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"camptown" poems
De Camptown ladies sing dis song -- Doo-dah! doo-dah! De Camptown racetrack five miles long -- Oh! doo-dah day! I come down dah wid my hat caved in -- Doo-dah! doo-dah! I go back home wid a pocket full of tin -- Oh! doo-dah day! Chorus Gwine to run all night! Gwine to run all day! I'll bet my money on de bob-tail nag -- Somebody bet on de bay! De long tail filly and de big black hoss -- Doo-dah! doo-dah! Dey fly de track and dey both cut across -- Oh! doo-dah day! De blind hoss sticken in a big mud hole -- Doo-dah! doo-dah! Can't touch bottom wid a ten foot pole -- Oh! doo-dah day! Chorus Old muley cow come on to de track -- Doo-dah! doo-dah! De bob-tail fling her ober his back -- Oh! doo-dah day! Den fly along like a rail-road car -- Doo-dah! doo-dah! Runnin' a race with a shootin' star -- Oh! doo-dah day! Chorus Seen dem flyin' on a ten mile heat -- Doo-dah! doo-dah! Round de race track, den repeat -- Oh! doo-dah day! I win my money on de bob-tail nag -- Doo-dah! doo-dah! I keep my money in an old tow-bag -- Oh! doo-dah day! Chorus
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Camptown Races
Harmonica Player Dad was a harmonica player. He always played those same several songs, but he played them well. Everyone recognized and sang along with Camptown Racetrack, Oh Susannah and Red River Valley. On his visit to Germany while I was in the Army Dad played, Ach Du Lieber Augustin and Beer Barrel Polka much to everyone’s enjoyment over there. He could also do a good imitation of that train chugging along the tracks down by the plywood factory in Ridgeway Virginia, steam whistle and all. Dad was a harmonica player. He always had a harmonica in one of the kitchen drawers or on our mantle above the fireplace, sticky from a child’s fingers and clogged with ******* crumbs. With six children he went through quite a few harmonicas. Out of us kids, I was the only one to learn to play anything, just 3 or 4 songs, but that, none the less, means I am a harmonica player. That one Christmas Dad gave each of his four grandsons a Hohner “Old Standby” harmonica with beginner instruction and method book. I guess none of the other grandsons had done much with their instrument, because when Dad asked my son, Jason if he could play the harmonica he’d sent, it was something like, “Well, I guess you never learned to play yours either.” Jason came out of his room a little later, handed Dad the songbook and asked, “Which would you like to hear?” He picked You Are My Sunshine and Jason played it note for note from the music written on the page. Dad was both surprised and thrilled, but most of all amazed. Jason not only could play his harmonica, but also read music, something neither he nor I could ever do. He talked about this for many years to come. That, of course, means Jason is a harmonica player, too.
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Feb 18, 2018
Feb 18, 2018 at 11:20 PM UTC
Harmonica Player
Harmonica Player Dad was a harmonica player. He always played those same several songs, but he played them well. Everyone recognized and sang along with Camptown Racetrack, Oh Susannah and Red River Valley. On his visit to Germany while I was in the Army Dad played, Ach Du Lieber Augustin and Beer Barrel Polka much to everyone’s enjoyment over there. He could also do a good imitation of that train chugging along the tracks down by the plywood factory in Ridgeway Virginia, steam whistle and all. Dad was a harmonica player. He always had a harmonica in one of the kitchen drawers or on our mantle above the fireplace, sticky from a child’s fingers and clogged with ******* crumbs. With six children he went through quite a few harmonicas. Out of us kids, I was the only one to learn to play anything, just 3 or 4 songs, but that, none the less, means I am a harmonica player. That one Christmas Dad gave each of his four grandsons a Hohner “Old Standby” harmonica with beginner instruction and method book. I guess none of the other grandsons had done much with their instrument, because when Dad asked my son, Jason if he could play the harmonica he’d sent, it was something like, “Well, I guess you never learned to play yours either.” Jason came out of his room a little later, handed Dad the songbook and asked, “Which would you like to hear?” He picked You Are My Sunshine and Jason played it note for note from the music written on the page. Dad was both surprised and thrilled, but most of all amazed. Jason not only could play his harmonica, but also read music, something neither he nor I could ever do. He talked about this for many years to come. That, of course, means Jason is a harmonica player, too.
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