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Junco Partner : ウィキペディア英語版
Junco Partner

"Junco Partner" is an American blues song first recorded by James Waynes in 1951.〔( Profile of James "Wee Willie" Wayne at Black Cat Rockabilly ). Retrieved 4 April 2013〕 It has been recorded and revised by many other artists over several decades, including Louis Jordan, Dr. John, Professor Longhair, James Booker, and The Clash.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.secondhandsongs.com/work/31946 )〕 It has been covered in various genres of music including blues, folk, rock, reggae, and dub.
== Early recordings ==
Singer James Waynes made the first recording of "Junco Partner" in 1951, for Bob Shad's record label "Sittin' in with...".〔( Profile of James "Wee Willie" Wayne at Black Cat Rockabilly ). Retrieved 4 April 2013〕 The song is credited to Shad and "Robert Ellen" (a pseudonym Shad used on some recordings),〔( List of recordings of "Junco Partner" at The Grateful Dead Family Discography ). Retrieved 21 November 2013〕 though it was directly inspired by the Willie Hall song "Junker's Blues". According to musician Mac Rebennack ("Dr. John"), James Waynes' recording made the song popular, although it was already widely known among musicians in New Orleans and elsewhere as "the anthem of the dopers, the whores, the pimps, the cons. It was a song they sang in Angola, the state prison farm, and the rhythm was even known as the 'jailbird beat'."〔(Liner notes to Dr. John's ''Gumbo'', reprinted at barewires blog ). Retrieved 4 April 2013〕
In 1952, several artists covered the song, including Richard Hayes with the Eddie Sauter Orchestra, and Louis Jordan & His Tympany Five for Decca.
Fully credited to himself, Chuck Berry's 1961 "The Man and the Donkey" is based on the "Junco Partner" melody with a story based on a traditional West African tale heard on other songs such as Willie Dixon's ''Signifying Monkey'' (1947) or Oscar Brown, Jr.'s ''Signifying Monkey'' (1960).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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