.

The Stomping Grounds Lyrics

What did they used to play?

Well, they played every type of music. Everyone, no doubt, had a different style.
Were they white and coloured both?

They had every class - they had Spanish, they had coloured, they had white, they had Frenchmen, they had American . . .

Do you remember, er, specifically, they . . . Were they Frenchmen who had just come from France, there in those places?

Well, er, we had 'em from, er, all parts of the world. New Orleans was the stomping grounds, we'll say, for all the greatest pianists in the country. Because there were more jobs in that section of the world, in that . . . for pianists, than any other ten places in the world. The reason for that, they had so many mansions - sporting houses that paid nothing to no pianist. Their salary was a dollar a day in the small places that couldn't afford to pay. The big places guaranteed five dollars a night. If you didn't make five dollars, they would pay you five dollars. But that was never the case, because when you didn't make a hundred dollars, you had a bad night.

Such houses as Hilma Burt's next, next door to Tom Anderson's saloon, corner of Custom House . . . and Basin Street was one of her mansions. Tom Anderson was supposed to be the husband of this Hilma Burt. Was no doubt one of the best paying places in the city.

How much would you make there?
Well, I never made, never no night, as I remember, under a hundred dollars. It was a very bad night when we made a hundred dollars. It was very often, men would come into the houses and hand you a twenty, or hand you forty, or fifty-dollar note. It was just like a match.

Wine flowed . . . much more than water, di, er, did, during those periods. And many of those houses, there's more wine sold than beer - I mean, the kind of wine I'm speaking about I don't mean sauterne or nothing like that - I mean champagne. Beer was sold for, for a dollar a bottle. Wine sold from five to ten, depending upon the type of wine that you bought. Of course, they were all imported. Er, among the main ones were Clicquot, which is a Fran, er, which is a French wine, and Mumm's Extra, er, Extra Dry - that was an English wine.

Well, you were tellin' us about this hangout for pianists.

Yes.

Who used to be down there?
Well, I, I didn't finish on that - I was only getting to this point - why we had so many pianists. Well, after four o'clock in the morning, all the girls that could get out of the houses, they were there. There weren't any discrimination of any kind. They all sat at different tables at any place that they felt like sitting. They all mingled together as they wished to, and everyone was just like one big happy family.

People from all over the country came there. There were most times that you couldn't get in. This place would go on from four o'clock in the morning at a tremendous rate of speed, with plenty of money, and drinks of all types, till maybe twelve, one, two, three o'clock in the daytime. Of course, when they . . . when the great pianists used to leave then all the crowds'd leave. Among some of these great pianists, I may mention some that I remember very well. Sammy Davis, one of the greatest manipulators, I guess I've ever seen in the history of the world on a piano. And the gentleman was . . . had a lot of knowledge in music. I may mention . . .

Was he white or coloured?

He was a coloured boy.

Where was he from?

He was from New Orleans, born and reared in New Orleans. He was a Creole.
Report lyrics
The Complete Library of Congress Recordings (2005)
"Bert Williams" (Piano Instrumental) "Freakish" (Piano Instrumental) "Pep" (Piano Instrumental) The Georgia Skin Game (Spoken) The Georgia Skin Game, continued (Spoken) The Georgia Skin Game, conclusion (Spoken) / "I'm Gonna Get One and Go Directly" (Song) "Ungai Hai," the Sign of the Indians (Interview and Song) "New Orleans Blues" (Piano Instrumental) / The Spanish Tinge (Spoken) The Spanish Tinge, continued (Interview and Demonstration) Improving Spanish Tempos and "Creepy Feeling" (Interview and Piano Instrumental) "Creepy Feeling" (Piano Instrumental) "The Crave" (Piano Instrumental) "Mamanita" (Piano Instrumental) C'était N'aut' Can-Can, Payez Donc (Interview and Song) / "If You Don't Shake, You Don't Get No Cake" (Song" "Spanish Swat" (Piano Instrumental) "Ain't Misbehavin'" (Song) "I Hate a Man Like You" (Interview and Song) / "Rolling Stuff" (Piano Instrumental) "Michigan Water Blues" (Interview and Song) "My Gal Sal," original and transformation (Interview and Song) The St. Louis Scene (Spoken) / Randall's Tune (Piano Instrumental) / "Maple Leaf Rag," St. Louis style (Piano Instrumental) "Maple Leaf Rag," St. Louis style, conclusion (Piano Instrumental) / "Maple Leaf Rag," New Orleans style (Piano Instrumental) Jelly Roll Carves St. Louis (Spoken) Jelly Roll Carves St. Louis, continued (Spoken) / "Miserere," swinging arrangement, with portion of "Anvil Chorus" (Piano Instrumental) "New Orleans Blues" (Song) "Winin' Boy Blues" (Song) "Winin' Boy Blues," continued (Song) "The Anamule Dance" (Song) "The Anamule Dance," continued (Song) / The Story of the "The Anmule Dance" (Spoken) / The Origins of Scat, "Scat Song" (Interview and Demonstration) The Great Buddy Bolden (Spoken) / "Buddy Bolden's Blues" (Song) The Great Buddy Bolden, continued (Spoken) "Mr. Jelly Lord" (Song) How Jelly Roll Got His Name (Spoken) / "Original Jelly Roll Blues" (Piano Instrumental) "Original Jelly Roll Blues," continued (Song) / Jelly Roll's Four-Beat Foot (Spoken) "Honky Tonk Blues" (Song) / Old-Time Honky Tonks (Spoken) Real Tough Boys (Spoken) Sporting Attire and Shooting the Agate (Spoken) Sweet Mamas and Sweet Papas (Spoken) / "See See Rider" (Song) "See See Rider," continued (Song) / Parading With the Broadway Swells (Spoken) Parading With the Broadway Swells, continued (Spoken) Fights and Weapons (Spoken) / "Stars and Stripes Forever" (Piano Instrumental) Luis Russell and New Orleans Riffs (Interview and Demonstration) / "Call of the Freaks" (Song) Jelly's Travels: From Yazoo to Clarksdale (Spoken) Jelly's Travels: From Clarksdale to Helena (Spoken) Jelly's Travels: From Helena to Memphis (Spoken) In Memphis: The Monarch Saloon and Benny Frenchy (Spoken) / "Benny Frenchy's Tune" (Piano Instrumental) "Benny Frenchy's Tune," continued (Piano Instrumental) / Bad Sam, Memphis' Toughest (Interview) / "The Stomp That Beat Benny Frenchy" (Piano Instrumental) / "All That I Ask Is Love" (Song) "Make Me a Pallet on the Floor" (Interview and Song) "Make Me a Pallet on the Floor," continued (Song) "Make Me a Pallet on the Floor," continued (Song) "Make Me a Pallet on the Floor," conclusion (Song) "The Dirty Dozen" (Interview and Song) The Murder Ballad, Part One (Song) The Murder Ballad, Part Two (Song) The Murder Ballad, Part Three (Song) The Murder Ballad, Part Four (Song) The Murder Ballad, Part Five (Song) The Murder Ballad, Part Six (Song) The Murder Ballad, conclusion (Song) "Fickle Fay Creep" (Piano Instrumental) "Jungle Blues" (Piano Instrumental) "King Porter Stomp" (Piano Instrumental) "Sweet Peter" (Piano Instrumental) "Hyena Stomp" (Piano Instrumental) "Wolverine Blues" (Song) "Wolverine Blues," continued (Song) "State and Madison" (Piano Instrumental) "The Pearls" (Piano Instrumental) "The Pearls," continued (Piano Instrumental) "Winin' Boy Blues" (Song) "Winin' Boy Blues," continued (Song) "Boogie Woogie Blues" (Piano Instrumental) / "Albert Carroll's Tune" (Piano Instrumental) / "Buddy Bertrand's Blues" (Piano Instrumental) "Buddy Bertrand's Blues," continued (Piano Instrumental) / "Mamie's Blues" (Interview, Piano Instrumental, and Song) When the Hot Stuff Came In (Spoken) The First Hot Arrangements (Spoken) The Pensacola Kid and the Cadillac Café (Spoken) At the Cadillac Café, Los Angeles, continued (Spoken) / "Little Liza Jane" (Song) "Little Liza Jane," continued (Song) / On the West Coast: Getting Along Swell (Spoken) In the Publishing Business (Spoken) / "Tricks Ain't Walking No More" (Song) "Original Jelly Roll Blues" (Guitar Instrumental) Jelly Roll's Early Playing Days in the District (Spoken) Hot Bands and Creole Tunes (Spoken) "Eh, La Bas" (Song) / Riffs and Breaks From Creole Songs (Spoken) Old-Time Creole Musicians and the French Element (Spoken) Playing Hot With Buddy Bolden (Spoken) "High Society" (Instrumental) Sporting Life Costumes (Spoken) Buddy Bolden: Man and Musician (Spoken) Creoles Playing With Negroes: Getting That Drive (Spoken) Jelly Roll's Compositions (Spoken) How Johnny St. Cyr Learned to Play Guitar (Spoken) "Guitar Blues" (Guitar Instrumental) / Just the Guitar Blues (Spoken) Bad Men and Pimps (Spoken) The Story of the "Coon Blues" (Spoken) "Coon Blues" (Instrumental) Jazz Is Just a Makeup: Buddy Bolden, Honky Tonks, Brass Band Funerals, and Parades (Spoken) Young Sidney Bechet: Jim Crow and the Dangers of the District (Spoken) The Main Idea in Jazz: "Just Watch Me" - Improvising and Reading Music (Spoken) "Of All His Mother's Children He Loved Jelly the Best": A Little Tale of Jelly Roll Morton (Spoken) The Story of "I'm Alabama Bound" (Spoken) / I'm Alabama Bound (Song) Time in Mobile (Spoken) / "I'm Alabama Bound," continued (Song) "King Porter Stomp" (Piano Instrumental) / The Story of "King Porter Stomp" (Spoken) The Story of "King Porter Stomp," continued (Spoken) / "You Can Have It, I Don't Want It" (Song) / Copyrights and Battles of Music (Spoken) Jell Roll's Background (Spoken) Music Lessons (Spoken) / "Miserere" (Piano Instrumental) "Miserere," continued (Piano Instrumental) / The French Opera House and the Tenderloin (Spoken) The Stomping Grounds "The Style of Sammy Davis" (Piano Instrumental) / The Renown of Tony Jackson (Spoken) / "Pretty Baby" (Song) Tony Jackson Was the Favorite / Dope, Crown, and Opium (Spoken) Poor Alfred Wilson (Spoken) / Tony Jackson's "Naked Dance" (Piano Instrumental) "Honky Tonk Blues" (Song) / In New Orleans, Anyone Could Carry a Gun (Spoken) New Orleans Was a Free and Easy Place (Spoken) / "Levee Man Blues" (Song) The Story of Aaron Harris (Spoken) The Story of Aaron Harris, continued (Spoken) / "Aaron Harris Blues" (Song) Aaron Harris, His Hoodoo Woman, and the The Hat That Started a Riot (Spoken) The Story of the 1900 New Orleans Riot and the Song of Robert Charles (Spoken) The Story of the 1900 New Orleans Riot, continued (Spoken) / "Game Kid Blues" (Song) "Game Kid Blues," continued (Piano Instrumental) / "Buddy Carter Rag" (Piano Instrumental) New Orleans Funerals (Spoken) / "Steal Away" (Song) / "Nearer My God to Thee" (Song) Funeral Marches (Spoken) / "Flee as the Bird to the Mountain" (Piano Instrumental) "Oh! Didn't He Ramble" (Piano Instrumental) / Evolution of Tiger Rag (Spoken) / "Tiger Rag" first and second strains (Piano Instrumental) "Tiger Rag" third, fourth, and fifth strains (Piano Instrumental) / "Tiger Rag" transformed (Piano Instrumental) "Tiger Rag" (Piano Instrumental) / "Panama" (Piano Instrumental) The Right Tempo Is the Accurate Tempo (Interview and Demonstration) / Harmony, Melody, and Riffs (Interview and Demonstration) Jazz Discords and the Story of the "Kansas City Stomp" (Interview and Demonstration) / "Kansas City Stomp" (Piano Instrumental) "Kansas City Stomp," continued (Piano Instrumental) / Breaks in Jazz (Interview and Demonstration) / "Darktown Strutters' Ball" (Piano Instrumental) Slow Swing and "Sweet Jazz Music" (Interview and Demonstration) "Salty Dog" (Song) / Bill Johnson, Jelly's Brother-in-Law (Spoken) "Hesitation Blues" (Interview and Song)