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Dust My Broom

"Dust My Broom" is a blues song originally recorded as "I Believe I'll Dust My Broom" by American blues artist Robert Johnson in 1936. It is a solo performance in the Delta blues-style with Johnson's vocal accompanied by his acoustic guitar. As with many of his songs, it is based on earlier blues songs, the earliest of which has been identified as "I Believe I'll Make a Change", recorded by the Sparks brothers as "Pinetop and Lindberg" in 1932. Johnson's guitar work features an early use of a boogie rhythm pattern, which is seen as a major innovation, as well as a repeating triplets figure.

"I Believe I'll Dust My Broom"
Original 78 record label
Single by Robert Johnson
ReleasedApril 1937 (1937-04)
RecordedNovember 23, 1936
StudioGunter Hotel, San Antonio, Texas
GenreBlues
Length2:58
LabelVocalion
Songwriter(s)Robert Johnson
Producer(s)Don Law

In 1951, Elmore James recorded the song as "Dust My Broom" and "made it the classic as we know it", according to blues historian Gerard Herzhaft.[1] James' slide guitar adaptation of Johnson's triplet figure has been identified as one of the most famous blues guitar riffs and has inspired many rock performers. The song has become a blues standard, with numerous renditions by a variety of musicians. It also has been selected for the Blues Foundation Blues Hall of Fame, the Grammy Hall of Fame, and the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry.

Earlier songs edit

Elements of "Dust My Broom" have been traced back to several earlier blues songs. Blues researcher-writer Edward Komara has suggested that Johnson may have begun developing his version as early as 1933.[2] The Sparks brothers' 1932 recording of "I Believe I'll Make A Change" and Jack Kelly's "Believe I'll Go Back Home" in 1933 both use a similar melody and lyrics.[3] Some verses are also found in Carl Rafferty's 1933 "Mr. Carl's Blues":[4]

I do believe, I do believe I'll dust my broom (2×)
And after I dust my broom, anyone may have my room ...
I'm goin' to call up in China, just to see if my baby's over there (2×)
I'll always believe, my babe's in the world somewhere

Kokomo Arnold, whose "Old Original Kokomo Blues" served as the basis for Johnson's "Sweet Home Chicago", recorded two songs with similar lines,[5] "Sagefield Woman Blues" in 1934:

I believe, I believe I'll dust my broom (2×)
So some of your lowdown rounders, lord you can have my room

and "Sissy Man Blues" in 1935:

I believe, I believe I'll go back home (2×)
Lord acknowledge to my good gal, mama, Lord, that I have done you wrong
Now I'm going to ring up China yeah man, see can I find my good gal over there (2×)
Says the Good Book tells me, that I got a good gal in the world somewhere

The melody that Johnson uses is also found in 1934 recordings of "I Believe I'll Make a Change" by Leroy Carr[5] and Josh White.[3]

Lyrics and interpretation edit

Johnson's "I Believe I'll Dust My Broom" combines lyrics, also identified as "floating verses",[5] from the earlier songs and adds two new verses of his own. Music historian Elijah Wald calls the result "a more cohesive lyric than either of the Arnold pieces [and] concentrates on the theme of traveling, and being away from the girl he loves".[6] Attempts have been made to read a hoodoo significance into the phrase "dust my broom".[7] However, bluesman Big Joe Williams, who knew Johnson and was familiar with folk magic, explained it as "leaving for good ... I'm putting you down, I won't be back no more".[7] Music writer Ted Gioia also likens the phrase to the biblical passages about shaking the dust from the feet and symbolizing "the rambling ways of the blues musician":[8]

I'm gon' get up in the morning, I believe I'll dust my broom (2×)
Girlfriend, the black man you been lovin', girlfriend, can get my room ...
I don't want no woman, wants every down town man she meet (2×)
She's a no good doney, they shouldn't 'low her on the street

While Johnson is disillusioned with one woman, he also yearns for another:

I'm gon' write a letter, telephone every town I know (2×)
If I can't find her in West Helena, she must be in East Munroe I know ...
I'm 'on' call up Chiney, see is my good gal over there (2×)
If I can't find her on Philippine's island, she must be in Ethiopia somewhere

The last verse shows Johnson's unusual use of geographical references. These are taken from topical events, including the Second Italo-Ethiopian War, the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, and the creation of the Commonwealth of the Philippines.[9] However, their use in Johnson's song is seen as escapism by music writer Greil Marcus.[10] Music writer Thomas Beebee notes that while the world of many blues listeners was limited to the Mississippi Delta,

The last stanza of the song raises the stakes, exploding into a fantastic geography—the singer's voice trails a bit behind the guitar line here, as if burdened by the imaginative leap involved ... Mixed with all the bitterness, after all, is a geographic expansiveness that suddenly stretches the thirty miles of Arkansas backroads into a trip around the world.[9]

"Sweet Home Chicago" (the next song Johnson recorded) includes the refrain "Back to the land of California, to my sweet home Chicago".[11] Comparing the two, Marcus comments, "'Chicago' functioned in the lyric as a place as distant as 'the Philippine Islands'; 'California' was a place as mythical as 'Ethiopia'".[10]

Recording and composition edit

"I Believe I'll Dust My Broom" was recorded by Johnson during his first recording session on November 23, 1936. The recording took place in a makeshift studio in Room 414 at the Gunter Hotel in San Antonio, Texas, and was produced by Don Law.[12] It was the second song that Johnson recorded and followed "Kind Hearted Woman Blues". As with most of his recordings, it appears that a second take of the song was recorded and assigned a reference number.[13] Stephen LaVere, who managed Johnson's recording legacy, notes that this take, along with several others, "remain[s] unfound, if ever issued; destroyed after being recorded (if ever); or otherwise unknown to collectors".[13]

Johnson recorded the song as an upbeat boogie shuffle.[14] As with several other Johnson songs and typical of Delta blues from the era, he does not adhere to a strict twelve-bar blues structure, but rather varies the timing to suit his whim.[6] The song is performed in the key of E at a moderate tempo of 100–105 beats per minute. Unlike some of the earlier songs that influenced Johnson, "I Believe I'll Dust My Broom" does not feature a bottleneck or slide guitar.[15] Instead, Johnson employs a fingerstyle guitar in which melodic lines are played against a driving bass boogie figure,[6] creating an effect similar to the then popular combination of piano and guitar accompaniment. The boogie bass line, adapted for guitar from the piano boogie style, is one of Johnson's major innovations.[6][16][a]

The song also features Johnson's use of a repeating guitar figure consisting of fast high-note triplets.[6] This riff came to define the song,[17] although Johnson also used it in several other of his songs, including a slide version for "Ramblin' on My Mind".[18] To facilitate his fingerpicking style, Johnson used an open guitar tuning. However, authors and researchers offer different views on which he used, including a modified open-A tuning with the fifth string retuned from A to B, giving a new tuning of E–B–E–A–C–E (known as Aadd 9),[19][20] a standard open E tuning of E–B–E–G–B–E,[21][22][page needed] or a drop D tuning of D–A–D–G–B–E.[23]

Releases edit

In April 1937, Vocalion Records issued "I Believe I'll Dust My Broom" on the then standard ten-inch 78 rpm record, backed with Johnson's "Dead Shrimp Blues".[24] The record was Johnson's second of eleven released during his lifetime.[25] An initial pressing of at least 5,000 was supplemented with another 900 copies released on Vocalion's budget labels Perfect Records and Romeo Records, which were sold by dime stores.[26] Conqueror Records, which were sold through Sears and Roebuck department stores and its catalogue, pressed an unspecified number, although Conqueror usually only issued Vocalion's best sellers.[24]

As one of three Johnson songs to become early blues standards,[27] Wald questions why "I Believe I'll Dust My Broom" was not included on the first reissue of his recordings, the King of the Delta Blues Singers album released by Columbia in 1961.[14] Authors Pearson and McCulloch note that its place on the album "would have connected Johnson to the rightful inheritors of his musical ideas—big-city African American artists whose high-powered, electrically amplified blues remained solidly in touch with Johnson's musical legacy".[28] In 1970, the song was included on Columbia's second Johnson compilation, King of the Delta Blues Singers, Vol. II,[29] in 1990, on The Complete Recordings box set,[30] and on several compilation albums.[31]

Elmore James renditions edit

"Dust My Broom (I Believe My Time Ain't Long)"
 
Original 78 record label
Single by Elmore James
B-side"Catfish Blues" (performed by Bobo Thomas)
Released1951 (1951)
RecordedAugust 5, 1951
StudioIvan Scott's Radio Service, Jackson, Mississippi
GenreBlues
Length2:42
LabelTrumpet
Songwriter(s)Elmore James (credited)
Producer(s)Lillian McMurry

Background edit

"Dust My Broom" was one of the earliest songs Elmore James performed regularly while he was still living in the Mississippi Delta in the late 1930s.[32] Blues historian Ray Topping has suggested that James may have encountered Robert Johnson during this time, when he learned how to play the song.[33] James often performed with Aleck Rice Miller, better known as Sonny Boy Williamson II as a duo. However, his music career was interrupted by a stint in the U.S. Navy during World War II. After his discharge, he again joined up with Williamson, who regularly performed on radio. In January 1951, Williamson was offered the opportunity to record some songs for Trumpet Records, where, by one account, he was accompanied by James.[34] In August, the duo auditioned "Dust My Broom" for Trumpet owner Lillian McMurry, who signed James to a recording contract.[34] Meanwhile, two versions of "Dust My Broom" were recorded—Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup in 1949 and Robert Lockwood in 1951.[1] Neither rendition appeared in the record charts.[35]

Recording and composition edit

On August 5, 1951, after a Sonny Boy Williamson II recording session, Elmore James recorded "Dust My Broom" at Ivan Scott's Radio Service Studio in Jackson, Mississippi.[34] James, who provided the vocals and amplified slide guitar, is accompanied by Williamson on harmonica, Leonard Ware on bass, and Frock O'Dell on drums.[36] The recording studio had not made the transition to tape technology, so the group was recorded direct-to-disc using one microphone.[37] It was the only song recorded by James; Trumpet's McMurray felt that his other songs were not suitable for recording.[34] However, Williamson and James' cousin, Homesick James, later claimed that McMurry secretly taped the performance and that Elmore was so upset that he was unable to record a B-side.[38] McMurray denied this and presented a check made out to and endorsed by James the day before the session to show his knowledge of and agreement to participate in the recording.[37]

To record his song, Elmore James used Robert Johnson's first four verses and concluded with one similar to that found in Arthur Crudup's 1949 recording:

I believe, I believe my time ain't long (2×)
I've got to leave my baby, and break up my happy home

James' song also followed Johnson's melody, key, and tempo, but adhered more closely to the chord changes of a typical twelve-bar blues. However, according to musicologist Robert Palmer, he "transformed what had been a brisk country blues into a rocking, heavily amplified shuffle".[38] Besides the backing musicians, the most notable addition to the song is James' overdriven slide guitar, which plays the repeating triplet figure and adds a twelve-bar solo after the fifth verse. Compared to Johnson guitar work, Gioia describes them as "more insistent, firing out a machine-gun triplet beat that would become a defining sound of the early rockers".[39] His use of vibrato with the slide has been called as "his distinctive jangling guitar style" by musicologist Charlie Gillett.[40] Music critic Cub Koda notes that, in James' hands, "this may be the most famous blues riff of all time, [n]ext to the four-note intro of Bo Diddley's 'I'm a Man'".[17]

Releases and charts edit

Elmore James never recorded any more of his own material for Trumpet, although he later appeared as a sideman.[3] McMurry, who was unaware of prior recordings of the song, arranged to copyright "Dust My Broom" in James' name and subsequently issued the single, with a rendition of "Catfish Blues" by Bobo Thomas as the B-side. Both songs listed the performer as "Elmo James",[b] although James does not perform with Thomas. Regional record charts show that "Dust My Broom" gradually gained popularity in different parts of the U.S.[34] It eventually entered Billboard magazine's national Top R&B singles chart April 5, 1952, and peaked at number nine.[41] In 1955, after the release of an updated version by another record label, McMurray leased the recording to Ace Records, who re-released it.[3] Jewel Records also re-released the original Trumpet recording as a single in 1965.[42]

Since it was originally released by Trumpet, the original recording does not appear on many of James' early compilation albums by Crown/Kent. However, it is included on King Biscuit Time, a Sonny Boy Williamson II collection by Arhoolie Records,[c] and a James box set, The Early Classic Recordings 1951–1956.[36] The versions of "Dust My Broom" that appear on many compilations, such as King of the Slide Guitar, were recorded during his first session in Chicago in 1959 and last session in New York in late 1962 or early 1963 for Bobby Robinson's Fire Records group of labels.[43] These later renditions do not include harmonica, but have piano accompaniment.[43]

Derivatives and "Dust My Blues" edit

The success of the single by the relatively small Trumpet Records led other record companies to pursue James in the hope of landing his follow-up singles.[34] Joe Bihari, who owned Los Angeles-based Modern Records with his brothers, and his talent scout Ike Turner were one of the first. A later session in Chicago produced "I Believe", a "Dust My Broom" knockoff, that became a number nine charting single and the first issued on the new Modern subsidiary Meteor Records in 1953. Being able to score two hits within a year with essentially the same song by the same artist prompted record companies to exploit it as much as possible. Thus, many re-workings of "Dust My Broom" with small variations were recorded by James for different record labels during his career.[8]

In 1955, Flair Records, another Bihari label, issued a reworking of the song titled "Dust My Blues" (catalogue no. 1074).[42] Recorded in New Orleans at Cosimo Matassa's J&M Studios, James was backed by veteran New Orleans musicians, including bassist Frank Fields, drummer Earl Palmer, and pianist Edward Frank.[44][d] Topping calls it "a powerful reincarnation of the old broom theme"[44] and Gillett adds that it is "a fine hard driving song".[40] "Dust My Blues" is perhaps the definitive re-recording of the James' original, with an updated accompaniment.[44] In 1964, it was released as a single in the UK and some reissues in the US in the 1960s reached regional charts.[42]

Recognition and legacy edit

Elmore James' "Dust My Broom" was inducted into the Blues Foundation Blues Hall of Fame in 1983; Jim O'Neal stated that it received more votes than any other record in the first year of balloting for singles.[45] His song was also inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1998.[46] In 2013, the original 1951 Trumpet recording was selected for preservation in the U.S. Library of Congress' National Recording Registry, which commented "James is known to have tinkered with his guitar pickups and fans still argue about how he achieved his signature sound. Whatever combination of guitar and pickup was used in his slide guitar opening, Elmore James created the most recognizable guitar riff in the history of the blues".[47]

"Dust My Broom" is a blues standard and is especially popular among slide guitarists.[1][45] Besides early versions by bluesmen, including Arthur Crudup (1949) and Robert Jr. Lockwood (1951),[1] the song carried over to the 1960s folk and blues revival and the British rhythm and blues scene. In 1963, American revivalists Koerner, Ray & Glover recorded the song, possibly making them the first white musicians to do so.[48] Following the 1964 UK release of "Dust My Blues",[42] James' slide guitar sound was adopted by many British blues-oriented guitarists.[40] Jeremy Spencer, with the original lineup of Fleetwood Mac, became a proponent of James's music and slide guitar style.[49] The group recorded the song for their second album, Mr. Wonderful (1968).[50]

During the 1960s and 1970s, "Dust My Broom" was on the set lists of many blues and rock musicians.[48] Ike & Tina Turner recorded a version that was released as a single in 1966, which later reached number 54 on the U.S. Cash Box R&B chart in 1971.[51] ZZ Top recorded the tune for their 1979 album Degüello and continued to perform it into the 1980s.[48] A live version recorded in 1980 appears on Double Down Live: 1980 & 2008 (2009).[52]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Although a 1935 recording by Johnny Temple, titled "Lead Pencil Blues (It Just Won't Write)", has been identified as the first recording to use the boogie bass line on guitar, Temple stated that he learned the technique directly from Robert Johnson.[16]
  2. ^ Even though his first name was usually spelled "Elmore", many referred to him using the shortened "Elmo"
  3. ^ Oliver 1989 Album notes, back cover
  4. ^ Frank Fields and Earl Palmer were members of Dave Bartholomew's band who had played on many of the hits of the era, including those by Fats Domino and Lloyd Price

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d Herzhaft 1992, p. 446.
  2. ^ Komara 2007, p. 47.
  3. ^ a b c d Wardlow 1998, p. 168.
  4. ^ Oliver 1989, p. 189.
  5. ^ a b c Wald 2004, p. 135.
  6. ^ a b c d e Wald 2004, p. 136.
  7. ^ a b Pearson & McCulloch 2008, p. 68.
  8. ^ a b Gioia 2008, p. 314.
  9. ^ a b Beebee 2008, pp. 13–14.
  10. ^ a b Marcus 2011, p. 137.
  11. ^ LaVere 1990, p. 25.
  12. ^ Wald 2004, p. 120.
  13. ^ a b LaVere 1990, p. 46.
  14. ^ a b Wald 2004, p. 138.
  15. ^ Charters 1973, p. 29.
  16. ^ a b Conforth & Wardlow 2019, p. 127.
  17. ^ a b Koda, Cub. "Robert Johnson: 'Dust My Broom' – Review". AllMusic. Retrieved October 29, 2013.
  18. ^ Wald 2004, p. 139.
  19. ^ Komara 2007, pp. 34, 46, 47.
  20. ^ Chappell 2020, p. 200.
  21. ^ Conforth & Wardlow 2019, p. 164.
  22. ^ Ainslie & Whitehill 1992.
  23. ^ Mann 1993, Entry for Robert Johnson.
  24. ^ a b Conforth & Wardlow 2019, p. 186.
  25. ^ LaVere 1990, p. 45.
  26. ^ Conforth & Wardlow 2019, pp. 151, 186.
  27. ^ Wald 2004, p. 188.
  28. ^ Pearson & McCulloch 2008, p. 28.
  29. ^ Greenberg, Adam. "Robert Johnson: King of the Delta Blues Singers, Vol. 2 – Review". AllMusic. Retrieved March 15, 2014.
  30. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Robert Johnson: The Complete Recordings – Review". AllMusic. Retrieved March 15, 2014.
  31. ^ "Robert Johnson: 'I Believe I'll Dust My Broom' – Appears On". AllMusic. Retrieved March 15, 2014.
  32. ^ Wardlow 1998, pp. 160–162.
  33. ^ Topping 1993, p. 10.
  34. ^ a b c d e f Topping 1993, p. 11.
  35. ^ Whitburn 1988, p. 485.
  36. ^ a b Topping 1993, p. 29.
  37. ^ a b Wardlow 1998, p. 167.
  38. ^ a b Palmer 1982, p. 214.
  39. ^ Gioia 2008, p. 313.
  40. ^ a b c Gillett 1972, p. 161.
  41. ^ Whitburn 1988, p. 216.
  42. ^ a b c d Topping 1993, p. 33.
  43. ^ a b Morris & Haig 1992, pp. 12–13.
  44. ^ a b c Topping 1993, p. 15.
  45. ^ a b Blues Foundation (November 10, 2016). "1983 Hall of Fame Inductees: Dust My Broom – Elmore (Elmo) James (Trumpet, 1951)". The Blues Foundation. Retrieved February 9, 2017.
  46. ^ . Grammy.org. 1998. Archived from the original on January 22, 2011. Retrieved October 28, 2013.
  47. ^ "Complete National Recording Registry Listing". U.S. Library of Congress. Retrieved June 11, 2014.
  48. ^ a b c Wyman & Havers 2001, pp. 338–339.
  49. ^ Celmins 1998, pp. 62, 71.
  50. ^ Celmins 1998, p. 218.
  51. ^ "R&B Top 60". Cash Box. Vol. 33, no. 16. October 9, 1971. p. 24. ISSN 0008-7289.
  52. ^ "ZZ Top: Double Down Live: 1980 & 2008 – Overview". AllMusic. Retrieved May 25, 2020.

References edit

dust, broom, album, boozoo, bajou, album, blues, song, originally, recorded, believe, american, blues, artist, robert, johnson, 1936, solo, performance, delta, blues, style, with, johnson, vocal, accompanied, acoustic, guitar, with, many, songs, based, earlier. For the album by Boozoo Bajou see Dust My Broom album Dust My Broom is a blues song originally recorded as I Believe I ll Dust My Broom by American blues artist Robert Johnson in 1936 It is a solo performance in the Delta blues style with Johnson s vocal accompanied by his acoustic guitar As with many of his songs it is based on earlier blues songs the earliest of which has been identified as I Believe I ll Make a Change recorded by the Sparks brothers as Pinetop and Lindberg in 1932 Johnson s guitar work features an early use of a boogie rhythm pattern which is seen as a major innovation as well as a repeating triplets figure I Believe I ll Dust My Broom Original 78 record labelSingle by Robert JohnsonReleasedApril 1937 1937 04 RecordedNovember 23 1936StudioGunter Hotel San Antonio TexasGenreBluesLength2 58LabelVocalionSongwriter s Robert JohnsonProducer s Don LawIn 1951 Elmore James recorded the song as Dust My Broom and made it the classic as we know it according to blues historian Gerard Herzhaft 1 James slide guitar adaptation of Johnson s triplet figure has been identified as one of the most famous blues guitar riffs and has inspired many rock performers The song has become a blues standard with numerous renditions by a variety of musicians It also has been selected for the Blues Foundation Blues Hall of Fame the Grammy Hall of Fame and the Library of Congress National Recording Registry Contents 1 Earlier songs 2 Lyrics and interpretation 3 Recording and composition 4 Releases 5 Elmore James renditions 5 1 Background 5 2 Recording and composition 5 3 Releases and charts 5 4 Derivatives and Dust My Blues 5 5 Recognition and legacy 6 Footnotes 7 Citations 8 ReferencesEarlier songs editElements of Dust My Broom have been traced back to several earlier blues songs Blues researcher writer Edward Komara has suggested that Johnson may have begun developing his version as early as 1933 2 The Sparks brothers 1932 recording of I Believe I ll Make A Change and Jack Kelly s Believe I ll Go Back Home in 1933 both use a similar melody and lyrics 3 Some verses are also found in Carl Rafferty s 1933 Mr Carl s Blues 4 I do believe I do believe I ll dust my broom 2 And after I dust my broom anyone may have my room I m goin to call up in China just to see if my baby s over there 2 I ll always believe my babe s in the world somewhere Kokomo Arnold whose Old Original Kokomo Blues served as the basis for Johnson s Sweet Home Chicago recorded two songs with similar lines 5 Sagefield Woman Blues in 1934 I believe I believe I ll dust my broom 2 So some of your lowdown rounders lord you can have my room and Sissy Man Blues in 1935 I believe I believe I ll go back home 2 Lord acknowledge to my good gal mama Lord that I have done you wrong Now I m going to ring up China yeah man see can I find my good gal over there 2 Says the Good Book tells me that I got a good gal in the world somewhere The melody that Johnson uses is also found in 1934 recordings of I Believe I ll Make a Change by Leroy Carr 5 and Josh White 3 Lyrics and interpretation editJohnson s I Believe I ll Dust My Broom combines lyrics also identified as floating verses 5 from the earlier songs and adds two new verses of his own Music historian Elijah Wald calls the result a more cohesive lyric than either of the Arnold pieces and concentrates on the theme of traveling and being away from the girl he loves 6 Attempts have been made to read a hoodoo significance into the phrase dust my broom 7 However bluesman Big Joe Williams who knew Johnson and was familiar with folk magic explained it as leaving for good I m putting you down I won t be back no more 7 Music writer Ted Gioia also likens the phrase to the biblical passages about shaking the dust from the feet and symbolizing the rambling ways of the blues musician 8 I m gon get up in the morning I believe I ll dust my broom 2 Girlfriend the black man you been lovin girlfriend can get my room I don t want no woman wants every down town man she meet 2 She s a no good doney they shouldn t low her on the street While Johnson is disillusioned with one woman he also yearns for another I m gon write a letter telephone every town I know 2 If I can t find her in West Helena she must be in East Munroe I know I m on call up Chiney see is my good gal over there 2 If I can t find her on Philippine s island she must be in Ethiopia somewhere The last verse shows Johnson s unusual use of geographical references These are taken from topical events including the Second Italo Ethiopian War the Japanese invasion of Manchuria and the creation of the Commonwealth of the Philippines 9 However their use in Johnson s song is seen as escapism by music writer Greil Marcus 10 Music writer Thomas Beebee notes that while the world of many blues listeners was limited to the Mississippi Delta The last stanza of the song raises the stakes exploding into a fantastic geography the singer s voice trails a bit behind the guitar line here as if burdened by the imaginative leap involved Mixed with all the bitterness after all is a geographic expansiveness that suddenly stretches the thirty miles of Arkansas backroads into a trip around the world 9 Sweet Home Chicago the next song Johnson recorded includes the refrain Back to the land of California to my sweet home Chicago 11 Comparing the two Marcus comments Chicago functioned in the lyric as a place as distant as the Philippine Islands California was a place as mythical as Ethiopia 10 Recording and composition edit I Believe I ll Dust My Broom was recorded by Johnson during his first recording session on November 23 1936 The recording took place in a makeshift studio in Room 414 at the Gunter Hotel in San Antonio Texas and was produced by Don Law 12 It was the second song that Johnson recorded and followed Kind Hearted Woman Blues As with most of his recordings it appears that a second take of the song was recorded and assigned a reference number 13 Stephen LaVere who managed Johnson s recording legacy notes that this take along with several others remain s unfound if ever issued destroyed after being recorded if ever or otherwise unknown to collectors 13 Johnson recorded the song as an upbeat boogie shuffle 14 As with several other Johnson songs and typical of Delta blues from the era he does not adhere to a strict twelve bar blues structure but rather varies the timing to suit his whim 6 The song is performed in the key of E at a moderate tempo of 100 105 beats per minute Unlike some of the earlier songs that influenced Johnson I Believe I ll Dust My Broom does not feature a bottleneck or slide guitar 15 Instead Johnson employs a fingerstyle guitar in which melodic lines are played against a driving bass boogie figure 6 creating an effect similar to the then popular combination of piano and guitar accompaniment The boogie bass line adapted for guitar from the piano boogie style is one of Johnson s major innovations 6 16 a The song also features Johnson s use of a repeating guitar figure consisting of fast high note triplets 6 This riff came to define the song 17 although Johnson also used it in several other of his songs including a slide version for Ramblin on My Mind 18 To facilitate his fingerpicking style Johnson used an open guitar tuning However authors and researchers offer different views on which he used including a modified open A tuning with the fifth string retuned from A to B giving a new tuning of E B E A C E known as Aadd 9 19 20 a standard open E tuning of E B E G B E 21 22 page needed or a drop D tuning of D A D G B E 23 Releases editIn April 1937 Vocalion Records issued I Believe I ll Dust My Broom on the then standard ten inch 78 rpm record backed with Johnson s Dead Shrimp Blues 24 The record was Johnson s second of eleven released during his lifetime 25 An initial pressing of at least 5 000 was supplemented with another 900 copies released on Vocalion s budget labels Perfect Records and Romeo Records which were sold by dime stores 26 Conqueror Records which were sold through Sears and Roebuck department stores and its catalogue pressed an unspecified number although Conqueror usually only issued Vocalion s best sellers 24 As one of three Johnson songs to become early blues standards 27 Wald questions why I Believe I ll Dust My Broom was not included on the first reissue of his recordings the King of the Delta Blues Singers album released by Columbia in 1961 14 Authors Pearson and McCulloch note that its place on the album would have connected Johnson to the rightful inheritors of his musical ideas big city African American artists whose high powered electrically amplified blues remained solidly in touch with Johnson s musical legacy 28 In 1970 the song was included on Columbia s second Johnson compilation King of the Delta Blues Singers Vol II 29 in 1990 on The Complete Recordings box set 30 and on several compilation albums 31 Elmore James renditions edit Dust My Broom I Believe My Time Ain t Long nbsp Original 78 record labelSingle by Elmore JamesB side Catfish Blues performed by Bobo Thomas Released1951 1951 RecordedAugust 5 1951StudioIvan Scott s Radio Service Jackson MississippiGenreBluesLength2 42LabelTrumpetSongwriter s Elmore James credited Producer s Lillian McMurryBackground edit Dust My Broom was one of the earliest songs Elmore James performed regularly while he was still living in the Mississippi Delta in the late 1930s 32 Blues historian Ray Topping has suggested that James may have encountered Robert Johnson during this time when he learned how to play the song 33 James often performed with Aleck Rice Miller better known as Sonny Boy Williamson II as a duo However his music career was interrupted by a stint in the U S Navy during World War II After his discharge he again joined up with Williamson who regularly performed on radio In January 1951 Williamson was offered the opportunity to record some songs for Trumpet Records where by one account he was accompanied by James 34 In August the duo auditioned Dust My Broom for Trumpet owner Lillian McMurry who signed James to a recording contract 34 Meanwhile two versions of Dust My Broom were recorded Arthur Big Boy Crudup in 1949 and Robert Lockwood in 1951 1 Neither rendition appeared in the record charts 35 Recording and composition edit On August 5 1951 after a Sonny Boy Williamson II recording session Elmore James recorded Dust My Broom at Ivan Scott s Radio Service Studio in Jackson Mississippi 34 James who provided the vocals and amplified slide guitar is accompanied by Williamson on harmonica Leonard Ware on bass and Frock O Dell on drums 36 The recording studio had not made the transition to tape technology so the group was recorded direct to disc using one microphone 37 It was the only song recorded by James Trumpet s McMurray felt that his other songs were not suitable for recording 34 However Williamson and James cousin Homesick James later claimed that McMurry secretly taped the performance and that Elmore was so upset that he was unable to record a B side 38 McMurray denied this and presented a check made out to and endorsed by James the day before the session to show his knowledge of and agreement to participate in the recording 37 To record his song Elmore James used Robert Johnson s first four verses and concluded with one similar to that found in Arthur Crudup s 1949 recording I believe I believe my time ain t long 2 I ve got to leave my baby and break up my happy home James song also followed Johnson s melody key and tempo but adhered more closely to the chord changes of a typical twelve bar blues However according to musicologist Robert Palmer he transformed what had been a brisk country blues into a rocking heavily amplified shuffle 38 Besides the backing musicians the most notable addition to the song is James overdriven slide guitar which plays the repeating triplet figure and adds a twelve bar solo after the fifth verse Compared to Johnson guitar work Gioia describes them as more insistent firing out a machine gun triplet beat that would become a defining sound of the early rockers 39 His use of vibrato with the slide has been called as his distinctive jangling guitar style by musicologist Charlie Gillett 40 Music critic Cub Koda notes that in James hands this may be the most famous blues riff of all time n ext to the four note intro of Bo Diddley s I m a Man 17 Releases and charts edit Elmore James never recorded any more of his own material for Trumpet although he later appeared as a sideman 3 McMurry who was unaware of prior recordings of the song arranged to copyright Dust My Broom in James name and subsequently issued the single with a rendition of Catfish Blues by Bobo Thomas as the B side Both songs listed the performer as Elmo James b although James does not perform with Thomas Regional record charts show that Dust My Broom gradually gained popularity in different parts of the U S 34 It eventually entered Billboard magazine s national Top R amp B singles chart April 5 1952 and peaked at number nine 41 In 1955 after the release of an updated version by another record label McMurray leased the recording to Ace Records who re released it 3 Jewel Records also re released the original Trumpet recording as a single in 1965 42 nbsp Elmore James Dust My Broom source source portion of 1959 re recording Problems playing this file See media help Since it was originally released by Trumpet the original recording does not appear on many of James early compilation albums by Crown Kent However it is included on King Biscuit Time a Sonny Boy Williamson II collection by Arhoolie Records c and a James box set The Early Classic Recordings 1951 1956 36 The versions of Dust My Broom that appear on many compilations such as King of the Slide Guitar were recorded during his first session in Chicago in 1959 and last session in New York in late 1962 or early 1963 for Bobby Robinson s Fire Records group of labels 43 These later renditions do not include harmonica but have piano accompaniment 43 Derivatives and Dust My Blues edit The success of the single by the relatively small Trumpet Records led other record companies to pursue James in the hope of landing his follow up singles 34 Joe Bihari who owned Los Angeles based Modern Records with his brothers and his talent scout Ike Turner were one of the first A later session in Chicago produced I Believe a Dust My Broom knockoff that became a number nine charting single and the first issued on the new Modern subsidiary Meteor Records in 1953 Being able to score two hits within a year with essentially the same song by the same artist prompted record companies to exploit it as much as possible Thus many re workings of Dust My Broom with small variations were recorded by James for different record labels during his career 8 In 1955 Flair Records another Bihari label issued a reworking of the song titled Dust My Blues catalogue no 1074 42 Recorded in New Orleans at Cosimo Matassa s J amp M Studios James was backed by veteran New Orleans musicians including bassist Frank Fields drummer Earl Palmer and pianist Edward Frank 44 d Topping calls it a powerful reincarnation of the old broom theme 44 and Gillett adds that it is a fine hard driving song 40 Dust My Blues is perhaps the definitive re recording of the James original with an updated accompaniment 44 In 1964 it was released as a single in the UK and some reissues in the US in the 1960s reached regional charts 42 Recognition and legacy edit Elmore James Dust My Broom was inducted into the Blues Foundation Blues Hall of Fame in 1983 Jim O Neal stated that it received more votes than any other record in the first year of balloting for singles 45 His song was also inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1998 46 In 2013 the original 1951 Trumpet recording was selected for preservation in the U S Library of Congress National Recording Registry which commented James is known to have tinkered with his guitar pickups and fans still argue about how he achieved his signature sound Whatever combination of guitar and pickup was used in his slide guitar opening Elmore James created the most recognizable guitar riff in the history of the blues 47 Dust My Broom is a blues standard and is especially popular among slide guitarists 1 45 Besides early versions by bluesmen including Arthur Crudup 1949 and Robert Jr Lockwood 1951 1 the song carried over to the 1960s folk and blues revival and the British rhythm and blues scene In 1963 American revivalists Koerner Ray amp Glover recorded the song possibly making them the first white musicians to do so 48 Following the 1964 UK release of Dust My Blues 42 James slide guitar sound was adopted by many British blues oriented guitarists 40 Jeremy Spencer with the original lineup of Fleetwood Mac became a proponent of James s music and slide guitar style 49 The group recorded the song for their second album Mr Wonderful 1968 50 During the 1960s and 1970s Dust My Broom was on the set lists of many blues and rock musicians 48 Ike amp Tina Turner recorded a version that was released as a single in 1966 which later reached number 54 on the U S Cash Box R amp B chart in 1971 51 ZZ Top recorded the tune for their 1979 album Deguello and continued to perform it into the 1980s 48 A live version recorded in 1980 appears on Double Down Live 1980 amp 2008 2009 52 Footnotes edit Although a 1935 recording by Johnny Temple titled Lead Pencil Blues It Just Won t Write has been identified as the first recording to use the boogie bass line on guitar Temple stated that he learned the technique directly from Robert Johnson 16 Even though his first name was usually spelled Elmore many referred to him using the shortened Elmo Oliver 1989 Album notes back cover Frank Fields and Earl Palmer were members of Dave Bartholomew s band who had played on many of the hits of the era including those by Fats Domino and Lloyd PriceCitations edit a b c d Herzhaft 1992 p 446 Komara 2007 p 47 a b c d Wardlow 1998 p 168 Oliver 1989 p 189 a b c Wald 2004 p 135 a b c d e Wald 2004 p 136 a b Pearson amp McCulloch 2008 p 68 a b Gioia 2008 p 314 a b Beebee 2008 pp 13 14 a b Marcus 2011 p 137 LaVere 1990 p 25 Wald 2004 p 120 a b LaVere 1990 p 46 a b Wald 2004 p 138 Charters 1973 p 29 a b Conforth amp Wardlow 2019 p 127 a b Koda Cub Robert Johnson Dust My Broom Review AllMusic Retrieved October 29 2013 Wald 2004 p 139 Komara 2007 pp 34 46 47 Chappell 2020 p 200 Conforth amp Wardlow 2019 p 164 Ainslie amp Whitehill 1992 Mann 1993 Entry for Robert Johnson a b Conforth amp Wardlow 2019 p 186 LaVere 1990 p 45 Conforth amp Wardlow 2019 pp 151 186 Wald 2004 p 188 Pearson amp McCulloch 2008 p 28 Greenberg Adam Robert Johnson King of the Delta Blues Singers Vol 2 Review AllMusic Retrieved March 15 2014 Erlewine Stephen Thomas Robert Johnson The Complete Recordings Review AllMusic Retrieved March 15 2014 Robert Johnson I Believe I ll Dust My Broom Appears On AllMusic Retrieved March 15 2014 Wardlow 1998 pp 160 162 Topping 1993 p 10 a b c d e f Topping 1993 p 11 Whitburn 1988 p 485 a b Topping 1993 p 29 a b Wardlow 1998 p 167 a b Palmer 1982 p 214 Gioia 2008 p 313 a b c Gillett 1972 p 161 Whitburn 1988 p 216 a b c d Topping 1993 p 33 a b Morris amp Haig 1992 pp 12 13 a b c Topping 1993 p 15 a b Blues Foundation November 10 2016 1983 Hall of Fame Inductees Dust My Broom Elmore Elmo James Trumpet 1951 The Blues Foundation Retrieved February 9 2017 Grammy Hall of Fame Awards Past Recipients Grammy org 1998 Archived from the original on January 22 2011 Retrieved October 28 2013 Complete National Recording Registry Listing U S Library of Congress Retrieved June 11 2014 a b c Wyman amp Havers 2001 pp 338 339 Celmins 1998 pp 62 71 Celmins 1998 p 218 R amp B Top 60 Cash Box Vol 33 no 16 October 9 1971 p 24 ISSN 0008 7289 ZZ Top Double Down Live 1980 amp 2008 Overview AllMusic Retrieved May 25 2020 References editAinslie Scott Whitehill Dave 1992 Robert Johnson At the Crossroads Milwaukee Wisconsin Hal Leonard ISBN 0793510937 Beebee Thomas O 2008 Nation and Region in Modern American and European Fiction West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 498 9 Celmins Martin 1998 Peter Green Founder of Fleetwood Mac The Authorised Biography London Sanctuary ISBN 1 86074 233 5 Chappell Jon 2020 Blues Guitar for Dummies Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 119 69563 9 Charters Samuel 1973 Robert Johnson Oak Publications ISBN 0 8256 0059 6 Conforth Bruce Wardlow Gayle Dean 2019 Up Jumped the Devil The Real Life of Robert Johnson Chicago Review Press ISBN 978 1 64160 094 1 Gillett Charlie 1972 The Sound of the City 2nd Laurel printing 1973 ed New York City Dell Publishing ISBN 9780440381556 Gioia Ted 2008 Delta Blues Norton Paperback 2009 ed New York City W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 33750 1 Herzhaft Gerard 1992 Dust My Broom Encyclopedia of the Blues Fayetteville Arkansas University of Arkansas Press ISBN 1 55728 252 8 Komara Edward ed 2006 Dust My Broom Encyclopedia of the Blues New York City Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 92699 7 Komara Edward 2007 The Road to Robert Johnson The Genesis and Evolution of Blues in the Delta From the Late 1800s Through 1938 Milwaukee Wisconsin Hal Leonard ISBN 978 0 634 00907 5 LaVere Stephen 1990 The Complete Recordings Box set booklet Robert Johnson New York City Columbia Records C2K 46222 Mann Woody 1993 Anthology of Blues Guitar London Oak Publications ISBN 978 1783234615 Marcus Greil 2011 Bob Dylan by Greil Marcus Writings 1968 2010 London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 1 61039 199 3 Morris Chris Haig Diana 1992 Elmore James King of the Slide Guitar Box set booklet Elmore James Nashville Tennessee Capricorn Records 9 42006 2 Oliver Paul 1989 Sonny Boy Williamson King Biscuit Time Album notes Sonny Boy Williamson II El Cerrito California Arhoolie Records CD 310 Oliver Paul 1989 Screening the Blues Aspects of the Blues Tradition New York City Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 80344 4 Palmer Robert 1982 Deep Blues New York City Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 006223 8 Pearson Barry Lee McCulloch Bill 2008 Robert Johnson Lost and Found Champaign Illinois University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 07528 5 Topping Ray 1993 Elmore James The Classic Early Recordings 1951 1956 Box set booklet Elmore James Beverly Hills California Virgin Records America Flair 7243 8 39632 2 5 Wald Elijah 2004 Escaping the Delta Robert Johnson and the Invention of the Blues New York City Amistad ISBN 978 0 06 052427 2 Wardlow Gayle Dean 1998 Chasin that Devil Music Searching for the Blues San Francisco Miller Freeman Books ISBN 0 87930 552 5 Whitburn Joel 1988 Top R amp B Singles 1942 1988 Menomonee Falls Wisconsin Record Research ISBN 0 89820 068 7 Wyman Bill Havers Richard 2001 Bill Wyman s Blues Odyssey London Dorling Kindersley ISBN 0 7513 3442 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dust My Broom amp oldid 1181239355, 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