Creole Belle J. Bodewalt Lampe. Classic Banjo

This is a new arrangement of this great Ragtime Classic by my friend Steve Harrison and myself. It is a little tricky to play so features gurning and the grinding of teeth.

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Comment by thereallyniceman on February 20, 2012 at 16:32

Also featured in this video are my double chin collection and fat belly, but what the heck, it is a great tune... and you are only old once ;-)

The score is now available for FREE download in the MUSIC LIBRARY

Comment by Sylvia on February 20, 2012 at 18:39

So that's where Gloria came from. .......  Oh, and BTW I enjoyed the music. 5 stars to you and Steve.

Comment by Mike Moss on February 20, 2012 at 20:08

Another outstanding arrangement and performance! Nice to see the picture of everyone's favourite banjo-playing belle in the background as well!

Comment by Alan Sims on February 20, 2012 at 20:57

great playing Ian .the second part sounds like a chet atkins tune called rubber doll rag

Comment by marc dalmasso on February 21, 2012 at 12:32

beautiful tune & landscape , Ian ; well played

Comment by thereallyniceman on February 21, 2012 at 19:38

Hi Alan,

thanks for the nice comments, even though I should have had more practice on the piece, it was still fun to learn. There seems considerable confusion between music publishers and performers on the actual name for this piece. Some say Creole Belle and others Creole Belles. If you read the actual song lyrics for the piece it is a song about a man's beautiful mixed race girlfriend... his Creole Belle, so I will stick with that and  Creole Belle it is !

 You mention that it sounded a bit like Rubber Dolly Rag. There is a reason for that. Here is an extract from the:  americanstrings.blogspot

Rubber Dolly Rag

 “Rubber Dolly Rag” is an American tune that has touched nearly every corner of the American music scene since the melody first appeared in 1900. Danish-born American violinist/composer Jens Bodewalt Lampe, after becoming the first-chair violinist for the Minneapolis Symphony at age 16, moved to Buffalo NY in the 1890s and began to lead dance band of his own. Almost immediately after becoming aware of Scott Joplin’s new “Maple Leaf Rag,” Lampe composed his own syncopated piece entitled “Creole Belles.” This brand new type of music, which later came to be called “ragtime,” was variously described as “cakewalk,” “march” and “two-step” music during its early history. “Creole Belles” was performed widely by pianists, ragtime bands, brass bands and military bands. John Phillip Sousa championed this piece and by 1902, the Danish American had become one of the most well known ragtime composers – perhaps second only to Joplin.

Early in the 1900s, the second strain of “Creole Belles” began to be picked up by fiddlers all across America and the catchy melody began to adopt alternative names including “Back Up and Push” and “Rubber Dolly.” The tune was so popular that most Appalachian string bands who were recording in the 1920s & 1930s released some version of it. Gid Tanner’s Skillet Lickers and Uncle Bud Landress made recordings of this tune in the early '30s. Perry Bechtel and His Boys, known for their recordings on the “Race” and “Hillbilly” series popularized in that era by the record companies, recorded this tune in Atlanta. Some of the most often quoted lyrics are from the Light Crust Dough Boys, a band that featured one of the greatest Texas swing fiddlers of the time – Cecil Brower.

This tune represents one of the most amazing of the many cultural cross-pollinations in our American musical history. After Western Swing bands and Texas Style fiddlers adopted and popularized the tune with its characteristic swing and ragtime rhythms, the great African American jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald recorded it using the white string-band lyrics. Fitzgerald’s “Wubba Dolly” was recorded in 1939. Famed African American blues guitarist and singer Mississippi John Hurt, who often collaborated with Anglo American fiddler Willie Narmour in the early 1920s, brought the original title of this tune to the forefront again by adapting the lyrics of “My Creole Belle” to the new tune and rhythm. Hurt was known for playing square dance and ragtime music during the same period that he was recording early blues music for Okey Records. His interest in different styles of American music resulted in this tune being introduced to a much wider audience. The lyrics of “My Creole Belle” are often sung to the tune of “Rubber Dolly Rag.”

My Creole Belle, I love her well
My darling baby, my Creole Belle
When the stars shine, I’ll call her mine
My darling baby, my Creole Belle.


 And the cross-pollination doesn’t end there! Whereas the original “Rubber Dolly” lyrics probably derive from Anglo American children’s games of the late 1800s, they made their way into a Top-10 record in 1965. In that year, African American soul singer Shirley Ellis recorded the Rubber Dolly lyrics used by the Light Crust Dough Boys and other Appalachian string bands as “The Clapping Song.” Folk music pioneer Woody Guthrie, as well as many others, recorded the Creole Belle version also adding to the popularity of the tune among the newer generations.

The appearance of alternate versions of lyrics in American songs, especially originating from different racial groups, is a long-standing American music tradition. However, in this case, having both versions of the lyrics covered by both black and white singers for over a century is particularly interesting. From its very beginning, fiddlers continued to play this tune from coast to coast and generation to generation, establishing it as one of the truly classic examples of the American Music System.

Comment by Richard William Ineson on February 23, 2012 at 8:54

Well! Blow me down. Who would have thought it? Good tunes get everywhere. Well played sir!

Comment by Alan Sims on February 23, 2012 at 11:47

Hi ian , thank you for the wonderfull information ,thinking about it now i have  john hurts version and back up and push  by chet .

Comment by Steve Harrison on February 23, 2012 at 19:52

I first played the Mississippi John Hurt ragtime guitar version of this back in the 1960's after he came to the UK touring with others during the folk revival. (that was before I put my guitar away in favour of the banjo!)

Comment by Trevor Boyd on February 25, 2012 at 19:40

When I started learning guitar in the 1960s I learned a version of this from John Pearse's "Hold Down a Chord" television series.  I still have the book.  It was based on the Mississippi (damn,  that's hard to spell) John Hurt version that Steve mentions.   Fascinating to see it surface all these years later as a classic banjo piece.

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