Detail from the cover of The Celebrated Negro Melodies, as sung by the Virginia Minstrels, 1843

Hokum is a particular song type of American blues music—a song which uses extended analogies or euphemistic terms to make humorous,[1] sexual innuendos. This trope goes back to early dirty blues recordings, enjoyed a huge commercial success in 1920s and 1930s,[1] and is used from time to time in modern American blues and blues rock.

An example of hokum lyrics is this sample from "Meat Balls", by Lil Johnson, recorded in 1937:[2]

Got out late last night, in the rain and sleet
Tryin' to find a butcher that grind my meat
Yes I'm lookin' for a butcher
He must be long and tall
If he want to grind my meat
'Cause I'm wild about my meat balls.

Terminology

"Hokum", originally a vaudeville term used for a simple performance bordering on vulgarity,[3][4] "old and sure-fire comedy",[5] but hinting at a smart wordplay, was first used to describe the genre of black music in a billing of a race record for Tampa Red's Hokum Jug Band (Tampa Red and Georgia Tom, 1929).[6] After producing a big hit, "It's Tight Like That", with Vocalion Records (and its sequel) in 1928, the musicians went on to Paramount Records where they were called The Hokum Boys. Other recording studios joined the fray using similarly named ensembles.[7] The application of "hokum" to describe the musical approach of these bands was fostered by Papa Charlie Jackson with his "Shake That Thing" (1925).[3]

The meaning of the stage slang word "hokum" was a subject of an extensive debate in the 1920s ("most discussed word in the entire vernacular", right next to the "jazz").[5] The term "hokum blues" did not become a formal designation of a style until 1960s.[8] "Hokum" is also used to describe the low comedy acts that were used at the turn of the 20th century to lure audiences to musical performances. In the words of W. C. Handy, a veteran of a minstrel troupe, "Our hokum hooked 'em"[9] outside the opera house, so that "ticket sellers would go to work".[10] King applies the term to the early short slapstick films.[11]

Etymology

The sources do not agree on the origins of "hokum": the word is thought to exist since either the late 19th, or early 20th century. It can be derived either by analogy withgap-sealing material oakum (the reliable gags of hokum were supposed to fill the deficiencies of the stage act), or a blend of "hocus-pocus" and "bunkum" (nonsense).[5]

Similar genres

Some of the hokum songs are also classified as belonging to the "dirty blues" subgenre of blues. Some sources treat hokum and dirty (also "bawdy") blues as interchangeable terms.[12][13] However, music researchers point to differences: dirty blues were played before the appearance of hokum,[14] the innuendo in the dirty blues is earnest and mature, while the hokum was full of sass and humor.[15] The dirty blues are good for dancing the slow drag,[15] while hokum, with its bouncy, ragtime-influenced[16] songs is intended for more lively dance style typical for the "mischievous branch" of music (similar to lundu, maxixe, xote, or samba).[15]

Daniel Beaumont points to minstrel shows, vaudeville, and medicine shows as the origins of humor in blues. These genres influenced the classic and country blues, which in turn fed hokum in the 1930s. Hokum after its heyday influenced rhythm and blues in 1940s and Chicago blues in 1950s and 1960s.[16]

Hokum and early blues

Hokum subgenre evolved from early blues, when in the late 1920s a new generation of bluesmen created a "more urbane product" that in addition to hokum included topical ballads, vaudeville blues, country blues, proto-jive.[17] Some commentators have argued that hokum "city style" was a degradation of the folk blues.[18]

Blues and hokum were inseparable until the very end of hokum era in the mid-1930s.[19] Hokum is considered to be an immediate predecessor of urban blues (Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Elmore James).[18]

Hokum in early country music

While hokum surfaces in early blues music most frequently, there was some significant crossover culturally. When the Chattanooga-based "brother duet" the Allen Brothers recorded a hit version of "Salty Dog Blues", refashioned as "Bow Wow Blues" in 1927 for Columbia's 15,000-numbered "Old Time" series the label rushed out several new releases to capitalize on their success, but mistakenly issued them on the 14,000 series instead.

In fact, the Allen Brothers were so adept at performing white blues that in 1927, Columbia mistakenly released their "Laughin' and Cryin' Blues" in the "race" series instead of the "old-time" series. (Not seeing the humor in it, the Allens sued and promptly moved to the Victor label.) [20]

An early black string band, the Dallas String Band with Coley Jones, recorded the song "Hokum Blues" on December 8, 1928, in Dallas, Texas, featuring mandolin instrumentation. They have been identified both as proto bluesmen and as an early Texas country band and were likely to have been selling to both black and white audiences. Blind Lemon Jefferson and T-Bone Walker played in the Dallas String Band at various times. Milton Brown and his Musical Brownies, the seminal white Texas swing band, recorded a hokum tune with scat lyrics in the early 1930s, "Garbage Man Blues", which was originally known by the title the jazz composer Luis Russell gave it, "The Call of the Freaks". Bob Wills, who had performed in blackface as a young man, liberally used comic asides, whoops, and jive talk when directing his famous Texas Playboys. The Hoosier Hot Shots, Bob Skyles and the Skyrockets, and other novelty song artists concentrated on the comedic aspects, but for many up-and-coming white country musicians, like Emmett Miller, Clayton McMichen and Jimmie Rodgers, the ribald lyrics were beside the point. Hokum for these white rounders in the South and Southwest was synonymous with jazz, and the "hot" syncopations and blue notes were a naughty pleasure in themselves. The lap steel guitar player Cliff Carlisle, who was half of another "brother duet", is credited with refining the blue yodel song style after Jimmie Rodgers became the first country music superstar by recording over a dozen blue yodels. Carlisle wrote and recorded many hokum tunes and gave them titles such as "Tom Cat Blues", "Shanghai Rooster Yodel" and "That Nasty Swing". He marketed himself as a "hillbilly", a "cowboy", a "Hawaiian" or a "straight" bluesman (meaning presumably, black), depending on the audience for whom he was playing and where he played.

The radio "barn dances" of the 1920s and 1930s interspersed hokum in their variety show broadcasts. The first blackface comedians at the WSM Grand Ole Opry were Lee Roy "Lasses" White and his partner, Lee Davis "Honey" Wilds, starring in the Friday night shows. White was a veteran of several minstrel troupes, including one organized by William George "Honeyboy" Evans and another led by Al G. Field, who also employed Emmett Miller. By 1920, White was leading his own outfit, the All Star Minstrels. Lasses and Honey joined the Grand Ole Opry cast in 1932. When Lasses moved on to Hollywood in 1936 to play the role of a silver-screen cowboy sidekick, Wilds stayed on in Nashville, corking up and playing blues on his ukulele with his new partner Jam-Up (first played by Tom Woods and subsequently by Bunny Biggs). Wilds organized the first Grand Ole Opry–endorsed tent show in 1940. For the next decade, he ran the touring show, with Jam-Up and Honey as the headliners. Pulling a forty-foot trailer behind a four-door Pontiac and followed by eight to ten trucks, Wilds took the tent show from town to town, hurrying back to Nashville on Saturdays for his Opry radio appearances. Many country musicians, like Uncle Dave Macon, Bill Monroe, Eddy Arnold, Stringbean and Roy Acuff, toured with the Wilds tent shows from April through Labor Day. As Wilds's son David said in an interview,

Music was a part of their act, but they were comedians. They would sing comedic songs, a la Homer and Jethro. They would add odd lyrics to existing songs, or write songs that were intended to be comedic. They were out there to come onstage, do five minutes of jokes, sing a song, do five minutes of jokes, sing another song and say, "Thank you, good night", as their segment of the Grand Ole Opry. Almost every country band during that time had some guy who dressed funny, wore a goofy hat, and typically played slide guitar.[21]

Legacy

By the mid-1930s the hokum bands were fading out. Georgia Tom got religious and switched to black gospel music by 1932, leaving Tampa Red to perform solo blues and hokum, Big Bill Broonzy from 1930 occasionally joined the Hokum Boys and the Famous Hokum Boys for their recordings with the last one in 1936. Leroy Carr made few hokum recordings with very mild lyrics, but moved to blues again with his rendition of "Sloppy Drunk Blues", originally by Lucille Bogan, becoming a blues standard.[19]

Some hokum songs got absorbed into the mainline jazz:[19]

Country music also use the hokum material:[22]

  • Luis Russell, one of the main figures behind the New Orleans jazz transition to swing, recorded "It's Tight Like That" in January of 1929, with "The Call of The Freaks" on the other of the single. In the hands of Milton Brown the latter one turned into the "Garbage Man Blues";
  • In 1936 Brown also recorded a version of "Keep A Knockin'", in May 1938 Bob Willis recorded "Keep Knocking (But You Can't Come In)".

The popularity of hokum rubbed off onto jive talk, with the latter eventually lasting longer than hokum and reaching wider audiences.[23]

Critique

Some scholars resent hokum as an era of purely commercial blues, when producers pushed the musicians to rehash the same slick songs, resembling the times of Tin Pan Alley.[24]

Examples of hokum

Schwartz[25] lists the following examples of hokum in the discography section:

Discography of records related to It's Tight Like That[25]
TitleArtistLabel/catalog #Year
It’s Tight Like ThatTampa Red’s Hokum Jug BandVocalion 12281928
It’s Tight Like That No. 2Georgia Tom and Tampa RedVocalion 12441929
It’s Tight Like That No. 3Georgia Tom and Tampa RedVocalion 14181929
(Honey) It’s Tight Like ThatHarry Jones and Papa Too SweetOKeh 65811929
It’s Tight Like ThatTampa RedVocalion 12581929
It’s Tight Like ThatMcKinney’s Cotton PickersVictor V38013-A1928
It’s Tight Like ThatWalter Barnes and his Royal CreoliansBrunswick 42441928
It’s Tight Like ThatJimmie Noone’s Apex Club Orchestra, with Junie CobbVocalion 12381928
It’s Tight Like ThatClara SmithColumbia 14398D1929
It’s Tight Like ThatLuis Russell and his Burning EightOKeh 8656 Paramount R2186, Parlophone R12861929
It’s Tight Like ThatZach Whyte’s Chocolate Beau BrummelsChampion 15715, Supertone 93681929
It’s Tight Like ThatHilda Alexander and Mamie McClureBrunswick 70691929
It’s Tight Like ThatSouthern Blues Singers, accompanied by Cow Cow DavenportGennett 68261929
It’s Tight Like ThatEddie Mapp, James Moore and Slim BartonQRS R70811929
It’s Tight Like ThatOtis MoteOKeh 453891929
(It’s) Tight Like ThisLouis Armstrong and his Savoy FiveOKeh 86491928
Who Said It’s Tight Like ThatThe Washingtonians (Duke Ellington and his Orchestra)Cameo 91951929
Shake That ThingPapa Charlie JacksonParamount 122811925
Shake That ThingClarence Williams’s Blue FiveOKeh 82671925
Shake That ThingEthel WatersColumbia 14116D1925
Shake That ThingBilly Wirges and his OrchestraPerfect 14533, Pathé 363521925
Shake That ThingViola McCoyVocalion 152451926
Shake That ThingViola BartletteParamount 123451926
Shake That ThingJimmy O’Bryant’s Famous Washboard BandParamount 12346A1926
Shake That ThingAbe Lyman and his CaliforniansBrunswick 30691926
Georgia GrindLouis Armstrong and his Hot FiveOKeh 83181926
Matchbox BluesBlind Lemon JeffersonParamount 124741927
Black Bottom StompJelly Roll Morton and his Red Hot PeppersVictor 202211926
Down to the BricksJimmy O’Bryant’s Famous Original Washboard BandParamount 123081925
You’ve Got The Right Key, but the Wrong KeyholeVirginia Liston with Clarence Williams’ Blue FiveOKeh 81731924
Hyena StompJelly Roll Morton and his Red Hot PeppersVictor 20772A1927
Beedle-Um-BumThe Hokum BoysParamount 127141929
Selling That StuffThe Hokum BoysParamount 127141929
Hey Mama, It’s Nice Like That, Parts 1–2Jim JacksonVocalion 12841929
It’s a Fight Like ThatBlind Ben CovingtonBrunswick 71271929
She Moves It Just RightBarbecue BobColumbia 14546D1929
Thirty-Eight and PlusJohn Byrd and Washboard WalterGennett 7157 Champion 15972, Supertone 9682, Varsity 60441930
It Feels So Good, Parts 1–2Lonnie Johnson and Spencer WilliamsOKeh 8664, Harmony 10871929
It Feels So Good, Parts 3–4Lonnie Johnson and Spencer WilliamsOKeh 8697 Vocalion 030941929
I Don’t Like ThatBarefoot Bill and Pillie BollingColumbia 14554-D1930
Loose Like ThatAlura MackGennett 6876, Supertone 9440 Champion 157541929
It’s Hot Like ThatCharlie McCoyBrunswick 71561930
Wringing That ThingMacon Ed and Tampa JoeOKeh 86761929
That Will Be AlrightMemphis Minnie and Kansas JoeColumbia 14439D1929
Bottle It Up and GoPicaninny Jug BandChampion 166151932
Diddie-Wa-DiddieBlind BlakeParamount 128881929
Diddle-Da-DiddleGeorgia Cotton PickersColumbia 14577-D1930
Giving It AwayBirmingham Jug BandOKeh 89081930
Wipe It OffLonnie Johnson and Clarence WilliamsOKeh 87621930
She Skuffles That RuffLovin’ Sam TheardBrunswick 70751929
Struttin’ My StuffLucille BoganBrunswick 71931930
She’s Got Good StuffCharlie SpandParamount 130051930
Move That ThingGeorgia Peanut BoysVictor 232741930
Tapping That ThingBurse and StephenChampion 166541932
We Can Sell That ThingRoosevelt SykesParamount 130041930
Smack That ThingWalter ColemanDecca 71571936
Somebody’s Been Using That ThingFamous Hokum BoysBanner 712, Oriole 8010 Perfect 150, Romeo 5010, Jewel 20010, Homestead 160991930
Dallas RagDallas String BandColumbia 14290-D1927
Hokum BluesDallas String BandColumbia 14389-D1928
Bohunkus BluesBlythe’s Washboard BandParamount 123681926
The King of the ZulusLouis Armstrong and his Hot FiveOKeh 8396A OKeh 415811926
That Stuff I GotFamous Hokum BoysOriole 8059, Banner 32139 Perfect 174, Romeo 50591930
I Had to Give Up GymHokum BoysParamount 127461929
We Don’t Sell It Here No MoreHokum BoysBrunswick 70701929
Let Me Have ItHokum BoysParamount 128971929
Can I Get Some of That?Coot Grant and Sox WilsonQRS R7065 Paramount 128331929
She Shakes a Mean AshcanCoot Grant and Sox WilsonColumbia 14598-D1931
Big Trunk BluesCoot Grant and Sox WilsonQRS R7085 Paramount 128311929
I Ain’t Gonna Give You NoneCoot Grant and Sox WilsonQRS R7085 Paramount 128311929
What Is It That Tastes Like Gravy?Tampa RedVocalion 1426, Supertone S22251929
Get ’Em from the Peanut Man (Hot Nuts)Lil JohnsonChampion 500021935
Banana in Your Fruit BasketBo CarterColumbia 14661-D Vocalion 03091, Bluebird B55941931
Sweet Honey HoleBlind Boy FullerARC 7-04-73 Vocalion 03254, Conqueror 88471937
Please Warm My WienerBo CarterBluebird B60581935
Riverside BluesKing Oliver’s Jazz BandOKeh 84841923
I Just Want a Daddy to Call My OwnFaye BarnesParamount 121361921
I Just Want a Daddy to Call My OwnMonette MooreParamount 120281923
I Just Want a Daddy to Call My OwnAlice CarterOKeh S-715951923
Muddy Water BluesMonette MooreParamount 120671923
Eagle Rock Me, PapaSara Martin with Clarence Williams’ Blue FiveOKeh S-728581924
Don’t Shake It No MoreTrixie SmithParamount 122111924
Don’t Shake It No MoreLovie Austin’s Blues SerenadersParamount 123001925
Freight Train BluesTrixie SmithParamount 122111924
That Creole BandAlbert Wynn and his Gut Bucket FiveOKeh 97891926
Easy Rider BluesBlind Lemon JeffersonParamount 124741927
Explaining the BluesMa Rainey and her Georgia BandParamount 122841925
Stormy Sea BluesMa Rainey and her Georgia BandParamount 122951925
Nighttime BluesMa Rainey and her Georgia BandParamount 123031925
Memphis Bound BluesMa Rainey and her Georgia BandParamount 123111925
Slave to the BluesMa Rainey and her Georgia BandParamount 123321925
Chain Gang BluesMa Rainey and her Georgia BandParamount 123881925
Bessemer Bound BluesMa Rainey and her Georgia BandParamount 123741925
Through Train BluesTampa RedParamount 126851928
Salty Dog BluesPapa Charlie JacksonParamount 12236, Broadway 50011924
Salty Dog BluesFreddie Keppard’s Jazz CardinalsParamount 123991926
Chicago FlipWhistler’s Jug BandGennett 55441924
The Jug Band SpecialWhistler’s Jug BandOKeh 88161927
I’m Looking for the Bully of the TownMemphis Jug BandVictor 207811927
Sugar PuddingMemphis Jug BandVictor 217401928
On the Road AgainMemphis Jug BandVictor V380151928
She’s in the Graveyard NowEarl McDonald’s Original Louisville Jug BandColumbia 14255-D1924
Minglewood BluesCannon’s Jug StompersVictor 212671918
Jazz Gypsy BluesBanjo Joe [Gus Cannon]Paramount 120641928
My Money Never Runs OutBanjo Joe [Gus Cannon]Paramount 120641928
Boodle-Am-ShakeDixieland Jug BlowersVictor 204801926
House Rent RagDixieland Jug BlowersVictor 204151926
Skoodlum BluesJimmy O’Bryant’s Famous Original Washboard BandParamount 122601925
Georgia BreakdownJimmy O’Bryant’s Famous Original Washboard BandParamount 122771925
Uncle BudTampa Red and Georgia TomVocalion 1268, Supertone S22241929
How Long, How LongLeroy CarrVocalion 11911928
It Ain’t No Good, Parts 1–2Charlie McCoy with Chatman’s Mississippi Hot FootersBrunswick 7118, Melotone 123031929
Bottle It Up and GoTommy McClennanBluebird B8378, Montgomery Ward M87871939
Step It Up and GoBlind Boy FullerVocalion 05476, Conqueror 9274 Columbia 30011 Columbia 372301940
Home Town Skiffle, Parts 1–2Paramount All-StarsParamount 128861929
Georgia GrindEthel WatersColumbia 14116-D1925

Hokum compilations

  • Please Warm My Weiner, Yazoo L-1043 (cover art by Robert Crumb) (1992)
  • Hokum: Blues and Rags (1929–1930), Document 5392 (1995)
  • Hokum Blues: 1924–1929, Document 5370 (1995)
  • Raunchy Business: Hot Nuts & Lollypops, Sony (1991)
  • Let Me Squeeze Your Lemon: The Ultimate Rude Blues Collection, (2004)
  • Take It Out Too Deep: Rufus & Ben Quillian (Blue Harmony Boys) (1929–30)
  • Vintage Sex Songs, Primo 6077 (2008)

Other collections containing hokum

  • Traditional Country Music Makers, Vol. 20: Memphis Yodel, Magnet MRCD 020 (Cliff Carlisle and other artists)
  • White Country Blues, 1926–1938: A Lighter Shade of Blue, Sony (1993)
  • Booze and the Blues, Legacy Roots n' Blues series, Sony (1996)
  • Good For What Ails You: Music of the Medicine Shows 1926–1937, Old Hat Records CD-1005 (2005)

References

  1. 1 2 Rocha 2022, p. 11.
  2. "Illustrated Rosetta Records discography". Wirz.de. Retrieved January 13, 2024.
  3. 1 2 Calt 2010, p. 125.
  4. King 2017, p. 2.
  5. 1 2 3 King 2017, p. 1.
  6. Larkin 2013.
  7. Hansen 2000, p. 60.
  8. Rocha 2022, p. 22.
  9. Sotiropoulos 2009, p. 40.
  10. Southern 1972, p. 213.
  11. King 2017.
  12. DeLune 2015, p. 87.
  13. Cunningham 2018, p. 78.
  14. Wald 2010, p. 43.
  15. 1 2 3 Rocha 2022, p. 96.
  16. 1 2 Beaumont 2004, p. 476.
  17. Freund Schwartz 2020, p. 359.
  18. 1 2 Schwartz 2018, p. 367.
  19. 1 2 3 Birnbaum 2013, p. 133.
  20. Wolfe, Charles (1998). Entry on the Allen Brothers. The Encyclopedia of Country Music. Paul Kingsbury, ed. Oxford University Press.
  21. Grant Alden. Interview with David Wilds. No Depression, issue 4, summer 1996.
  22. Birnbaum 2013, pp. 133–134.
  23. Birnbaum 2013, p. 134.
  24. Schwartz 2018, p. 368.
  25. 1 2 Schwartz 2018, pp. 383–388.

Sources

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  • Toll, Robert C. (1974). Blacking Up: The Minstrel Show in Nineteenth-Century America. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-8195-6300-5.
  • The Souls of Black Folk by W. E. B. DuBois (Penguin Classics, New York: Penguin Books, reprinted April 1996) ISBN 0-14-018998-X.
  • Reminiscing with Sissle and Blake by Robert Kimball and William Bolsom (The Viking Press, New York, 1973)
  • Demons of Disorder: Early Blackface Minstrels and Their World by Dale Cockrell (Cambridge University Press, 1997)
  • The Story of a Musical Life: An Autobiography by George F. Root (Cincinnati: John Church Co., 1891; reprinted by AMS Press, New York, 1973). ISBN 0-404-07205-4.
  • We'll Understand It Better By and By: Pioneering African American Gospel Composers edited by Bernice Johnson Reagon. Wade in the Water Series. (Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C, 1993).
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  • Where Dead Voices Gather by Nick Tosches, 2001, Little, Brown, Boston. ISBN 0-316-89507-5. On Emmett Miller.
  • A Good Natured Riot: The Birth of the Grand Ole Opry by Charles K. Wolfe (Country Music Foundation Press and Vanderbilt University Press, Nashville, Tennessee, 1999)
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  • You Ain't Talkin' to Me: Charlie Poole and the Roots of Country Music liner notes by Henry Sapoznik, Columbia Legacy Recordings C3K 92780, 2005
  • Good for What Ails You: Music of the Medicine Shows 1926–1937 liner notes by Marshall Wyatt, Old Hat Records CD-1005 (2005)
  • Rocha, Alexandre Eleutério (2022). Hokum Blues: erotismo e humor em uma vertente musical silenciada (PDF) (Mestre em Música thesis) (in Portuguese). Universidade de Brasília.
  • DeLune, Clair (21 September 2015). South Carolina Blues. Arcadia Publishing. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-4396-5327-2. OCLC 936538023. hokum, which is also called "bawdy" or "dirty" blues
  • Wald, Elijah (3 August 2010). The Blues: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-19-975079-5. OCLC 1014220088. flood of hokum songs established blues as a medium for [...] comic smut. There had always been dirty blues [...]
  • Cunningham, Alexandria (2018). "Make It Nasty: Black Women's Sexual Anthems and the Evolution of the Erotic Stage". Journal of Black Sexuality and Relationships. 5 (1): 63–89. doi:10.1353/bsr.2018.0015. eISSN 2376-7510. (page 78): dirty blues was a subgenre [...] also referenced as hokum
  • Calt, Stephen (1 October 2010). Barrelhouse Words: A Blues Dialect Dictionary. University of Illinois Press. p. 125. ISBN 978-0-252-09071-4. OCLC 1156337352. hokum: A vaudeville term [...] fun bordering on vulgarity and quite obvious [...] descriptive of material by [...] Hokum Boys [...] musical approach [...] fostered by Papa Charlie Jackson
  • Larkin, Colin (30 September 2013). The Virgin Encyclopedia of The Blues. Random House. ISBN 978-1-4481-3274-4. 'Hokum, with its connotations of verbal cleverness, was first applied to black music [...] in billing of 'Tampa Red's Hokum Jazz Band' [ Tampa Red and Georgia Tom ]
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