Episode 26: “Ain’t That A Shame” by Fats Domino
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A History of Folk Music and 500 Songs
by Andrew Hickey.
Episode 26
Ain't That a Shame by Fats Domino.
Today, for the third time, we're going to look at the collaborations between Fats Domino, Dave Bartholomew and Cosimo Matassa, and the way they brought New Orleans music into the RB and rock and roll genres.
It's been a few months since we talked about them, so you might want to refresh your memory by listening to Episode 8 on The Fat Man and Episode 12 on Lordy Miss Claudie.
After his brief split from Imperial Records, and thus from working with Fat Domino, Dave Bartholomew had returned to Imperial after Domino helped him on Lordy Miss Claudie, Claudie, and the two of them resumed their collaboration.
The first new track they recorded together was an instrumental called Dreaming, featuring members of both Domino's touring band and of Bartholomew's studio band.
It's credited on the label to Bartholomew as a writer, but other sources have the instrumental being written by Domino.
Whoever wrote it, the most popular hypothesis seems to be that the song was written as a tribute to Domino's manager, Melvin Cade, who had died only five days before the session.
Domino had been sleeping in the back of Cade's car, as Cade had been speeding to get them to a show that they were late for.
Cade had lost control of the car, which had been thrown ten feet into the air in a collision.
Domino and the other passengers were uninjured, but Cade died of his injuries.
While this was obviously tragic, it turned out to be to Domino's benefit.
Domino's contract with Cade had given Domino only $150 a day from his shows, with Cade keeping the rest, which might often be several times as much money.
With Cade's death, Domino was free from that contract, and so the beginning of September 1952, with the death of Cade and the renewal of Domino and Bartholomew's partnership, marks the start of the second phase of Fats Domino's career.
One of the things we've touched on in the previous podcasts about Dave Bartholomew and Fats Domino is the strained nature of their songwriting partnership, although this is using strained in a fairly loose sense, given that they continued working with each other for decades.
But like with so many musical partnerships, where the whole is greater than the sum of the parts, both men did consider their own contribution to be the more important.
Bartholomew considered himself to be the more important writer, because he came up with literate stories with narrative arcs and punch lines, coupled with sophisticated musical ideas, while Domino considered himself more important, because he came up with relatable, simple ideas and catchy hooks.
And of course, Domino's piano style and distinctive voice were crucial in the popularity of the records, just as Dave Bartholomew's arrangement and production ideas were.
And the difference in their attitudes shows up in, for example, Going to the River, one of the first fruits of their renewed collaboration.
I'm going to the river, gonna
jump overboard and drown.
I'm going to the river, gonna
jump overboard and drown.
Dave Bartholomew called that a nothing song, and it's easy to see what he means.
Other than the Trecio bass line, and a reminder for those of you who don't remember what that is, it's that bom, bump, bump rhythmic figure you get in almost every record Dave Bartholomew had a hand in.
There's not much of musical interest there.
You've got Domino playing his usual triplets in the right hand on the piano, but rather than the drums emphasising the backbeat, they're mostly playing the same triplets as the piano.
The chord sequence is nothing special, and the lyrics were simplistic.
But at the same time, the track did go to number two on the RB charts, and probably would have gone to number one if it hadn't been for the cover version by Chuck Willis.
river, gonna
jump overboard and drown.
Well, I'm going to the river, gonna
jump overboard and drown.
Well, the woman I love,
she output
that went to number four on the RB charts.
For once, it wasn't a white man having a hit with a black man's song, but another black man who'd heard Domino perform it live before the record was released, and got in quickly with his own version.
On the other hand, it wasn't like Domino was the perfect judge of what made a hit either.
Bartholomew wrote the song I Hear You Knocking for Domino, but when Domino decided not to record it, Bartholomew recorded it for another artist on Imperial Records, Smiley Lewis, getting the great New Orleans piano player Huey Piano Smith to play in an imitation of Domino's style.
ago.
Now you come back knocking.
All I know, I hear you knocking.
Look, you came
in.
I hear you knocking.
That went to number two on the RB charts.
And a cover version by the white singer Gail Storm went to number two on the pop charts.
So both Domino and Bartholomew were capable of coming up with big hits in the style they perfected together, and both were capable of dismissing a potential hit when it wasn't their own idea.
But their partnership was so successful that Dave Bartholomew actually regarded Smiley Lewis as a bad luck singer, because when Bartholomew wrote and produced for him, the records would only sell a hundred thousand copies or so, compared to the much larger numbers of records that Domino sold.
Domino was becoming huge in the RB world.
In early 1954, Billboard listed him as the biggest selling RB star in the country, and he was managing to cope with it better than most.
While he would miss the occasional gig from drinking a little too much, and he'd sleep around on the road more than a married man should, he was essentially a well-adjusted, private man, who had five kids, phoned home to his wife every night, and never touched anything stronger than alcohol.
That wasn't true of the rest of his band, however.
In the 1950s, heroin was the chic drug to be taking if you were a touring musician, and many of Domino's touring band members were users.
He would often have to pay to get his guitarist's instrument out of the pawn shop so they could go on tour, and once even had to pay off the guitarist's back child support to get him out of jail, as he would keep spending all his money on heroin.
The one who came out worst, sadly, was Jimmy Gilkvist, who would sing with Domino's backing band as the support act.
Gilkvist died of an overdose during one of Domino's tours in early 1954.
Domino replaced him with a new support act, Galasi Hawkins, but he only lasted a couple of weeks.
According to Domino, he fired Galaci for being too vulgar on stage and screaming, but Screamin' Jay Hawkins, as he would soon become known, claimed instead that it was because Domino was jealous of Hawkins' cool leopardskin suit.
But through this turmoil, Domino and Bartholomew, with Cosimo Matasa in the control room, continued recording a whole string of hits.
Please don't leave me, Rosemary, something's wrong, you done me wrong, and don't you know, all went top ten on the R ⁇ B charts.
For two and a half years, from September 1952 through March 1955, they would dominate the rhythm and blues charts, even though most white audiences had little idea who Fat Domino was.
But slowly, Domino was noticing that more and more white teenagers were starting to come to his shows, and he also started incorporating a few country songs and old standards into his otherwise R and B dominated act,
catering slightly more to a pop audience.
Their first crossover hit definitely has more of Domino's fingerprints on it than than Bartholomew's.
Bartholomew was unimpressed at the session, saying that the song didn't tell a complete story.
Once it became a hit though, Bartholomew would soften on the song, saying, Ain't that a shame will never die.
It will be here when the world comes to an end.
He may not have been a particular fan of the song.
but you'd never know it from his arrangement.
Listen to the way that horn section in the intro punctuates the words.
The way it doesn't just go, you made me cry, but you made bam-bam me cry.
Bam-bam.
Me cry
when you said
goodbye.
Hey, that a shamefilling rain.
Hey, that a shame.
You're the one
That's the kind of arrangement decision that can only be made by someone with a real feel for the material.
And this is where Dave Bartholomew's real importance to the records he was making with Fats Domino comes in.
It's all well and good, Bartholomew doing great arrangements and productions for his own songs, or songs mostly written by him, but he put the same thought and attention into the arrangements even where the song was not to his taste and wasn't his idea.
Domino's biographer Rick Coleman, to whose biography of Domino I am extremely indebted for this episode, suggests that Dave Bartholomew's arrangement owes a little to the old Dixieland jazz standard tin roof blues.
I can sort of hear it, but but I'm not entirely convinced.
Listen for yourself.
Another possible influence on Ain't That a Shame is a record by Lloyd Price, who of course had worked with both Domino and Bartholomew earlier.
His Ain't It a Shame doesn't sound much like Ain't That a Shame, but it does have a very fat domino feel, and it would be very surprising if neither Bartholomew nor Domino had heard it, given their previous collaborations.
And it's a shame
Indeed, early pressings of Ain't That a Shame mistakenly called it Ain't It a Shame, presumably because of confusion with the Lloyd Price song.
Bartholomew and Matassa also put more thought into the production than was normal at this time.
When mastering Domino's records, now that Matasa's studio had finally switched to tape from cutting directly onto wax, they would speed up the tape slightly, a trick which made Domino's voice sound younger and which emphasised the beats more.
This sort of thing is absolutely basic now, but at the time it was extraordinarily unusual for any rhythm and blues records to have any kind of production trickery at all.
It also had another advantage, because as Cosimo Matasa would point out, it would change the key slightly, so it wouldn't be in a normal key at all.
So when other people tried to cover Domino's records, they couldn't find the damn notes on the piano.
Of course, with success came problems of its own.
When Domino was sent on a promotional tour of local radio stations, DJs would complain to Lou Chud of Imperial Records that Domino didn't speak English.
He did speak English, though it was his second language after Creole French, but he spoke English with such a thick accent that many people from outside Louisiana didn't recognise it as English at all.
Domino's relative lack of fluency in English is possibly also why he wrote such simple lyrics.
A fact that was mocked on national TV when Steve Allen, the talk show host, read out the lyrics to Ain't That a Shame in a mock poetry recital to laughter from the studio audience, causing Bartholomew and Domino to feel extremely upset.
Of course, this is an easy trick to play, as almost all song lyrics sound puerile when recited pompously enough.
For example, I can recite,
Let's go go to church next Sunday morning
We'll see our friends on the way
We'll stand and sing on Sunday morning And I'll hold your hand as we pray.
That, of course, is a lyric written by Steve Allen, who, despite having written eight thousand five hundred songs by his own count,
never wrote one as good as Ain't That a Shame.
As with all black hits at this time, there was a terrible white cover, in this case by Pat Boone.
Boone's cover version came out almost before Domino's did, thanks to Bill Randall.
Bill Randall was a D J in Cleveland, a colleague of Alan Freed, who is now a much better known D J.
But in the early fifties, Randall was possibly the best known DJ in America.
While While Freed only played black rhythm and blues records, Randall, whose first radio show was called The Interracial Good Time Hour, played records by both black and white people.
As the country's biggest DJ, he was sent an advance copy of Ain't That a Shame, and he liked it immensely.
According to Lou Chud,
he liked it because it was ignorant, because he was an English professor.
That's sort of true.
Randall wasn't a professor at the time, but in the 1960s he ended up getting degrees in law, journalism, sociology, and education, and a doctorate in American Studies, all while continuing to work as a DJ.
Randall would regularly send copies of new R and B records to white record executives he knew, and it was because of Randall that the Crew Cuts and the Diamonds, among others, first heard the black recordings whose style they stole.
In this case, he sent his acetate copy of Ain't That a Shame to Randy Wood, the owner of Dot Records, a label set up specifically to record white cover versions of black records.
Randall was an odd case in this respect, because he was someone who truly loved rhythm and blues and black music, and would play it regularly on his show.
Early on, he had actually been fired from one of his first radio jobs for playing a sister Rosetta Tharpe record, though he was soon rehired, but he seems to have truly bought into the idea that the white cover versions of black records did help the black performers.
There are very few examples of how little that was the case more blatant than that of Boone, a man whose attitude is best summed up by the fact that when he recorded his version, he tried to change the lyrics to Isn't That a Shame?
because he thought ain't ungrammatical.
Boone would later go on to commit similar atrocities against Tooti Fruti, among other records.
In a 1977 interview, Domino said of Boone's cover, When I first heard it, I didn't like it.
It took two months to write, and he put it out almost the same time I did.
It kind of hurt.
The publishing companies don't care if a thousand people make it.
Talking to Domino's biographer Rick Coleman, Dave Bartholomew was characteristically more forthright.
Pat Boone was a lucky white boy.
He wasn't singing.
And here he used an expletive that I'm not going to repeat because I'm not sure what makes something qualify as adult content in iTunes.
Randy Wood was doing unconstitutional type stuff.
He was successful with it, but that don't make it right.
Bill Randall would play both versions of the record on his show, and both went to number one in Cleveland as a result.
But in the rest of the country, the clean cut white man was miles ahead of the fat black man with a flat top from New Orleans.
Boone's misunderstanding typifies the cultural ignorance that characterised white cover versions of R and B hits in this period.
A few months later, a similar thing would happen again with Domino's hit, Bo Weevil, and here the racial dynamics were more apparent.
That was covered by Theresa Brewer, and obviously her version did better on the charts.
Why
But the thing is, that song celebrates boll weevils, pests which destroy cotton, and which have become regarded in African-American folklore as humorous trickster figures because they bankrupted plantation owners.
And while bull weevils didn't reach the USA until after slavery had ended, you can understand how a pest that destroys the livelihood of cotton plantation owners might have a rather different reputation among black people than white.
But despite these white covers, Domino continued to make inroads into the white market himself.
And for all that Domino's music seems easy going,
it was enough that even before his proper crossover into the pop market, Domino had shows cancelled because the promoters or local government couldn't handle the potential of riots breaking out at his shows.
That only increased when Ain't That A Shame hit and white teenagers wanted to come to the shows.
Police would try to shut them down because white and black kids dancing together was illegal, and often shows would be cancelled because of the police's heavy-handed tactics.
For example, at one show in Houston, the police tried in vain to stop the dancing, and eventually said that only whites would be allowed to dance, so Domino stopped the show, and the kids in the audience defiantly sang, Let the Good Times Roll at the police.
At another show in San Jose, someone threw a lit string of firecrackers into the audience, leading to a dozen people requiring medical treatment and another dozen being arrested.
Ain't that a shame was one of two hit songs recorded on the same day.
The other, All By Myself, would also become a number one hit on the RB charts.
While All By Myself was credited to Domino and Bartholomew, it was based very closely on an old Big Bill Brunsy record.
Here's Brunsy's song.
On my way just around the world.
When I get back, I'm going to have dumps and fur
by myself,
all by myself.
I don't need nobody to help me.
I can do it all by myself.
Locked up and gin, it wasn't no hanging climb.
Now I'm on the farm, boys, and I'm doing time.
All by myself.
All by myself.
And here's dominoes.
Little girl, don't you understand?
I want to be your lover man,
all by myself,
all by myself.
I don't want no one to love you, I want to love you all by myself.
You find little girls, you know it too.
Don't you know I'm in love with you all by myself,
all by myself.
I don't want no one to love you, I want to love you
As you can hear, while the verses are quite different, the choruses are identical.
Domino here, for the first time, plays in his two beat piano style, yet another of the New Orleans rhythms that Domino and Bartholomew would incorporate into Domino's hits.
A standard two beat rhythm is the rhythm one finds in polkas, or in, say, Johnny Cash records, that boom chick boom chick walking or marching rhythm.
But the New Orleans variant of it, which as far as I can tell, was first recorded when Domino recorded all by myself, isn't boom chick boom chick, but is rather boom boom chick boom boom chick, with quavers on the first beat, and slightly swinging the quavers.
Indeed, by doing it two handed, with the bass booms in the left hand and the treble chicks in the right, Domino also sneaks in a bass quaver at the end of the chick syncopating it, so it's sort of a boom boom chick, a boom boom chick.
The two beat rhythm would become as important a factor in Domino's future records as his rolling piano triplets and Dave Bartholomew's trijo rhythms already had been.
Domino's music was about rhythm and groove, and whereas most of his contemporaries were content to stick with one or two simple rhythms, Domino and Bartholomew would stack all of these different rhythmic patterns on top of each other.
A lot of this is the basic musical vocabulary of anyone working in any of the musics influenced by New Orleans RB these days, which includes all of reggae and scar, as well as most African-American musical idioms.
But that vocabulary was being built in these sessions.
Domino and Bartholomew weren't the only ones doing it.
Professor Longhair and Huey Piano Smith and Mac Rebenak were all contributing, and all of these performers would take each other's material and put their own unique spin on it.
But they were vital parts of creating these building blocks that would be used by musicians to this day.
Ain't that a shame was just the start of Domino's rock and roll stardom.
He would go on on to have another seven RB number ones after this, and his records would consistently chart on the RB charts for the next seven years.
He would have, in total, 40 top 10 hits on the RB chart in his career.
But what was more remarkable was the number of pop chart hits he would have.
He had 14 pop top 20 hits between 1955 and 1961,
11 of them going top 10, including classics like I'm In Love Again, I'm Walking, Blue Monday, Valley of Tears, I Want to Walk You Home, and Walking to New Orleans.
Almost all of his hit singles were written by the Bartholomew and Domino songwriting team, and almost all of them were extraordinarily good records.
There were almost no 50s rockers who had anything like Domino's consistent quality.
So we'll be seeing Fats Domino at least once more in this series, when he finds his thrill on Blueberry Hill.coms.com to see transcriptions, liner notes and links to other materials, including a mixed cloud stream of all songs accepted in this episode.
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