Winnsboro Cotton Mill Blues

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  • Опубліковано 19 вер 2024
  • By Frederic Anthony Rzewski
    In this piece, Rzewski depicts a scene of the 1930s when workers at the textile mill plant in Winnsboro, South Carolina began singing lyrics to reflect the hardship of factory labor and to promote camaraderie among the workers. Prominent Blues artists such as Lead Belly and Pete Seeger have sung this catchy folk song. In Rzewski’s version, he utilizes this tune while employing unconventional piano techniques to imitate the sounds of the mill-this includes having the pianist using his palms and arms to achieve this!---by Frank Huang
    Lyrics:
    Down in Winsboro, South Carolina
    There's... some person put some new verses
    Uh, to the old "Alcoholic Blues"
    Old man seargent sittin' at the desk
    The damn old fool won't give us no rest
    He'd take the nickels off a dead man's eyes
    To buy a Coca-Cola and a Eskimo pie
    I got the blues, I got the blues
    I got the Winsboro cotton mill blues
    Oh Lordy, Lordy spoolin's hard
    You know and I know, we don't have to tell
    You work for Tom Watson got to work like hell
    I got the blues, I got the blues
    I got the Winnsboro cotton mill blues
    Now, when I die don't you bury me at all
    Hang me up on the factory wall
    Place a bobbin in my hand
    So I can keep on workin' in the Promised Land
    I got the blues, I got the blues
    I got the Winsboro cotton mill blues
    Oh Lordy, Lordy spoolin's hard
    You know and I know, we don't have to tell
    You work for Tom Watson, gotta work like hell

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