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Post-Slavery American
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European and African Elements 1


REFRAIN

Frankie was a good girl, everybody knows.
Paid one hundred dollars for Albert's new suit of clothes.
He was her man, but he done her wrong

Notice how the first two lines are connected through the rhyme between "knows" and "clothes" and between "be" and "Lee" in the stanza below. The "Ballad of Stack O'Lee" which took a similar form, was popular amongst African Americans:

REFRAIN

Police officer, how can it be?
You can 'rest ev'rybody but cruel Stack O' Lee
That bad man, oh, cruel Stack O' Lee.

It seems probable that these shorter stanzas, frequently sung over twelve bars, were extemporized as hollers, eventually contributing to establishing the "twelve-bar blues" form. A blues verse would typically consist of a repeated line and a third rhyming line forming an AAB structure. Each line was sung over two bars, generally with an instrumental "response" of two bars, making four bars in all for each of the three lines. For example, a newcomer might sing:

The Standard Twelve-Bar Blues Progression
I'm a Stranger Here Blind Boy Fuller
Vocal Call Instrumental Break-Response
I-(C) I-(C) I-(C) I-(C)
I'm a stranger here, just blowed in your town (A) Instrumental Break-(response)
IV-(F) IV-(F) I-(C) I-(C)
I'm a stranger here, just blowed in your town (A) Instrumental Break-(response)
V-(G) IV-(F) I-(C) I-(C)
But just because I'm a stranger, 'body wants to dog me aroun'. (B) Instrumental Break-(response)

Sidney Bechet

The blues like spirituals were prayers. One was praying to God; the other was praying to man.

Sterling Brown

You can't play the blues until you have paid your dues