big yes to that. turns out even the great robert johnson resorted to theft.
compliments of some energetic soul...
The list of songs mentioning a lady with an extenuated torso (or small dwelling) who SLEEPS IN THE KITCHEN WITH HER FEET IN THE HALL, requested by Jack Beard (v.49#4, v.50#1), is growing to a corresponding length. Teresa McNeil MacLean has been "singing these words in the song: 'Polly Wolly Doodle' [whose first known printing was in 1880] for at least 20 years," and wonders if Robert Johnson might have heard it there and included it in his "They're Red Hot." Steve Rosenberg adds to a previous mention of "Salty Dog" that it "appears in the Kingston Trio's version ... on their Back in Town album." I checked with Michael Taft, my esteemed successor as Head of the Archive of Folk Culture at the Library of Congress, who in 1983 published a prodigious concordance and anthology of blues on race records, the latter of which has been reprinted as Talkin' to Myself: Blues Lyrics, 1921-1942 (New York: Routledge, 2005). He has three references: "Her feets in the kitchen: her head's in the hall" in "Take Your Fingers Off It" (Will Shade & Memphis Jug Band, 1934); "She sleeps in the kitchen: with her feets in the hall" in the aforementioned "They're Red Hot" (Robert Johnson, 1936); and "She sleeps in the kitchen: one foot in the hall" in "Callin' Corrine" (Frankie "Half-Pint" Jaxon, 1939). Michael informs me that both of his books are now available online at <tinyurl.com/le432>. Finally, my apologies go to Deirdre Murtha for misstating the title of her group's CD and website designation in the last issue. These should read The Johnson Girls "with the subtitle or descriptor, Sea Chanteys and Maritime Music" and <www.thejohnsongirls.com>, respectively.
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m ... _n16689746