysterious 1907 disappearance of the 28-year-old jockey Jimmy Lee, "The Black Demon", a well-known black rider who won every race on the card at Churchill Downs.[7]

Composition edit

Ma Rainey's rendition of "See See Rider" is based on a traditional folk 12-bar blues, such as the rendition by Lead Belly in which the lyrics follow the traditional repetition of the first line of the stanza structure (AAB). Ma Rainey's rendition opens with the three couplet introduction credited to Lena Arant that explains why the singer is blue. The following lines are adapted in the less typical repetition of the second line of the stanza (ABB) pattern.[8][9]

Gates Thomas collected a version of "C.C. Rider" in the 1920s in south Texas. It repeated the second line of the stanza (ABB) rather than the first (AAB) which is more common in blues.[9] Folklorists recorded regional variations in stanza patterns such as ABB and ABA in Texas versus AB in New Orleans.[10]

Renditions edit

In October 1924, "Ma" Rainey was the first to record "See See Rider Blues" at Paramount Records New York Studio. Her Georgia Jazz Band included Louis Armstrong on cornet, Charlie Green on trombone, Buster Bailey on clarinet, Fletcher Henderson on piano, and Charlie Dixon on banjo.[11] The record was released in 1925. While the copyright listed Lena Arant as a composer, she was responsible only for the first three rhymed couplets at the beginning of the song.[8]

In 1943, a version by Wee Bea Booze reached number one on Billboard magazine's Harlem Hit Parade, a precursor of the rhythm and blues chart. Some blues critics consider this to be the definitive version of the song.[12] Later rock-oriented versions were recorded by Chuck Willis (as "C.C. Rider", a number one R&B hit and a number 12 pop hit in 1957) and LaVern Baker (number nine R&B and number 34 pop in 1963).[13]

Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels' version of the song (as part of the medley "Jenny Take a Ride!") reached number 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1965 the US.[14] In 1966, Eric Burdon & the Animals recorded "See See Rider" for their fourth American album, Animalization. It was released as a single in September 1966[15] and reached number 10 on the Hot 100.[16]Cash Box said that it is an "excellent re-working" in which the Animals play "the bluesy sturdie in an infectious, hard-pounding rollicking style."[17] Elvis Presley recorded a version of the song in 1970. The song eventually became Presley's opening song at his concerts beginning in 1972, with the orchestra section of his rendition opening and closing the concerts.

Old Crow Medicine Show included a rendition on their 2004 self-titled album. [18]

Recognition and influence edit

In 2004, Ma Rainey's "See See Rider" was selected for the National Recording Registry of the Library of Congress to preserve its legacy for future generations.[11] In 2004, her recording received a Grammy Hall of Fame Award. Film director Martin Scorsese credited the song with stimulating his interest in music. He commented:

One day, around 1958, I remember hearing something that was unlike anything I'd ever heard before ... The music was demanding, "Listen to me!" ... The song was called "See See Rider," which I already knew from the Chuck Willis cover version. The name of the singer was Lead Belly ... I found an old Folkways record by Lead Belly ... And I listened to it obsessively. Lead Belly's music opened something up for me. If I could have played guitar, really played it, I never would have become a filmmaker.[19]

In 2018, the Blues Foundation inducted "See See Rider" into the Blues Hall of Fame as a "classic of blues recording".[1] The induction statement noted that the song "became a standard recorded by countless artists in many genres [with] hit singles [and] many other versions by blues, soul, jazz, pop, country, and rock performers".[1] It is also specifically recognized as a blues standard.[20]

John "Big Nig" Bray, the leader of a crew that hauled cypress logs from Louisiana swamps in the 1930s, borrowed the frame and tune of "See See Rider" for his "Trench Blues" (1934), a semi-autobiographical heroic blues ballad recounting the experience of an African American soldier in World War I, as recorded by Alan Lomax.[21] "See See Rider" was among the most known African American play party songs in Alabama in the 1950s.[22]

Origins of the term edit

There are many theories and conjectures about the origin and meaning of the title; none of them have been proven correct, and the song's complex history may make proof impossible. Performers have interpreted the song in more than one way, and have sometimes changed words to suit their interpretations.

The spelling See See Rider might be a pronunciation spelling of "C. C. Rider". Many sources indicate that "c. c. rider" refers to either early "church circuit" traveling preachers who did not have established churches or "county circuit" riders who were attorneys following a circuit judge.[23][24] Debra Devi, a researcher of the language of the blues, recorded a hypothesis that during the American Civil War C.C. stood for Cavalry Corporal, a horseman officer. "Riding" is also a common metaphor for sexual intercourse in the blues, and "rider" a term for a sexual partner. In African American usage a "rider" can be either male or female.[25] This folk etymology appears to stem from somebody by the name Alex Washburn who came across this interpretation of "c.c. rider" in a folk song collection by Alan Lomax, a prominent American field researcher of folk music.[26]

The term see see rider is sometimes taken as synonymous with easy rider[27] (an unscrupulous man living off his lover's earnings). In dirty blues songs, "easy rider" can also refer to a woman who had liberal sexual views, had been married more than once, or was skilled at sex. Likewise, in jazz singer and guitarist Wee Bea Booze's version of "See See Rider Blues", which reached number one on the US Billboard R&B chart in 1943, the well audible lyrics are "now your girl come", hence addressing a man.[28] Another theory is that the term could refer to a prostitute and there would be a lyric such as "You made me love you, now your man done come", "your man" would refer to the woman's pimp. In this interpretation, rather than being directed to a male "easy rider", the song would be an admonition to a prostitute to give up her evil ways.[29][30]

There are further theories:

  • Easy rider was sometimes used to refer to the partner of a hypersexual woman who therefore does not have to work or pay for sex.[29][30]
  • Easy rider sometimes referred to the guitar hung across the back of a travelling blues singer.[31]
  • Big Bill Broonzy states, on his album Big Bill Broonzy (recorded in Baarn, the Netherlands, early 1956 and released late 1956), that the first time he heard that song was by a man who "loved to be on the water, and that's why he wrote this title, and that's the title of the song: it's Sea Sea Rider".[32]
  • Big Bill Broonzy also states, in a conversation about his youth with Bill Randle on his album The Bill Broonzy Story (recorded on July 12, 1957), that See See Rider was a blues singer (AVID Roots, Classic Box Set, AMSC1159) before playing the tune.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Blues Foundation (March 6, 2018). "2018 Hall of Fame Inductees: "See See Rider Blues" – Ma Rainey (Paramount, 1924)". The Blues Foundation. Retrieved March 7, 2018.
  2. ^ Sullivan, Steve (2013). Encyclopedia of Great Popular Song Recordings. Vol. 1. Lanham, Toronto, Plymouth UK: Scarecrow Press. p. 356. ISBN 9780810882966.
  3. ^ Sullivan, Steve (2013). Encyclopedia of Great Popular Song Recordings. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. p. 357. ISBN 978-0810882966.
  4. ^ Lomax, Alan (1973). Mister Jelly Roll: The Fortunes of Jelly Roll Morton, New Orleans Creole and Inventor of Jazz. University of California Press. p. 20. ISBN 9780520022379.
  5. ^ House, Roger (June 4, 2018). Blue Smoke: The Recorded Journey of Big Bill Broonzy. LSU Press. p. 19. ISBN 9780807138090.
  6. ^ Wolfe, Charles; Lornell, Kip (1992). The Life and Legend of Leadbelly. Hachette Books. p. 96. ISBN 9780306808968.
  7. ^ Hobson, Vic (2008). Reengaging Blues Narratives: Alan Lomax, Jelly Roll Morton, and W.C.Handy (PDF) (PhD). University of East Anglia.
  8. ^ a b Lieb, Sandra R. (1981). Mother of the Blues: A Study of Ma Rainey. Univ of Massachusetts Press. p. 64. ISBN 9780870233944.
  9. ^ a b Tracy, Steven Carl (2001). Langston Hughes & the Blues. University of Illinois Press. p. 73. ISBN 9780252069857.
  10. ^ Evans, David (1982). Big Road Blues: Tradition and Creativity in the Folk Blues. University of California Press. p. 35. ISBN 9780520034846.
  11. ^ a b Obrecht, Jas (n.d.). ""See See Rider Blues" –Gertrude "Ma" Rainey (1924)" (PDF). Library of Congress. Retrieved January 24, 2020.
  12. ^ "Wee Bea Booze - Biography & History". AllMusic. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
  13. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1988). "ARTIST". Top R&B Singles 1942–1988. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research. pp. 448, 32. ISBN 0-89820-068-7.
  14. ^ "Mitch Ryder: Chart History – Hot 100". Billboard. Retrieved February 24, 2021.
  15. ^ Rodriguez, Robert (2012). Revolver: How the Beatles Re-Imagined Rock 'n' Roll. Montclair: Backbeat Books. p. 251. ISBN 978-1-61713-009-0.
  16. ^ "Eric Burdon & the Animals: Chart History – Hot 100". Billboard.com. Retrieved September 19, 2021.
  17. ^ "CashBox Record Reviews" (PDF). Cash Box. September 3, 1966. p. 18. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
  18. ^ "Old Crow Medicine Show- O.C.M.S." discogs. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
  19. ^ "The Blues . Feel Like Going Home . Interview - PBS". Pbs.org. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  20. ^ Herzhaft, Gerard (1992). "See See Rider". Encyclopedia of the Blues. Fayetteville, Arkansas: University of Arkansas Press. p. 469. ISBN 1-55728-252-8.
  21. ^ Caffery, Joshua Clegg (2013). Traditional Music in Coastal Louisiana: The 1934 Lomax Recordings. LSU Press. p. 247. ISBN 9780807152027.
  22. ^ Gaunt, Kyra D. (2006). The Games Black Girls Play: Learning the Ropes from Double-dutch to Hip-hop. NYU Press. p. 68.
  23. ^ "Think you are soul folk, baby?". Jet. Vol. 31, no. 18. Johnson Publishing Company. February 9, 1967. pp. 47, 55. ISSN 0021-5996. 7. In "C.C. Rider," what does "C.C." stand for? [...] (c) Country Circuit, preacher an old time rambler.
  24. ^ Brewer, J.Mason (1965). Worser Days and Better Times: The Folklore of the North Carolina Negro. Chicago: Quadrangle Books. p. 52.
  25. ^ Devi, Debra (2012). The Language of the Blues: From Alcorub to Zuzu. True Nature Books. p. 54. ISBN 978-1624071850.
  26. ^ Goings, Russell L. (2009). The Children of Children Keep Coming: An Epic Griotsong. Simon and Schuster. p. 271. ISBN 9781439155127.
  27. ^ Lieb, Sandra R. (1981). Mother of the Blues: A Study of Ma Rainey. University of Massachusetts Press. p. 99. ISBN 978-0870233944.
  28. ^ CD Female Blues, The Remaining Titles, vol. 2, 1938-1949, RST Records, JPCD-1526-2 ; and CD Let's Ball Tonight ; and CD See See Rider Blues, Sammy Price and The Blues Singers, Original Recordings, New-York, 1942-1949
  29. ^ a b , Oxford English Dictionary (2nd ed.), Oxford University Press, 1989, archived from the original on 2006-06-25, retrieved 2009-06-15, c. easy rider (U.S. slang): (a) a sexually satisfying lover (see also quot. 1926); (b) a guitar.
    1912–13 W. C. HANDY Memphis Blues, Mr. Crump don't 'low no easy riders here. 1926 in R. de Toledano Frontiers Jazz (1947) iii. 37 'Rider', 'easy rider', which term means both lover and (not either, or) procurer... Fidelity to his woman is expected of the easy rider. 1927 Jrnl. Abnormal & Social Psychol. XXII. 16 'Easy rider'. This apt expression is used to describe a man whose movements in coitus are easy and satisfying. It is frequently met both in Negro folk songs and in formal songs. 'I wonder where my easy rider's gone', is a sort of by-word with Southern negroes. 1949 R. BLESH Shining Trumpets vi. 128 In rural Negro parlance...easy rider meant the guitar...carried suspended by its cord. In the double meaning of Negro imagery, the femininely formed guitar...typifies also a woman companion. In Negro 'city talk', the term easy rider has come to mean either a sexually satisfying woman or a male lover who lives off a woman's earnings. 1958 P. OLIVER in P. Gammond Decca Bk. Jazz i. 24 For the blues singer, the most valuable instrument was the guitar,...and, as his 'easy rider', could be slung across his back when he wished to travel.
  30. ^ a b Lighter, J.E. (1994), Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang A-G, vol. I, p. 693, ISBN 0-394-54427-7, n Black E. 1. a parasitical man usu. without a steady job who lives by gambling or sponging, (specif.) a man who is supported by a woman, esp. a prostitute. [...] 2.a. a sexually satisfying lover. [...] b. a young woman who is sexually promiscuous or easily seduced. Also easy ride. [...] c.a guitar [...] 4. a person who is not easily ruffled or provoked
  31. ^ Ayto, John (1998), "The Arts, Entertainment, and the Media. 3. Music & Dance", The Oxford Dictionary of Slang, Oxford University Press, p. 351, ISBN 0-19-863157-X, easy rider (1949) Applied to a guitar, probably from a guitar's portability, but compare earlier sense, sexually satisfying lover, perhaps suggesting a link between the guitar's curved outlines and those of a voluptuous woman.
  32. ^ Big Bill Broonzy quote "The first time I hear this song was by a guy ... he was a Negro, I'm sure ... He was ... the first guy that would give me an idea of buying some box and making me a fiddle. And this guy, the first song I heard him playing in my life ... that was 1908. And he told me that he learnt this song because he was a rouster, on a boat. And he loved to be on the water, and that's why he wrote this title, and that's the title of the song: it's Sea Sea Rider.

External links edit

  • Partial listing of recorded versions at Secondhandsongs.com
  • Joseph Scott: "Elijah Wald and 16-bar blues"

rider, lavern, baker, album, album, british, band, band, transit, service, oregon, columbia, county, rider, film, character, ryder, company, this, article, about, song, also, known, easy, rider, other, songs, named, easy, rider, easy, rider, also, known, rider. For the LaVern Baker album see See See Rider album For the British band see See See Rider band For the transit service in Oregon see Columbia County Rider For the film character C C Ryder see C C and Company This article is about a song also known as Easy Rider For other songs named Easy Rider see Easy Rider See See Rider also known as C C Rider See See Rider Blues or Easy Rider is a popular American 12 bar blues song that became a standard in several genres 1 Gertrude Ma Rainey was the first to record it on October 16 1924 at Paramount Records in New York 2 The song uses mostly traditional blues lyrics to tell the story of an unfaithful lover commonly called an easy rider See see rider see what you have done making a play on the word see and the sound of easy See See Rider Blues Single by Ma RaineyA side Jealous Hearted Blues Released1924 1924 1925RecordedOctober 16 1924GenreBluesLength3 16LabelParamountSongwriter s Ma Rainey Lena ArantMa Rainey singles chronology Booze and Blues 1924 See See Rider Blues 1924 Cell Bound Blues 1924 Contents 1 Background 2 Composition 3 Renditions 4 Recognition and influence 5 Origins of the term 6 See also 7 Notes 8 External linksBackground edit See See Rider is a traditional song that may have originated on the black vaudeville circuit It is similar to Poor Boy Blues as performed by Ramblin Thomas 3 Jelly Roll Morton recollected hearing the song as a young boy sometime after 1901 in New Orleans Louisiana when he performed with a spiritual quartet that played at funerals Older band members played See See Rider during get togethers with their sweet mamas or as Morton called them fifth class whores 4 Big Bill Broonzy claimed that when he was about 9 or 10 that is around 1908 in the Delta Jefferson County Arkansas he learned to play the blues from an itinerant songster named See See Rider a former slave who played a one string fiddle one of the first singers of what would later be called the blues 5 Lead Belly and Blind Lemon Jefferson performed the song in Dallas Fort Worth Texas area between 1912 and 1917 6 The song is possibly connected to the Shelton Brooks composition I Wonder Where My Easy Rider s Gone 1913 that was inspired by the mysterious 1907 disappearance of the 28 year old jockey Jimmy Lee The Black Demon a well known black rider who won every race on the card at Churchill Downs 7 Composition editMa Rainey s rendition of See See Rider is based on a traditional folk 12 bar blues such as the rendition by Lead Belly in which the lyrics follow the traditional repetition of the first line of the stanza structure AAB Ma Rainey s rendition opens with the three couplet introduction credited to Lena Arant that explains why the singer is blue The following lines are adapted in the less typical repetition of the second line of the stanza ABB pattern 8 9 Gates Thomas collected a version of C C Rider in the 1920s in south Texas It repeated the second line of the stanza ABB rather than the first AAB which is more common in blues 9 Folklorists recorded regional variations in stanza patterns such as ABB and ABA in Texas versus AB in New Orleans 10 Renditions editIn October 1924 Ma Rainey was the first to record See See Rider Blues at Paramount Records New York Studio Her Georgia Jazz Band included Louis Armstrong on cornet Charlie Green on trombone Buster Bailey on clarinet Fletcher Henderson on piano and Charlie Dixon on banjo 11 The record was released in 1925 While the copyright listed Lena Arant as a composer she was responsible only for the first three rhymed couplets at the beginning of the song 8 In 1943 a version by Wee Bea Booze reached number one on Billboard magazine s Harlem Hit Parade a precursor of the rhythm and blues chart Some blues critics consider this to be the definitive version of the song 12 Later rock oriented versions were recorded by Chuck Willis as C C Rider a number one R amp B hit and a number 12 pop hit in 1957 and LaVern Baker number nine R amp B and number 34 pop in 1963 13 Mitch Ryder amp the Detroit Wheels version of the song as part of the medley Jenny Take a Ride reached number 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1965 the US 14 In 1966 Eric Burdon amp the Animals recorded See See Rider for their fourth American album Animalization It was released as a single in September 1966 15 and reached number 10 on the Hot 100 16 Cash Box said that it is an excellent re working in which the Animals play the bluesy sturdie in an infectious hard pounding rollicking style 17 Elvis Presley recorded a version of the song in 1970 The song eventually became Presley s opening song at his concerts beginning in 1972 with the orchestra section of his rendition opening and closing the concerts Old Crow Medicine Show included a rendition on their 2004 self titled album 18 Recognition and influence editIn 2004 Ma Rainey s See See Rider was selected for the National Recording Registry of the Library of Congress to preserve its legacy for future generations 11 In 2004 her recording received a Grammy Hall of Fame Award Film director Martin Scorsese credited the song with stimulating his interest in music He commented One day around 1958 I remember hearing something that was unlike anything I d ever heard before The music was demanding Listen to me The song was called See See Rider which I already knew from the Chuck Willis cover version The name of the singer was Lead Belly I found an old Folkways record by Lead Belly And I listened to it obsessively Lead Belly s music opened something up for me If I could have played guitar really played it I never would have become a filmmaker 19 In 2018 the Blues Foundation inducted See See Rider into the Blues Hall of Fame as a classic of blues recording 1 The induction statement noted that the song became a standard recorded by countless artists in many genres with hit singles and many other versions by blues soul jazz pop country and rock performers 1 It is also specifically recognized as a blues standard 20 John Big Nig Bray the leader of a crew that hauled cypress logs from Louisiana swamps in the 1930s borrowed the frame and tune of See See Rider for his Trench Blues 1934 a semi autobiographical heroic blues ballad recounting the experience of an African American soldier in World War I as recorded by Alan Lomax 21 See See Rider was among the most known African American play party songs in Alabama in the 1950s 22 Origins of the term editThere are many theories and conjectures about the origin and meaning of the title none of them have been proven correct and the song s complex history may make proof impossible Performers have interpreted the song in more than one way and have sometimes changed words to suit their interpretations The spelling See See Rider might be a pronunciation spelling of C C Rider Many sources indicate that c c rider refers to either early church circuit traveling preachers who did not have established churches or county circuit riders who were attorneys following a circuit judge 23 24 Debra Devi a researcher of the language of the blues recorded a hypothesis that during the American Civil War C C stood for Cavalry Corporal a horseman officer Riding is also a common metaphor for sexual intercourse in the blues and rider a term for a sexual partner In African American usage a rider can be either male or female 25 This folk etymology appears to stem from somebody by the name Alex Washburn who came across this interpretation of c c rider in a folk song collection by Alan Lomax a prominent American field researcher of folk music 26 The term see see rider is sometimes taken as synonymous with easy rider 27 an unscrupulous man living off his lover s earnings In dirty blues songs easy rider can also refer to a woman who had liberal sexual views had been married more than once or was skilled at sex Likewise in jazz singer and guitarist Wee Bea Booze s version of See See Rider Blues which reached number one on the US Billboard R amp B chart in 1943 the well audible lyrics are now your girl come hence addressing a man 28 Another theory is that the term could refer to a prostitute and there would be a lyric such as You made me love you now your man done come your man would refer to the woman s pimp In this interpretation rather than being directed to a male easy rider the song would be an admonition to a prostitute to give up her evil ways 29 30 There are further theories Easy rider was sometimes used to refer to the partner of a hypersexual woman who therefore does not have to work or pay for sex 29 30 Easy rider sometimes referred to the guitar hung across the back of a travelling blues singer 31 Big Bill Broonzy states on his album Big Bill Broonzy recorded in Baarn the Netherlands early 1956 and released late 1956 that the first time he heard that song was by a man who loved to be on the water and that s why he wrote this title and that s the title of the song it s Sea Sea Rider 32 Big Bill Broonzy also states in a conversation about his youth with Bill Randle on his album The Bill Broonzy Story recorded on July 12 1957 that See See Rider was a blues singer AVID Roots Classic Box Set AMSC1159 before playing the tune See also edit I Wonder Where My Easy Rider s Gone R amp B number one hits of 1943 USA Notes edit a b c Blues Foundation March 6 2018 2018 Hall of Fame Inductees See See Rider Blues Ma Rainey Paramount 1924 The Blues Foundation Retrieved March 7 2018 Sullivan Steve 2013 Encyclopedia of Great Popular Song Recordings Vol 1 Lanham Toronto Plymouth UK Scarecrow Press p 356 ISBN 9780810882966 Sullivan Steve 2013 Encyclopedia of Great Popular Song Recordings Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press p 357 ISBN 978 0810882966 Lomax Alan 1973 Mister Jelly Roll The Fortunes of Jelly Roll Morton New Orleans Creole and Inventor of Jazz University of California Press p 20 ISBN 9780520022379 House Roger June 4 2018 Blue Smoke The Recorded Journey of Big Bill Broonzy LSU Press p 19 ISBN 9780807138090 Wolfe Charles Lornell Kip 1992 The Life and Legend of Leadbelly Hachette Books p 96 ISBN 9780306808968 Hobson Vic 2008 Reengaging Blues Narratives Alan Lomax Jelly Roll Morton and W C Handy PDF PhD University of East Anglia a b Lieb Sandra R 1981 Mother of the Blues A Study of Ma Rainey Univ of Massachusetts Press p 64 ISBN 9780870233944 a b Tracy Steven Carl 2001 Langston Hughes amp the Blues University of Illinois Press p 73 ISBN 9780252069857 Evans David 1982 Big Road Blues Tradition and Creativity in the Folk Blues University of California Press p 35 ISBN 9780520034846 a b Obrecht Jas n d See See Rider Blues Gertrude Ma Rainey 1924 PDF Library of Congress Retrieved January 24 2020 Wee Bea Booze Biography amp History AllMusic Retrieved June 4 2018 Whitburn Joel 1988 ARTIST Top R amp B Singles 1942 1988 Menomonee Falls Wisconsin Record Research pp 448 32 ISBN 0 89820 068 7 Mitch Ryder Chart History Hot 100 Billboard Retrieved February 24 2021 Rodriguez Robert 2012 Revolver How the Beatles Re Imagined Rock n Roll Montclair Backbeat Books p 251 ISBN 978 1 61713 009 0 Eric Burdon amp the Animals Chart History Hot 100 Billboard com Retrieved September 19 2021 CashBox Record Reviews PDF Cash Box September 3 1966 p 18 Retrieved 2022 01 12 Old Crow Medicine Show O C M S discogs Retrieved October 22 2023 The Blues Feel Like Going Home Interview PBS Pbs org Retrieved 4 June 2018 Herzhaft Gerard 1992 See See Rider Encyclopedia of the Blues Fayetteville Arkansas University of Arkansas Press p 469 ISBN 1 55728 252 8 Caffery Joshua Clegg 2013 Traditional Music in Coastal Louisiana The 1934 Lomax Recordings LSU Press p 247 ISBN 9780807152027 Gaunt Kyra D 2006 The Games Black Girls Play Learning the Ropes from Double dutch to Hip hop NYU Press p 68 Think you are soul folk baby Jet Vol 31 no 18 Johnson Publishing Company February 9 1967 pp 47 55 ISSN 0021 5996 7 In C C Rider what does C C stand for c Country Circuit preacher an old time rambler Brewer J Mason 1965 Worser Days and Better Times The Folklore of the North Carolina Negro Chicago Quadrangle Books p 52 Devi Debra 2012 The Language of the Blues From Alcorub to Zuzu True Nature Books p 54 ISBN 978 1624071850 Goings Russell L 2009 The Children of Children Keep Coming An Epic Griotsong Simon and Schuster p 271 ISBN 9781439155127 Lieb Sandra R 1981 Mother of the Blues A Study of Ma Rainey University of Massachusetts Press p 99 ISBN 978 0870233944 CD Female Blues The Remaining Titles vol 2 1938 1949 RST Records JPCD 1526 2 and CD Let s Ball Tonight and CD See See Rider Blues Sammy Price and The Blues Singers Original Recordings New York 1942 1949 a b easy a and adv Oxford English Dictionary 2nd ed Oxford University Press 1989 archived from the original on 2006 06 25 retrieved 2009 06 15 c easy rider U S slang a a sexually satisfying lover see also quot 1926 b a guitar 1912 13 W C HANDY Memphis Blues Mr Crump don t low no easy riders here 1926 in R de Toledano Frontiers Jazz 1947 iii 37 Rider easy rider which term means both lover and not either or procurer Fidelity to his woman is expected of the easy rider 1927 Jrnl Abnormal amp Social Psychol XXII 16 Easy rider This apt expression is used to describe a man whose movements in coitus are easy and satisfying It is frequently met both in Negro folk songs and in formal songs I wonder where my easy rider s gone is a sort of by word with Southern negroes 1949 R BLESH Shining Trumpets vi 128 In rural Negro parlance easy rider meant the guitar carried suspended by its cord In the double meaning of Negro imagery the femininely formed guitar typifies also a woman companion In Negro city talk the term easy rider has come to mean either a sexually satisfying woman or a male lover who lives off a woman s earnings 1958 P OLIVER in P Gammond Decca Bk Jazz i 24 For the blues singer the most valuable instrument was the guitar and as his easy rider could be slung across his back when he wished to travel a b Lighter J E 1994 Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang A G vol I p 693 ISBN 0 394 54427 7 n Black E 1 a parasitical man usu without a steady job who lives by gambling or sponging specif a man who is supported by a woman esp a prostitute 2 a a sexually satisfying lover b a young woman who is sexually promiscuous or easily seduced Also easy ride c a guitar 4 a person who is not easily ruffled or provoked Ayto John 1998 The Arts Entertainment and the Media 3 Music amp Dance The Oxford Dictionary of Slang Oxford University Press p 351 ISBN 0 19 863157 X easy rider 1949 Applied to a guitar probably from a guitar s portability but compare earlier sense sexually satisfying lover perhaps suggesting a link between the guitar s curved outlines and those of a voluptuous woman Big Bill Broonzy quote The first time I hear this song was by a guy he was a Negro I m sure He was the first guy that would give me an idea of buying some box and making me a fiddle And this guy the first song I heard him playing in my life that was 1908 And he told me that he learnt this song because he was a rouster on a boat And he loved to be on the water and that s why he wrote this title and that s the title of the song it s Sea Sea Rider External links editPartial listing of recorded versions at Secondhandsongs com Joseph Scott Elijah Wald and 16 bar blues Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title See See Rider amp oldid 1217870944, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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