I Believe I'll Dust My Broom
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I Believe I’ll Dust my Broom is a blues song recorded on November 23, 1936 in San Antonio, Texas by legendary bluesman Robert Johnson. The song was originally released on 78 rpm format as Vocalion 03474, ARC 7-04-81 and Conqueror 8871.
This was the second song that Johnson recorded, immediately after Kind Hearted Woman Blues. Like that first recording, Johnson’s song was based on a recent hit by Leroy Carr and Scrapper Blackwell, and on a cover version by another popular artist. Carr’s original hit was I Believe I’ll Make A Change recorded in August 1934. The popular bottleneck guitar player and singer Kokomo Arnold used the tune for two records: Sagefield Woman Blues recorded in September 1934 and Sissy Man Blues recorded in January 1935. It seems likely that Johnson owned and studied both of Arnold’s records. Another possibility is that Johnson heard Arnold in person performing a number of verses to this melody.
Arnold began Sissy Man Blues with the same words as Carr’s original
I Believe I'll Make a Change | Sissy Man Bluess | |
---|---|---|
Now I believe, — I believe I’ll go back home …… x 2 Because this life I’m livin’ — won’t let me stay alone |
I belive, — I believe I’ll go back home ……....... x 2 Lord acknowledge to my good gal, mama, — Lord, that I have done you wrong |
He also borrows a verses from Mr Carl’s Blues recorded by Carl Rafferty in December 1933, with a different melody.
Mr Carl’s Blues | Sissy Man Blues” | |
---|---|---|
I’m goin’ to call up in China, — just to see if my baby’s over there .. x 2 I’ll always believe — my babe’s in the world somewhere |
Now, I’m gonna ring up China, yeah man, — see can I find my good gal over there …… x 2 Says the Good Book tells me, — that I got a good gal in the world somewhere |
Another verse is used in Arnold’s earlier record, Sagefield Woman Blues.
Mr Carl’s Blues | Sagefield Woman Blues | |
---|---|---|
I do believe, — I believe I’ll dust my broom …… x 2 And after I dust my broom — Anyone may have my room |
And I believe, — I believe I’ll dust my broom …… x 2 So some of your lowdown rounders, — Lord, you can have my room |
Johnson bases three of his verses on Arnold's
I'm goin' get up in the morning, I believe I'll dust my broom x 2
Girl friend, the black man you been lovin', girl friend can get my room
I believe, I believe I'll go back home x 2
You can mistreat me here, but you can't when I go home
I'm gonna call up China, see is my good gal over there x 2
I can't find her in the Philippine islands, she must be in Ethiopia somewhere
Johnson did not attempt to copy the distinctive guitar styles of Arnold or Blackwell. But, according to Elijah Wald,[1] the accompaniment was a major innovation. He played high pitch slide guitar triplets alternating with a driving bass boogie figure, creating an effect similar to the then popular combination of piano and guitar accompaniment. Johnson's innovation later became very common among blues guitarists, especially after the electric guitar became standard. That particular boogie guitar figure was apparently invented by Johnnie Temple, who used it in his 1935 recording Lead Pencil Blues. Some have speculated that Johnson may have invented the figure even earlier and taught it to Temple.
I Believe I'll Dust My Broom was not copied on record until Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup's 1949 recording entitled Dust My Broom. Two years later, Elmore James made his first recording of Dust My Broom, incorporating the slide guitar triplet figure from Johnson's Rambling On My Mind. The record was so popular and so commercially successful as to make the song a blues standard.
[edit] References
- ^ Wald, Elijah (2004). Escaping the Delta. Robert Johnson and the Invention of the Blues. p.p. 135-138. Amistad. ISBN 0-06-052427-8.