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Shortnin' Bread

"Shortnin' Bread" (also spelled "Shortenin' Bread", "Short'nin' Bread", or "Sho'tnin' Bread") is an African-American folk song dating back at least to the 1890s.[1] James Whitcomb Riley published it as a poem in 1900, building on older lyrics. A "collected" version of the song was published by E. C. Perrow in 1915. It is song number 4209 in the Roud Folk Song Index.

"Shortnin' Bread"
Song
Writtenc. 1890s
Published1900
Songwriter(s)James Whitcomb Riley

Shortening bread refers to a bread made of corn meal and/or flour and lard shortening.

Origins

"Shortnin' Bread" is a plantation song. Its first written version was captured by poet James Whitcomb Riley in 1900. He titled the song "A Short'nin' Bread Song—Pieced Out", and wrote the first verse as:

Fotch dat dough fum the kitchin-shed
Rake de coals out hot an' red
Putt on de oven an' putt on de led
Mammy's gwiner cook som short'nin' bread[2]

The dialect rendered into common English would be:

Fetch that dough, from the kitchen shed
Rake those coals out, hot and red
Put on the oven and put on the lid
Mommy's going to cook some short'nin' bread

The verse includes:

When corn plantin' done come roun'
Blackbird own de whole plowed groun'
Corn is de grain as I've hearn said
Dat's de blackbird's short'nin' bread

Another pair of verses may be later, and exist in several versions:

Three little children, lying in bed
Two was sick and the other 'most dead
Send for the doctor and the doctor said
"feed them children on short'nin' bread"

When those children, sick in bed,
heard that talk 'bout short'nin' bread.
They popped up well, to dance and sing,
skipping around and cut the pigeon wing.

(In some versions there are two children instead of three - and the "other" either "bump'd his head" or "was dead". Neither of these quite scan. The children (or "chillun") were once referred to by one of several racist terms.

Other verses include:

Pull out the skillet, pull out the led,
Mama's gonna make a little short'nin' bread
That ain't all she's gonna do,
Mama's gonna make a little coffee too

I slipped to the kitchen, slipped on the led,
slipped my pockets full of short'nin' bread.
I stole the skillet, I stole the led,
I stole the girl who makes short'nin' bread

They caught me with the skillet, They caught me with the led,
They caught me with the girl who makes short'nin' bread.
I paid six dollars for the skillet, six dollars for the led,
Spent six months in jail eating short'nin' bread.

Reese DuPree composed a version recorded in 1927.[3]

Folk version

Titled "Shortened Bread", E. C. Perrow published the first folk version of this song in 1915, which he collected from East Tennessee in 1912.[4] The folk version of the song—as with Riley's—does not have any distinct theme, but consists of various floating lyrics, some relating to "shortnin' bread", some not. The traditional chorus associated with the folk song goes:

Mammy's little baby loves short'nin', short'nin'
Mammy's little baby loves short'nin' bread (rpt.)

The Beach Boys version

Background

"Shortenin' Bread"
Song by the Beach Boys
from the album L.A. (Light Album)
Released19 March 1979 (1979-03-19)
Recordedc. 1979
Length2:50
Songwriter(s)Traditional, arranged by Brian Wilson
Licensed audio
"Shortenin' Bread" on YouTube

"Shortenin' Bread" was recorded by the American rock band the Beach Boys numerous times. Only one version has seen official release, as the final track on their 1979 album L.A. (Light Album).

The band's principal songwriter Brian Wilson was reportedly obsessed with the song, having recorded more than a dozen versions of the tune.[5] Beach Boy Al Jardine speculated that Wilson's obsession with the song may have begun after co-writing the song "Ding Dang" with the Byrds' Roger McGuinn in the early 1970s.[6]

Numerous anecdotes have been reported about Wilson's obsession with the song:

  • Alex Chilton, the former lead singer of Big Star, recalled receiving middle-of-the-night phone calls from Wilson asking him to sing on a recording of "Shortenin' Bread"' ("He was telling me I have the perfect voice for it").[7]
  • The Monkees' Micky Dolenz said that when he tripped on LSD with Wilson, John Lennon, and Nilsson, Wilson played "Shortenin' Bread" on piano "over and over again".[5]
  • Biographer Peter Ames Carlin wrote that Elton John and Iggy Pop were bemused by an extended, contumacious Wilson-led singalong of "Shortenin' Bread", leading Pop to flee the room proclaiming, "I gotta get out of here, man. This guy is nuts!"[8]
  • Musician Alice Cooper recalled that Wilson considered "Shortnin' Bread" to be the greatest song ever written. According to Cooper, when he asked why, Wilson responded "I don't know, it's just the best song ever written."[9]

A number of Wilson-produced "Shortenin' Bread" and "Ding Dang" variations remain unreleased. Titles include "Clangin'" (recorded with Harry Nilsson), "Brian's Jam",[5] and "Rolling Up to Heaven".[10] A version that was developed from a 1973 session, featuring American Spring as guest vocalists, was completed for the unreleased album Adult/Child in 1977.[11][12]

Personnel

Credits per Craig Slowinski, sourced from his L.A. (Light Album) sessionography.[13]

The Beach Boys

Additional musicians

  • Michael Andreas - saxophone
  • Joe Chemay - additional bass guitar
  • Bernard Fleischer - saxophone
  • Jim Guercio - bass guitar
  • Billy Hinsche - guitars
  • Chuck Kirkpatrick - guitar
  • Jimmy Lyon - lead guitar
  • Rod Novak - saxophone
  • Fred Selden - saxophone
  • Sterling Smith - Hammond organ

Other renditions

 
Version by Clayton McMichen
* 1933 – Paul Robeson

In popular culture

Music

Film

  • Willie the Whale (voiced by Nelson Eddy) sings the first verse and the chorus of the song in the animated short "The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met" featured in the Disney film Make Mine Music (1946).
  • Donald Duck sings the song while making pancakes in the animated short Three for Breakfast (1948) and you can hear him sing a short version of this in Lion Around (1950).
  • In the Looney Tunes cartoon Swooner Crooner (1944), the first of many crooning roosters who audition for Porky Pig is a caricature of Vaughn Monroe who sings the refrain.
  • In the Merrie Melodies cartoon Hare Tonic (1945), Elmer Fudd sings the song at the beginning of the cartoon but with the lyrics changed from "shortnin' bread" into "wabbit stew".
  • Rosa Rio played the song in her original Video Yesteryear score for The Wizard of Oz (1925) in the mid-1980s as a theme for the character of Snowball (Spencer Bell, credited as G. Howe Black). Some reviewers found this reinforced the racist portrayal of the character.
  • In the film Police Academy 4 (1987), the character Captain Harris is seen singing the song into his cane.
  • Similarities have been noted in the main theme for Driving Miss Daisy (1989).[18]
  • In the movie Trainspotting (1996), Renton's friends and family sing the song in a celebration after he avoids being jailed.
  • At the end of the credits in the movie Secret Window (2004), Johnny Depp is heard singing the song.
  • Chris Rock sings this at a funeral in the comedy Death at a Funeral (2010).
  • Rod Steiger sings a modified version, "Mama's little Joy Boy loves lobster, lobster" in the black comedy The Loved One (1965), when describing a nightmare he had involving his mother and lobsters.

Television

  • In the I Love Lucy episode "Ethel's Home Town" (1955), Ethel sings "Shortnin' Bread" while Lucy, Ricky, and Fred perform a comedy routine behind her.[19]
  • The Bullwinkle Show (1959-1964): Numerous characters sing this song in different contexts. In one Dudley Do-Right segment, "The Masked Ginny Lynne", Dudley begins leaping around and dancing while singing this song, as the opera singer renders everyone else inert with her soporific moan. One Fractured Fairy Tales retelling of "The Three Little Pigs" begins with three pig sisters receiving a singing telegram, to the tune of this song, telling them they have inherited a fortune.
  • The Banana Splits (1969): The "Tra La La" theme song uses a chorus derived from "Shortnin' Bread".
  • In 1984, the children's music trio Sharon, Lois & Bram performed this song in Season 1 of their hit TV show Sharon, Lois & Bram's Elephant Show.
  • In the 1985 Kidsongs video, "A Day at Old MacDonald's Farm", "Shortnin' Bread" is sung in a different way pertaining to eating breakfast.
  • In the Batman: The Animated Series episode "Harley and Ivy", Harley Quinn hums the refrain in one scene while setting a table.
  • In the Ren & Stimpy episode, "I Love Chicken", Ren Höek sings the song whilst preparing a meal.
  • At the end of a The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air episode, Will is seen singing the song while scrubbing the floor with his cousin as the end credits roll.
  • In the Tom & Jerry cartoon, "The Milky Waif" (1946), the tune of "Shortnin' Bread" is played when Jerry and Nibbles daub themselves with shoe polish and appear in blackface to confuse Tom.
  • In the Warner Bros. animated television series Animaniacs, this song is part of the regular soundtrack for the adventures of Yakko, Wakko, and Dot, and is played over and over again throughout the series.
  • In the episode "Terms of Endearment" on the adult comedy show Drawn Together, the character Foxxy Love sings a few verses of the refrain.

References

  1. ^ Wade, Stephen. The Beautiful Music all Around Us: Field Recordings and the American Experience. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2012. p. 93.
  2. ^ Eitel, The Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley, p. 119.
  3. ^ "Du Pree, Reese - Discography of American Historical Recordings".
  4. ^ Perrow, "Songs and Rhymes from the South", p. 142: "from Tennessee mountain whites, 1912".
  5. ^ a b c Chidester, Brian (7 March 2014). "Busy Doin' Somethin': Uncovering Brian Wilson's Lost Bedroom Tapes". Paste. Retrieved 11 December 2014.
  6. ^ Beard, David (Spring 2007). "Ding Dang". Endless Summer Quarterly.
  7. ^ George-Warren 2014, p. 124.
  8. ^ Carlin 2006, p. 172.
  9. ^ Music-News.com Newsdesk (5 July 2011). "Alice Cooper was too afraid to argue with Brian Wilson". MusicNewsWeb.
  10. ^ Chidester, Brian (30 January 2014). "Brian Wilson's Secret Bedroom Tapes". LA Weekly. Retrieved 11 December 2014.
  11. ^ "The Stylus Magazine Non-Definitive Guide: The Lost Album". Stylus Magazine. 2 September 2003. Retrieved 13 July 2014.
  12. ^ Lambert 2007, p. 316.
  13. ^ Slowinski, Craig (Spring 2015). Beard, David (ed.). "THE BEACH BOYS' - L.A. (Light Album)". Endless Summer Quarterly Magazine. No. 109. Charlotte, North Carolina.
  14. ^ Broven, John (2009). Record makers and breakers: voices of the independent rock 'n' roll pioneers. University of Illinois Press. pp. 363ff. ISBN 978-0-252-03290-5.
  15. ^ "Compare Dave 'Baby' Cortez' 'The Happy Organ' with James Whitcomb Riley's 'Shortnin' Bread'". who sampled: Exploring the DNA of music. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  16. ^ "Paul Chaplain and his Emeralds". Billboard.com. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
  17. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Sittin' in a High Chair - by Hap Palmer - Baby Songs". YouTube.
  18. ^ Bettencourt, Scott. "THE YEAR IN FILM MUSIC: 1989". Film Score Monthly. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
  19. ^ Feldman, Leslie Dale (18 January 2019). The Political Theory of I Love Lucy: Speed It Up!. Lexington Books. p. 16. ISBN 978-1498541558. Retrieved 2 April 2020.

Bibliography

  • Badman, Keith (2004). The Beach Boys: The Definitive Diary of America's Greatest Band, on Stage and in the Studio. Backbeat Books. ISBN 978-0-87930-818-6.
  • Carlin, Peter Ames (2006). Catch a Wave: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of the Beach Boys' Brian Wilson. Rodale. ISBN 978-1-59486-320-2.
  • Eitel, Edmund Henry (ed.) The Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley, Vol 5. Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Company (1913).
  • George-Warren, Holly (20 March 2014). A Man Called Destruction: The Life and Music of Alex Chilton, From Box Tops to Big Star to Backdoor Man. Penguin Group US. ISBN 978-0-698-15142-0.
  • Lambert, Philip (2007). Inside the Music of Brian Wilson: the Songs, Sounds, and Influences of the Beach Boys' Founding Genius. Continuum. ISBN 978-0-8264-1876-0.
  • Perrow, E.C. "Songs and Rhymes from the South." The Journal of American Folklore, 28:108 (April - Jun. 1915) 129–190.
  • Wade, Stephen. The Beautiful Music all Around Us: Field Recordings and the American Experience. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2012.
  • Waltz, Robert B; David G. Engle. "Shortenin' Bread". The Traditional Ballad Index: An Annotated Bibliography of the Folk Songs of the English-Speaking World. Hosted by California State University, Fresno, Folklore, 2007.

External links

  • The Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley: In Ten Volumes, Including Poems and Prose Sketches, Many of which Have Not Heretofore Been Published; an Authentic Biography, an Elaborate Index and Numerous Illustrations in Color from Paintings by Howard Chandler Christy and Ethel Franklin Betts – complete text of James Whitcomb Riley's "A Short'nin' Bread Song—Pieced Out".
  • A traditional version of lyrics and an MP3 clip are here Shortenin' Bread • Lyrics & Song Clip (free mp3).

shortnin, bread, this, article, about, song, similarly, named, different, food, shortbread, also, spelled, shortenin, bread, short, bread, tnin, bread, african, american, folk, song, dating, back, least, 1890s, james, whitcomb, riley, published, poem, 1900, bu. This article is about the song For a similarly named but different food see shortbread Shortnin Bread also spelled Shortenin Bread Short nin Bread or Sho tnin Bread is an African American folk song dating back at least to the 1890s 1 James Whitcomb Riley published it as a poem in 1900 building on older lyrics A collected version of the song was published by E C Perrow in 1915 It is song number 4209 in the Roud Folk Song Index Shortnin Bread SongWrittenc 1890sPublished1900Songwriter s James Whitcomb RileyShortening bread refers to a bread made of corn meal and or flour and lard shortening Contents 1 Origins 2 Folk version 3 The Beach Boys version 3 1 Background 3 2 Personnel 4 Other renditions 5 In popular culture 5 1 Music 5 2 Film 5 3 Television 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksOrigins Edit Shortnin Bread is a plantation song Its first written version was captured by poet James Whitcomb Riley in 1900 He titled the song A Short nin Bread Song Pieced Out and wrote the first verse as Fotch dat dough fum the kitchin shed Rake de coals out hot an red Putt on de oven an putt on de led Mammy s gwiner cook som short nin bread 2 The dialect rendered into common English would be Fetch that dough from the kitchen shed Rake those coals out hot and red Put on the oven and put on the lid Mommy s going to cook some short nin bread The verse includes When corn plantin done come roun Blackbird own de whole plowed groun Corn is de grain as I ve hearn said Dat s de blackbird s short nin bread Another pair of verses may be later and exist in several versions Three little children lying in bed Two was sick and the other most dead Send for the doctor and the doctor said feed them children on short nin bread When those children sick in bed heard that talk bout short nin bread They popped up well to dance and sing skipping around and cut the pigeon wing In some versions there are two children instead of three and the other either bump d his head or was dead Neither of these quite scan The children or chillun were once referred to by one of several racist terms Other verses include Pull out the skillet pull out the led Mama s gonna make a little short nin bread That ain t all she s gonna do Mama s gonna make a little coffee too I slipped to the kitchen slipped on the led slipped my pockets full of short nin bread I stole the skillet I stole the led I stole the girl who makes short nin bread They caught me with the skillet They caught me with the led They caught me with the girl who makes short nin bread I paid six dollars for the skillet six dollars for the led Spent six months in jail eating short nin bread Reese DuPree composed a version recorded in 1927 3 Folk version EditTitled Shortened Bread E C Perrow published the first folk version of this song in 1915 which he collected from East Tennessee in 1912 4 The folk version of the song as with Riley s does not have any distinct theme but consists of various floating lyrics some relating to shortnin bread some not The traditional chorus associated with the folk song goes Mammy s little baby loves short nin short nin Mammy s little baby loves short nin bread rpt The Beach Boys version EditBackground Edit Further information Ding Dang song Shortenin Bread Song by the Beach Boysfrom the album L A Light Album Released19 March 1979 1979 03 19 Recordedc 1979Length2 50Songwriter s Traditional arranged by Brian WilsonLicensed audio Shortenin Bread on YouTube The Beach Boys with American Spring Shortenin Bread Adult Child bootleg source source Wilson s earliest attempted recording of the song 1973 Problems playing this file See media help Shortenin Bread was recorded by the American rock band the Beach Boys numerous times Only one version has seen official release as the final track on their 1979 album L A Light Album The band s principal songwriter Brian Wilson was reportedly obsessed with the song having recorded more than a dozen versions of the tune 5 Beach Boy Al Jardine speculated that Wilson s obsession with the song may have begun after co writing the song Ding Dang with the Byrds Roger McGuinn in the early 1970s 6 Numerous anecdotes have been reported about Wilson s obsession with the song Alex Chilton the former lead singer of Big Star recalled receiving middle of the night phone calls from Wilson asking him to sing on a recording of Shortenin Bread He was telling me I have the perfect voice for it 7 The Monkees Micky Dolenz said that when he tripped on LSD with Wilson John Lennon and Nilsson Wilson played Shortenin Bread on piano over and over again 5 Biographer Peter Ames Carlin wrote that Elton John and Iggy Pop were bemused by an extended contumacious Wilson led singalong of Shortenin Bread leading Pop to flee the room proclaiming I gotta get out of here man This guy is nuts 8 Musician Alice Cooper recalled that Wilson considered Shortnin Bread to be the greatest song ever written According to Cooper when he asked why Wilson responded I don t know it s just the best song ever written 9 A number of Wilson produced Shortenin Bread and Ding Dang variations remain unreleased Titles include Clangin recorded with Harry Nilsson Brian s Jam 5 and Rolling Up to Heaven 10 A version that was developed from a 1973 session featuring American Spring as guest vocalists was completed for the unreleased album Adult Child in 1977 11 12 Personnel Edit Credits per Craig Slowinski sourced from his L A Light Album sessionography 13 The Beach Boys Al Jardine backing vocals Bruce Johnston backing vocals Fender Rhodes Mike Love backing vocals Brian Wilson piano Moog synthesizer Carl Wilson lead and backing vocals possible guitar Dennis Wilson bass vocal drumsAdditional musicians Michael Andreas saxophone Joe Chemay additional bass guitar Bernard Fleischer saxophone Jim Guercio bass guitar Billy Hinsche guitars Chuck Kirkpatrick guitar Jimmy Lyon lead guitar Rod Novak saxophone Fred Selden saxophone Sterling Smith Hammond organOther renditions Edit Version by Clayton McMichenThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message 1933 Paul Robeson The Andrews Sisters Al Jolson Gid Tanner The Viscounts Sonny Terry Sonny Terry s New Sound The Jawharp in Blues and Folk Music 1968 Lawrence Tibbett Fats Waller Dave Brubeck Frances Faye Taj Mahal musician Richard White Clayton McMichen 1937 Nelson Eddy Maytime 1956 Etta James Etta Miss Peaches James Shortnin Bread Rock Tears of Joy 1963 Mississippi John Hurt D C Blues Library of Congress Recordings 1966 Lee Dorsey 1982 Klaus Flouride 1981 The Kelly Family Wonderful World 1990 The Cramps Stay Sick 1998 The Tractors Farmers in a Changing World reached No 57 on the Hot Country Songs chart Heaven s Sake Kids 2002 Laurie Berkner Under a Shady Tree 2014 and 2017 The WigglesIn popular culture EditThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section appears to contain trivial minor or unrelated references to popular culture Please reorganize this content to explain the subject s impact on popular culture providing citations to reliable secondary sources rather than simply listing appearances Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Music Edit The Unity Church sings Every little cell in my body is healthy Every little cell in my body is well to the tune of Shortnin Bread It appears in all three editions of the hymnal and was reportedly used by Myrtle Fillmore during her healing The tune for a significant portion of The Happy Organ 1959 bears a strong resemblance to the Shortnin Bread tune the portion under put on the skillet slip on the lid mammy s gonna make us some shortnin bread 14 15 Bread and Butter by The Newbeats 1964 is also based on the put on the skillet melody I Can t Believe What You Say for Seeing What You Do by Ike Turner 1964 shares this progression The melody from the put on the skillet portion also forms the harmonic choruses of Little Bitty Pretty One by Thurston Harris and the Sharps 1957 The Tra La La Song One Banana Two Banana by The Banana Splits 1968 and Buffalo Soldier by Bob Marley and the Wailers 1983 In the Elvis Presley song Clambake Shortnin Bread is paraphrased as Mama s little baby loves clambake clambake mama s little baby loves clambake too Paul Chaplain and his Emeralds took a rock version of the song to No 82 in the Hot 100 in August 1962 16 The chorus to the song is used as a melody in the song Pachuco Cadaver on Trout Mask Replica by Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band The 1994 song Deuces Are Wild by Aerosmith features the line Mama s little baby loves shortnin bread in the lyrics Hap Palmer wrote a song Sittin in a High Chair for his 1984 album BabySong while using the music to adapt it A video for the song shows a mama orangutan feeding her baby 17 Johnny Cash mentioned the line Mama s little baby loves shortnin bread in the Mark O Connor song The Devil Comes Back to Georgia a continuation of The Devil Went Down to Georgia and a collaboration with Marty Stuart Travis Tritt and Charlie Daniels Film Edit Willie the Whale voiced by Nelson Eddy sings the first verse and the chorus of the song in the animated short The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met featured in the Disney film Make Mine Music 1946 Donald Duck sings the song while making pancakes in the animated short Three for Breakfast 1948 and you can hear him sing a short version of this in Lion Around 1950 In the Looney Tunes cartoon Swooner Crooner 1944 the first of many crooning roosters who audition for Porky Pig is a caricature of Vaughn Monroe who sings the refrain In the Merrie Melodies cartoon Hare Tonic 1945 Elmer Fudd sings the song at the beginning of the cartoon but with the lyrics changed from shortnin bread into wabbit stew Rosa Rio played the song in her original Video Yesteryear score for The Wizard of Oz 1925 in the mid 1980s as a theme for the character of Snowball Spencer Bell credited as G Howe Black Some reviewers found this reinforced the racist portrayal of the character In the film Police Academy 4 1987 the character Captain Harris is seen singing the song into his cane Similarities have been noted in the main theme for Driving Miss Daisy 1989 18 In the movie Trainspotting 1996 Renton s friends and family sing the song in a celebration after he avoids being jailed At the end of the credits in the movie Secret Window 2004 Johnny Depp is heard singing the song Chris Rock sings this at a funeral in the comedy Death at a Funeral 2010 Rod Steiger sings a modified version Mama s little Joy Boy loves lobster lobster in the black comedy The Loved One 1965 when describing a nightmare he had involving his mother and lobsters Television Edit In the I Love Lucy episode Ethel s Home Town 1955 Ethel sings Shortnin Bread while Lucy Ricky and Fred perform a comedy routine behind her 19 The Bullwinkle Show 1959 1964 Numerous characters sing this song in different contexts In one Dudley Do Right segment The Masked Ginny Lynne Dudley begins leaping around and dancing while singing this song as the opera singer renders everyone else inert with her soporific moan One Fractured Fairy Tales retelling of The Three Little Pigs begins with three pig sisters receiving a singing telegram to the tune of this song telling them they have inherited a fortune The Banana Splits 1969 The Tra La La theme song uses a chorus derived from Shortnin Bread In 1984 the children s music trio Sharon Lois amp Bram performed this song in Season 1 of their hit TV show Sharon Lois amp Bram s Elephant Show In the 1985 Kidsongs video A Day at Old MacDonald s Farm Shortnin Bread is sung in a different way pertaining to eating breakfast In the Batman The Animated Series episode Harley and Ivy Harley Quinn hums the refrain in one scene while setting a table In the Ren amp Stimpy episode I Love Chicken Ren Hoek sings the song whilst preparing a meal At the end of a The Fresh Prince of Bel Air episode Will is seen singing the song while scrubbing the floor with his cousin as the end credits roll In the Tom amp Jerry cartoon The Milky Waif 1946 the tune of Shortnin Bread is played when Jerry and Nibbles daub themselves with shoe polish and appear in blackface to confuse Tom In the Warner Bros animated television series Animaniacs this song is part of the regular soundtrack for the adventures of Yakko Wakko and Dot and is played over and over again throughout the series In the episode Terms of Endearment on the adult comedy show Drawn Together the character Foxxy Love sings a few verses of the refrain References Edit Wade Stephen The Beautiful Music all Around Us Field Recordings and the American Experience Urbana University of Illinois Press 2012 p 93 Eitel The Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley p 119 Du Pree Reese Discography of American Historical Recordings Perrow Songs and Rhymes from the South p 142 from Tennessee mountain whites 1912 a b c Chidester Brian 7 March 2014 Busy Doin Somethin Uncovering Brian Wilson s Lost Bedroom Tapes Paste Retrieved 11 December 2014 Beard David Spring 2007 Ding Dang Endless Summer Quarterly George Warren 2014 p 124 Carlin 2006 p 172 Music News com Newsdesk 5 July 2011 Alice Cooper was too afraid to argue with Brian Wilson MusicNewsWeb Chidester Brian 30 January 2014 Brian Wilson s Secret Bedroom Tapes LA Weekly Retrieved 11 December 2014 The Stylus Magazine Non Definitive Guide The Lost Album Stylus Magazine 2 September 2003 Retrieved 13 July 2014 Lambert 2007 p 316 Slowinski Craig Spring 2015 Beard David ed THE BEACH BOYS L A Light Album Endless Summer Quarterly Magazine No 109 Charlotte North Carolina Broven John 2009 Record makers and breakers voices of the independent rock n roll pioneers University of Illinois Press pp 363ff ISBN 978 0 252 03290 5 Compare Dave Baby Cortez The Happy Organ with James Whitcomb Riley s Shortnin Bread who sampled Exploring the DNA of music Retrieved 18 October 2014 Paul Chaplain and his Emeralds Billboard com Retrieved 31 May 2021 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Sittin in a High Chair by Hap Palmer Baby Songs YouTube Bettencourt Scott THE YEAR IN FILM MUSIC 1989 Film Score Monthly Retrieved 29 June 2014 Feldman Leslie Dale 18 January 2019 The Political Theory of I Love Lucy Speed It Up Lexington Books p 16 ISBN 978 1498541558 Retrieved 2 April 2020 Bibliography EditBadman Keith 2004 The Beach Boys The Definitive Diary of America s Greatest Band on Stage and in the Studio Backbeat Books ISBN 978 0 87930 818 6 Carlin Peter Ames 2006 Catch a Wave The Rise Fall and Redemption of the Beach Boys Brian Wilson Rodale ISBN 978 1 59486 320 2 Eitel Edmund Henry ed The Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley Vol 5 Indianapolis The Bobbs Merrill Company 1913 George Warren Holly 20 March 2014 A Man Called Destruction The Life and Music of Alex Chilton From Box Tops to Big Star to Backdoor Man Penguin Group US ISBN 978 0 698 15142 0 Lambert Philip 2007 Inside the Music of Brian Wilson the Songs Sounds and Influences of the Beach Boys Founding Genius Continuum ISBN 978 0 8264 1876 0 Perrow E C Songs and Rhymes from the South The Journal of American Folklore 28 108 April Jun 1915 129 190 Wade Stephen The Beautiful Music all Around Us Field Recordings and the American Experience Urbana University of Illinois Press 2012 Waltz Robert B David G Engle Shortenin Bread The Traditional Ballad Index An Annotated Bibliography of the Folk Songs of the English Speaking World Hosted by California State University Fresno Folklore 2007 External links EditThe Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley In Ten Volumes Including Poems and Prose Sketches Many of which Have Not Heretofore Been Published an Authentic Biography an Elaborate Index and Numerous Illustrations in Color from Paintings by Howard Chandler Christy and Ethel Franklin Betts complete text of James Whitcomb Riley s A Short nin Bread Song Pieced Out A traditional version of lyrics and an MP3 clip are here Shortenin Bread Lyrics amp Song Clip free mp3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shortnin 27 Bread amp oldid 1167431363, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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