August 1999 (edited)
Cal Stewart and the British “Negro Laughing Song”
By Tim Brooks
In
the course of compiling, with Brian Rust, The
Columbia Master Book Discography, which covers U.S. Columbia disc
recordings from 1901-1934, I encountered some real mysteries. Among the
problematic recordings were several that were released in, or made exclusively
for, England.
This is the story of one of those recordings.
One
of the most interesting personalities in the early days of recording was George
W. Johnson, the first successful black artist, whose biography I am currently
writing. He had a small repertoire, but two of his specialties, “The Laughing
Song” and “The Whistling Coon,” were enormously successful in the U.S. He
recorded them for numerous cylinder and disc labels between 1890 and 1910.
Johnson
was one of Columbia’s best selling artists during the late 1890s, and when the
company introduced disc records in late 1901 (on the Climax label), it promptly
recorded him doing his two big titles. The numbers were 210 for “The Negro
Laughing Song” (as Columbia
called it) and 211 for “The Whistling Coon.” Judging by the numbers, early
takes were presumably made during late 1901, although I have never seen a copy
of either on the Climax label, which was in use until mid-1902. Both titles do
turn up rather frequently on Columbia
single face and double face discs, as well as on client labels. Toward the end
of the single-face era “The Whistling Coon” was remade by Billy Murray (10-inch
take 9), but all copies of “The Laughing Song” that I have ever seen or heard
of are by Johnson. That includes six takes on four labels.
This is where the mystery begins.
When English Columbia introduced double-faced discs in October 1907, one of its
very first offerings was “Negro Laughing Song” on number D4—by Cal
Stewart. The title was also available on
single-face disc 210. On the reverse was Murray’s version of “The Whistling
Coon” (211). The single-face numbers prove that these are U.S.
recordings, but no copy of the disc has ever turned up to confirm the
identities of the singers, or the takes used. A year later, when Columbia brought out double-discs in the U.S., it used
Johnson’s version of the song. There was even a late take (take 12) issued in
the U.S.
on which Johnson’s original piano accompaniment was replaced with an orchestra.
It is a little strange that English Columbia chose
to include these very American recordings on its inaugural double-face
list. Possibly the fact that there had
already been popular British versions of the songs by Burt Shepard and others
led the company to think patrons might find U.S. versions amusing as well. Cal Stewart, who had previously recorded “The
Laughing Song” for Edison in the U.S.,
was perhaps felt to be better known in England than Johnson.
To
confuse the matter even further, matrix lists compiled by Columbia librarian Helene Chmura in the
1950s, from now-lost company files, identify the artist on 210 as Cal Stewart,
not George W. Johnson. Oddly, Johnson’s
name does not appear in these lists at all. Perhaps only the last artist to
record a title was reflected in the files.
Perhaps the Stewart take, whatever it was, was made especially for England. Until someone finds a copy of Columbia D4 we
cannot be sure.
Poor old George, a former slave, suffered many
indignities in his lifetime. Despite the
fact that he had been one of Columbia’s
best selling artists a few years earlier, it appears that the company had both
of his trademark titles remade by others, while he was still alive. He couldn’t have laughed at that.
Following is a list of English versions of
Johnson’s “Laughing Song” that I have identified to date. (Johnson’s own version was imported by
Berliner in 1898, but was apparently available only briefly.) Additional information is welcome, as I am no
expert on British recordings, and have probably missed some.
“The Laughing Song” (George. W. Johnson)
Burt Shepard:
7” Gramophone 2-2030 (rel. Jan 02)
7” Gramophone 2-2164 (rel. Oct 02;
also on Canadian Berliner 982)
10” Gramophone 2-2803 (rel. Jun 03)
7” Zonophone 42042 (as George
Atkinson; rec. 5 Jan 04)
Zonophone 553 (1911)
HMV B468 (from 2-2803, rel. 1915)
Sterling cylinder 1102 (1907)
Pathe 1448 (8½-inch disc dubbed from
the cylinder; rel. 1908)
Wilson Hallett:
Gramophone 2-2584 (rel. Feb 02)
7” Zonophone 42020 (31 Dec 03)
W.W. Whitlock:
Edison Bell Winner 2060 (1912).
“Johnson’s Laughing Song”
Al Johnson:
Scala Ideal 7025 (1923)
Charles Penrose:
His
widely recorded “Laughing Policeman” used Johnson’s melody with different
lyrics. Among the recorded versions were the following. The 1934 Columbia catalog also contains a dozen
“Laughing Policeman” sketches by Penrose.
Regal G7816 (as Charles Jolly, rel.
Sep. 1922)
Regal G9391 (as Charles Jolly, rel.
Nov. 1929)
Columbia DB 4014 (1926)
Columbia FB 1184 (1934)
Maurice Farkoa:
Farkoa’s
“Laughing Song” (“Le Fou Rire”) from An
Artist’s Model is a different song altogether. The Syrian-born Farkoa
(1864-1916) appeared in both the 1895 London and New York productions of the
show and recorded this trademark number many times, in the U.S. on Berliner
1302 (8 May 1896) and Bettini (c.1896) and in Britain on 7” Berliner
F2125/Gramophone 32125, 7” Berliner E2128/Gramophone 32128 (19 October 1898),
7” Gramophone 32651, 32654 (October 1899), Gramophone 32111 (1901), Zonophone
X-2282 (1902), Gramophone GC 3-2261/HMV E325 (16 March 1905) and possibly
others. Sung in French. Details on many of these can be found in Alan Kelly, His Master’s Voice/La Voix de Son Matre (Westport,
CT: Greenwood Press, 1990).
Sources:
Jim Walsh, “In Justice to George Washington Johnson,” Hobbies, Feb. 1971;
Brian
Rust, “British Berliner, G&T and Zonophone 7-Inch Records,” Talking Machine Review No. 63/64, Autumn, 1981; Sydney H. Carter, A Catalogue of Sterling Cylinder Records (Talking
Machine Review, 1975); and catalogs and records in the author’s collection.
My
thanks to Frank Andrews for kindly providing a photocopy of “Columbia Double-Face Records, October 1907” (four
page supplement published by the Columbia Phonograph Company, Gen’l, London). The record is also listed in Andrews’
valuable discography of British Columbia, Columbia 10” Records 1904-30 (CLPGS, 1985).