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Midnight Teds - Goodnight Irene (Lead Belly Rockabilly Cover)

Midnight Teds - Goodnight Irene (Lead Belly Rockabilly Cover)

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TitleMidnight Teds - Goodnight Irene (Lead Belly Rockabilly Cover)
AuthorCoverVerse
Duration2:47
File FormatMP3 / MP4
Original URL https://youtube.com/watch?v=yB8-nl5d5Bs

Description

https://playwoodproductions.blogspot.com/
https://www.youtube.com/@NilsMikaelsson
Available on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/album/0APYoY86tIKZGtuLGjT0ct
Apple Music:
https://music.apple.com/us/album/rockabilly-village-single/544786251
and Deezer:
https://www.deezer.com/us/album/4500141

From '' Rockabilly Village ''
Label: Playwood Productions
Format: CD, Album
Country: Sweden
Released: 2012

Tracklist
1. Rockabilly Village
2. Goodnight Irene

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"Goodnight, Irene" or "Irene, Goodnight," is a 20th-century American folk standard first recorded by American blues musician Huddie 'Lead Belly' Ledbetter in 1933.
A version recorded by the Weavers was a No. 1 hit in 1950.

The lyrics tell of the singer's troubled past with his love, Irene, and express his sadness and frustration.
Several verses refer explicitly to suicidal fantasies, most famously in the line "sometimes I take a great notion to jump in the river and drown," which was the inspiration for the title of the 1964 Ken Kesey novel Sometimes a Great Notion and a song of the same name from John Mellencamp's 1989 album, Big Daddy, itself strongly informed by traditional American folk music.

Origin

In 1886, Gussie Lord Davis published a song called "Irene, Goodnight".
The lyrics of the song have some similarities to "Goodnight, Irene" to suggest that Huddie Ledbetter's song was based on Davis' lyrics.

There is also a degree of resemblance in the music despite some differences, such as their time signatures, to indicate that the two songs are related.

According to Ledbetter, he first heard the core of the song, the refrain, and a couple of verses from his Uncle Terrill.

Another uncle of Ledbetter, Bob Ledbetter, who also recorded a nearly identical version of the song, said that he also learned the song from Terrill.

Family members of Huddie Ledbetter indicate that he may have sung the song as early as 1908 as a lulluby to his niece, Irene Campbell.
Ledbetter eventually extended the song to six verses.

History

John Lomax recorded a version of Huddie Ledbetter's song "Irene" in 1933, on a prison visit to Angola (Louisiana State Penitentiary).
These recordings for the Library of Congress included three takes of "Irene".
The first version recorded in 1933 had two verses and two choruses, the second version from 1934 had four verses and four refrains, while the third version from 1936 had six verses and six refrains, including an extended spoken part.

As part of the Federal Art Project that began in 1935, the song was published in 1936, in Lomax's version, as "Goodnight, Irene", a joint Ledbetter-Lomax composition.
It has a straightforward verse–chorus form, but is in waltz time.
It is a three-chord song, characterised as a "folk ballad" with a three-phrase melody, with provenance in 19th-century popular music transmitted by oral tradition.

"Irene" has been styled by Neil V. Rosenberg a "folk recomposition" of the 1886 song "Irene Good Night" by Gussie L. Davis.
Hank Williams connected the melody to the English ballad tradition, via a mountain song he knew as "Pere Ellen".
Lead Belly's account was of performing "Irene" by 1908, in a way he learned from his uncles Ter(r)ell and Bob.
By the 1930s, he had made the song his own, modifying the rhythm and rewriting most of the verses.
John and Alan Lomax made a field recording of Bob Ledbetter's version of the song.

Lead Belly continued performing the song during his prison terms.
An extended version of the song that includes narratives connecting the verses appears in Negro Folk Songs as Sung by Lead Belly.
In 1941, Woody Guthrie used the melody for his New Deal anthem Roll On, Columbia, Roll On.

"Irene" remained a staple of Lead Belly's performances throughout the 1930s and 1940s.

In 2002, Lead Belly's Library of Congress recording received a Grammy Hall of Fame Award.

Version by the Weavers

In 1950, one year after Lead Belly's death, the American folk band the Weavers recorded a version of "Goodnight, Irene".
It was a B-side track on the Decca label, produced by Milt Gabler.
The arranger was Gordon Jenkins.
It was a national hit, as was the A-side, a version of Tzena, Tzena, Tzena; sales were recorded as 2 million copies.

The single first reached the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart on June 30, 1950 and lasted 25 weeks on the chart, peaking at No. 1 for 13 weeks.
Although generally faithful, the Weavers chose to omit some of Lead Belly's lyrics, leading Time magazine to label it a "dehydrated" and "prettied up" version of the original.
The Weavers' lyrics are the ones now generally used. and Billboard ranked this version as the No. 1 song of 1950.

Frank Sinatra's cover, released a month after the Weavers', lasted nine weeks on the Billboard magazine Best Seller chart on July 10, peaking at No. 5.

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