Jimmie Rodgers discography

{{Short description|Country singer discography}}

{{about|the discography of Jimmie Rodgers (country singer)|the discography of the pop singer by the same name|Jimmie Rodgers (pop singer)#Discography}}

{{Infobox artist discography

|Artist = Jimmie Rodgers

|Image = JimmieRodgers in 1929.png

|Caption = Rodgers in 1929

|Studio =

|Live =

|Compilation = 72

|Video =

|Tribute =

|EP = 11

|Singles = 57

|Music videos = 1

|B-sides =

|Soundtrack =

}}

The discography of Jimmie Rodgers is composed of 111 songs that spanned the blues, jazz and country music genres.{{sfn|Mazor, Barry|2009|p=n8}}{{sfn|Peterson, Richard|2008|p=50}} His first recording was made on August 4, 1927, during the Bristol sessions. The sessions were organized by Ralph Peer, who became Rodgers' main producer with the Victor Talking Machine Company.{{sfn|Mazor, Barry|2009|p=16}}At the height of his career in 1929, Rodgers earned US $75,000 ({{Inflation|US|75,000|1929|fmt=eq|r=-2|cursign=US$}}) in royalties from the sale of his records. After the Great Depression, his sales dropped to US$60,000 ({{Inflation|US|60,000|1929|fmt=eq|r=-2|cursign=US$}}).{{sfn|Peterson, Richard|2008|p=50}} Rodgers last recording session took place in New York City on May 24, 1933.{{sfn|Dicaire, David|2015|p=44}} He died two nights later at the Taft Hotel, after years of suffering from tuberculosis.{{sfn|Peterson, Richard|2008|p=50}}

Music historian Norm Cohen categorized Rodgers' discography in four different types of songs: nineteenth century songs, songs stemming from vaudeville and minstrel shows, traditional songs, and his thirteen Blue Yodels.{{sfn|Heylin, Clinton|2015|p=81}} Rodgers was known as "America's Blue Yodeler" for his signature use of yodeling.{{sfn|Sullivan, Steve|2013|p=22}} Additional to his recordings, he appeared on Columbia Pictures' short The Singing Brakeman. Two versions by different directors were shot, one in 1929 and the second one, the following year.{{sfn|Mazor, Barry|2009|pp=98-99}} Rodgers was given writing credits on the labels of eighty-nine releases,{{sfn|Heylin, Clinton|2015|p=80}} though he did not compose most of his songs. He was aided by his sister-in-law Elsie McWilliams, who wrote thirty-nine of the songs.{{sfn|Mazor, Barry|2009|p=n8}} Other songs by Rodgers consisted of already existing numbers that originated from traditional, blues or vaudeville show sources. Rodgers modified the tune, lyrics and interpretation "beyond recognition" to create material that his producer, Ralph Peer, could copyright. He added his signature guitar playing and yodeling.{{sfn|Heylin, Clinton|2015|p=80}} Though McWilliams did not desire credits or financial gain for her contributions, and clarified she did it to help Rodgers and the family, the song publisher added her name to the song credits. McWilliams received US$50 ({{Inflation|US|50|1929|fmt=eq|r=-2|cursign=US$}}) for each song, and with her permission some of her writing credits were omitted.{{sfn|Bond, Johnny|1977|p=68}} Other usual collaborators of Rodgers included Raymond Hall and Waldo O'Neal.{{sfn|Mazor, Barry|2009|p=124}}

Rodgers' music directly influenced two generations of musicians including Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, Eddy Arnold,{{sfn|Peterson, Richard|2008|p=50}} Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan, and George Harrison.{{sfn|Smith, John|1999|p=80}}{{sfn|Kahn, Ashley|2020|p=349}} Rodgers was elected into the Country Music Hall of Fame with the inaugural class in 1961, to the Songwriters Hall of Fame with the inaugural class in 1970, and to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with the inaugural class in 1986 as an "Early Blues Influence".{{sfn|Porterfield, Nolan|2007|p=11}}

Recordings

{{sticky header}}

Sources:{{Cite web |title=Music {{!}} Jimmie Rodgers Festival & Museum {{!}} Meridian, Mississippi |url=https://www.jimmierodgers.com/music |access-date=2024-04-26 |website=Jimmie Rodgers |language=en}}

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header"

!Song Title

!Recording Number

!Recording Date

!Recording Location

!Release Date

!Recording Notes

The Soldiers Sweetheart

|39767-4

| rowspan="2" |Aug 4, 1927

| rowspan="2" |Bristol, Tennessee

| rowspan="2" |Oct 4, 1927

| rowspan="2" |First recording session; Vocals, guitar

Sleep Baby Sleep

|39768-3

Ben Dewberry's Final Run

|40751-2

| rowspan="4" |Nov 30, 1927

| rowspan="20" |Camden, New Jersey

|April 6, 1928

|Vocals, guitar; written by Andy Jenkins

Mother Was A Lady (If Brother Jack Were Here)

|40752-2

|Aug 3, 1928

|Vocals, guitar. The record had to be re-issued after a lawsuit by Joseph Stern and Edward B. Marks for the title, and crediting authorship to Rodgers.

Blue Yodel (T For Texas)

|40753-2

| rowspan="2" |Feb 3, 1928

|Rodgers' most popular recording, sold over a million copies. Vocals, guitar.

Away Out On The Mountain

|40754-2

|Vocals, guitar

Dear Old Sunny South By The Sea

|41736-2

| rowspan="4" |Feb 14, 1928

|Oct 5, 1928

|Vocals, guitar with The Three Southerners

Treasures Untold

|41737-2

|Aug 3, 1928

|Vocals, guitar

Brakeman's Blues (Yodeling The Blues Away)

|41738-2

|May 4, 1928

|Vocals, guitar, ukulele

Sailors Plea

|41739-2

|April 19, 1929

|With the Three Southeners; co-written McWilliams

In The Jailhouse Now

|41740-2

| rowspan="4" |Feb 15, 1928

|April 6, 1928

|Vocals, guitar, banjo

Blue Yodel 2 (Lovin' Gal Lucille)

|41741-2

|May 4, 1928

|Vocals, guitars

Memphis Yodel

|41742-2

|Nov 2, 1928

|Singing and yodeling with guitar

Blue Yodel 3 (Evening Sun Yodel)

|41743-2

|Sept 7, 1928

|Vocals, guitar

My Old Pal

|45090-2

| rowspan="8" |June 12, 1928

|Dec 2, 1928

|Singing with guitar, co-written with McWilliams

Mississippi Moon (Early Version)

|45091-2

|Feb 4, 1932

|Vocals, guitar

My Little Home Down In New Orleans

|45093-2

|Oct 5, 1928

|Vocals, guitar

You And My Old Guitar

|45094-2

|June 7, 1929

|Co-written with McWilliams, singing and yodeling with guitar

Daddy And Home

|45095-2

|Dec 2, 1928

|Singing with guitar, co-written with McWilliams

My Little Lady

|45096-2

|June 7, 1929

|Co-written with McWilliams, singing and yodeling with guitar

Lullaby Yodel

|45098-2

|Nov 2, 1928

|Co-written with McWilliams, singing and yodeling with guitar

Never No Mo’ Blues

|45099-3

|Sept 7, 1928

|Co-written with McWilliams, singing and yodeling with guitar

My Carolina Sunshine Girl

|47215-3

| rowspan="2" |Oct 20, 1928

| rowspan="4" |Atlanta, Georgia

|Aug 22, 1929

|Singing and yodeling with orchestra

Blue Yodel 4 (California Blues)

|47216-4

| rowspan="2" |Feb 8, 1929

|Singing with orchestra

Waiting For A Train

|47223-4

| rowspan="2" |Oct 22, 1928

|Singing with orchestra. Second best-selling song by Rodgers, with 365,0000 copies sold.

I'm Lonely And Blue

|47224-5

|April 19, 1929

|Singing with orchestra, co-written with McWilliams

Desert Blues

|48384-3

| rowspan="2" |Feb 21, 1929

| rowspan="5" |New York City, New York

|Aug 22, 1929

|Singing and yodeling with orchestra

Any Old Time

|48385-2

|Sept 5, 1930

|Singing with guitar and orchestra.

Blue Yodel 5 (It's Raining Here)

|49990-2

| rowspan="3" |Feb 23, 1929

|Sept 20, 1929

|Singing with yodeling and guitar

High Powered Mama

|49991-3

|Oct 17, 1930

|Singing with guitar

I'm Sorry We Met

|49992-2

|Sept 20, 1929

|Singing with yodeling and guitar

Everybody Does It In Hawaii

|55307-2

| rowspan="3" |Aug 8, 1929

| rowspan="12" |Dallas, Texas

|Nov 22, 1929

|Singing with guitar. Co-written with McWilliams

Tuck Away My Lonesome Blues

|55308-3

|Jan 3, 1930

|Co-written with McWilliams and Joe Kaipo. Singing with guitar, whistling by Bob MacGimsey

Train Whistle Blues

|55309-2

| rowspan="2" |June 5, 1930

|Singing with guitar

Jimmie's Texas Blues

|55332-2

| rowspan="3" |Aug 10, 1929

|Singing with guitar

Frankie And Johnny

|55333-2

|Nov 22, 1929

|Singing with guitar

Home Call

|55445-3

|Aug 12, 1929

|Co-Written with McWilliams. Singing with guitar

Whisper Your Mother's Name

|56449-4

| rowspan="6" |Oct 22, 1929

|April 4, 1930

|Singing with guitar

The Land Of My Boyhood Dreams

|56450-4

|July 14, 1933

|Singing with guitar

Blue Yodel 6 (She Left Me This Morning)

|56453-3

| rowspan="2" |Feb 21, 1930

|Singing with guitar

Yodeling Cowboy

|56454-3

|Co-Written with McWilliams. Singing with guitar

My Rough And Rowdy Ways

|56455-3

|Jan 3, 1930

|Singing with guitar. Co-written with McWilliams

I've Ranged I've Roamed And I've Travelled

|56456-3

|April 10, 1935

|Co-Written with McWilliams. Singing with guitar

Hobo Bill's Last Ride

|56528-3

|Nov 13, 1929

|New Orleans, Louisiana

|Aug 1, 1930

|Written by Waldo Lafayette O'Neal. Singing with yodeling and guitar

Mississippi River Blues

|56594-4

| rowspan="2" |Nov 25, 1929

| rowspan="8" |Atlanta, Georgia

|April 24, 1931

|Singing with guitar

Nobody Knows But Me

|56595-4

|March 13, 1931

|Co-Written with McWilliams. Singing with guitar

Blue Yodel 7 (Anniversary Yodel)

|56607-3

| rowspan="2" |Nov 26, 1929

|Sept 5, 1930

|Co-Written with McWilliams. Singing with guitar

She Was Happy Till She Met You

|56608-3

|July 1, 1932

|Co-Written with McWilliams. Singing with guitar

Blue Yodel 11 (I've Got A Gal)

|56617-4

|Nov 27, 1929

|June 30, 1933

|Singing with guitar

Drunkards Child

|56618-3

| rowspan="3" |Nov 28, 1929

|April 4, 1930

|Singing with guitar, co-written with Andrew Jenkins

That's Why I'm Blue

|56619-3

|Aug 1, 1930

|Co-Written with McWilliams. Singing and yodeling with guitar

Why Did You Give Me Your Love

|56620-4

|April 10, 1935

|Singing with guitar

My Blue Eyed Jane

|54849-3

| rowspan="3" |June 30, 1930

| rowspan="15" |Hollywood, California

|June 5, 1931

|Singing with orchestra. Co-written with Mrs. Lulu Belle White

Why Should I Be Lonely

|54850-3

|Dec 4, 1931

|Co-written with Estelle Lovell. Singing with Hawaiian guitars

Moonlight And Skies

|54851-3

|Oct 23, 1931

|Co-written with Raymond E. Hill. Singing with orchestra

Pistol Packin' Papa

|54852-2

|July 1, 1930

|Dec 5, 1930

|Co-written with Waldo O'neal. Singing with guitar

Take Me Back Again

|54854-3

|July 2, 1930

|May 25, 1938

|Co-written with Raymond E. Hill. Singing with the Lani McIntire's Hawaiians

Those Gambler's Blues

|54855-3

|July 5, 1930

|Dec 5, 1930

|Singing with guitar

I'm Lonesome Too

|54856-3

| rowspan="2" |July 7, 1930

|July 17, 1931

|Singing with Hawaiian orchestra

The One Rose

|54857-3

|Dec 1, 1937

|Written by Del Lyon, McIntire. Singing with McIntire's Hawaiians

For The Sake Of Days Gone By

|54860-2

|July 9, 1930

|April 8, 1932

|Co-written with Jack White. Singing with Hawaiian guitar

Jimmie's Mean Mama Blues

|54861-3

|July 10, 1930

|Feb 6, 1931

|Singing with orchestra. Written by Walter O'Neal, Bob Sawyer

Mystery Of Number 5

|54862-3

| rowspan="2" |July 11, 1930

|March 13, 1931

|Singing with guitar

Blue Yodel 8 (Muleskinner Blues)

|54863-3

|Feb 6, 1931

|Singing with guitar

In The Jailhouse Now 2

|54864-3

|July 12, 1930

|Oct 17, 1930

|Singing with guitar

Blue Yodel 9 (Standin' On The Corner)

|54867-3

| rowspan="2" |July 16, 1930

| rowspan="2" |Sept 11, 1931

|Singing with orchestra. Uncredited appearances by Louis Armstrong (trumpet) and Lil Hardin Armstrong (piano).

Pullmans Porters

|1302-1

|

T.B. Blues

|67133-3

| rowspan="4" |Jan 31, 1931

| rowspan="4" |San Antonio, Texas

|April 24, 1931

|Singuing with guitar. Co-written by R. Hall

Travellin' Blues

|67134-3

|July 17, 1931

|Singing with orchestra. Co-written with Shelly Lee Alley

Jimmie The Kid

|67135-3

|June 5, 1931

|Singing with guitars and string bass. Co-written with Neville

Rodger's Puzzle Record

|67135-3

|Dec 31, 1931

|Contains three songs. Studio edit joining "Train Whistle Blues", "Blue Yodel" and "Everybody Does it in Hawaii"

Why There's A Tear In My Eye

|69412-3

| rowspan="2" |June 10, 1931

| rowspan="11" |Louisville, Kentucky

|Nov 23, 1936

|Recorded with Sara Carter. Singing with guitar

The Wonderful City

|69413-3

|Feb 17, 1937

|Co-written with McWilliams. With Sara Carter, singing with guitars

Let Me Be Your Side Track

|69424-4

|June 11, 1931

|Dec 31, 1931

|Singing with guitar

Rodgers Visits The Carter Family

|69427-1

| rowspan="2" |June 12, 1931

|Oct 23, 1931

|Assisted by the Carter Family. Singing with Mandolin and guitar

The Carter Family Visit Rodgers In Texas

|67428-1

|Jan 20, 1937

|With the Carter Family. Singing with guitars

Cactus Is In Bloom

|69432-3

|June 13, 1931

| rowspan="2" |Feb 26, 1932

|Singing with guitar

Gambling Polka Dot Blues

|69439-3

| rowspan="2" |June 15, 1931

|Co-written with R. Hall. Singing with piano

Looking For A New Mama

|69443-3

|Sept, 11, 1931

|Singing with guitars

What's it?

|69448-4

| rowspan="2" |June 16, 1931

|Dec 4, 1931

|Co-written with J. Neville. Singing with piano

My Good Gals Gone

|69449-3

|May 22, 1935

|Singing with Louisville Jug Band

Southern Cannonball

|69458-4

|June 17, 1931

|July 14, 1933

|Co-written with McWilliams. Singing with guitar

Roll Along Kentucky Moon

|70645-2

|Feb 2, 1932

| rowspan="8" |Dallas, Texas

|April 8, 1932

|Written by Halley. Singing with Hawaiian guitars

Hobos Meditation

|70646-2

|Feb 3, 1932

|Sep 23, 1932

|Singing with guitars and string bass

My Time Ain't Long

|70647-2

| rowspan="3" |Feb 4, 1932

| rowspan="2" |May 20, 1932

|Co-written with Waldo O'Neal. Singing with guitars, ukulele and string bass

Ninety-Nine Year Blues

|70648-2

|Co-written with Hall. Singing with guitars and string bass

Mississippi Moon (Later Version)

|45091-2

|Aug 12, 1932

|Co-Written with McWilliams. Singing with guitar

Down The Old Road To Home

|70649-2

|Feb 5, 1932

|Sep 23, 1932

|Co-written with Carey D. Harvey. Singing with guitars

Blue Yodel 10 (Ground Hog Rootin' In My Backyard)

|70650-2

| rowspan="2" |Feb 6, 1932

|Aug 12, 1932

|Singing with guitars

Home Call (1932)

|55345-2

|July 1, 1932

|Co-Written with McWilliams. Singing with guitar

Mother Queen Of My Heart

|58961-2

| rowspan="3" |Aug 11, 1932

| rowspan="8" |Camden, New Jersey

| rowspan="2" |Oct 21, 1932

|Co-written with Hoyt Bryant. Singing with violin, banjo and guitar

Rock All Our Babies To Sleep

|58963-2

|Arranged by Rodgers. Singing with violin, banjo and guitar

Whippin' That Old T.B.

|58964-2

| rowspan="2" |Jan 13, 1933

|Singing with violin, banjo and guitars

No Hard Times

|58968-3

| rowspan="5" |Aug 15, 1932

|Singing with violin, banjo and guitars

Long Tall Mama Blues

|58969-1

|Feb 24, 1933

|Singing with banjo and guitars

Peach Picking Time In Georgia

|58970-2

|April 7, 1933

|Co-written with C. McMichen. Singing with banjo and guitar

Gambling Barroom Blues

|58971-3

|Feb 24, 1933

|Co-written with Shelly Lee Alley. Singing with fiddle, banjo and guitar.

I've Only Loved Three Women

|58972-1

|Feb 17, 1937

|Co-written with Harvey. With violin, banjo and guitar

In The Hills Of Tennessee

|73324-2

| rowspan="4" |Aug 29, 1932

| rowspan="16" |New York City, New York

|Dec 2, 1932

|Sam M. Hills, Ira Schuster. Singing with orchestra

Prairie Lullaby

|73325-2

|April 7, 1933

|Co-written with George Brown. Singing with violins, guitar, clarinet and piano

Miss The Mississippi And You

|73326-2

|Dec 2, 1932

|Written by Bill Halley. Singing with orchestra

Sweet Mama Hurry Home

|73327-2

|June 30, 1933

|Singing with guitar, violin, clarinet and piano

Blue Yodel 12 (Barefoot Blues)

|76138-1

| rowspan="4" |May 17, 1933

|June 27, 1933

|Singing with guitars

Dreaming With Tears In My Eye

|76139-1

|May 25, 1938

|Co-written with Waldo O'Neal. Singing with guitar.

The Cowhand's Last Ride

|76140-1

|June 27, 1933

|Co-written with Arza Hitt Singing with guitar

I'm Free From The Chain Gang Now

|76141-1

|Sep 8, 1933

|Written by Lou Herscher. Singing with guitar

Yodeling My Way Back Home

|76151-2

| rowspan="2" |May 18, 1933

|Dec 1, 1937

|Singing with guitars

Jimmie Rodgers' Last Blue Yodel (The Women Make A Fool Out Of Me)

|76160-1

|Dec 20, 1933

|Singing with guitars

The Yodeling Ranger

|76191-2

| rowspan="2" |May 20, 1933

|Sept 8, 1933

|Co-written with Raymond Hall, singing with guitar

Old Pal Of My Heart

|76192-2

|July 28, 1933

|Co-written with Joe B. Mason. Singing with guitar

Old Love Letters

|76327-1

| rowspan="4" |May 24, 1933

|Oct 20, 1933

|Co-written with Herscher and Butcher. Singing with guitars

Mississippi Delta Blues

|76328-2

|July 28, 1933

|Co-written with Jack Neville

Somewhere Down Below The Dixson Line

|76331-2

|Oct 20, 1933

|Co-written with Ryan. Singing with guitar

Years Ago

|76332-2

|Dec 20, 1933

|Singing with guitar. Co-written with Herscher, Richards

Unreleased recordings

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|+

!Song{{Cite book |last1=Russell |first1=Tony |title=Country Music Records: a discography, 1921-1942 |last2=Pinson |first2=Bob |date=2008 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-536621-1 |location=Oxford}}

!Label

!Recording Location

!Recording date

"The Sailors Plea" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="3" |Camden, New Jersey

|Feb 14, 1928

"Mississippi Moon" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="2" |June 12, 1928

"I'm Lonely and Blue" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

"Any Old Time" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="2" |New York City, New York

|Feb 21, 1929

"High Powered Mama" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|Feb 23, 1929

"Frankie and Johnny" (Alternate Take 1)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="16" |Dallas, Texas

|Aug 10, 1929

"Frankie and Johnny" (Alternate Take 2)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="3" |Aug 12, 1929

"Home Call" (Alternate take 1)

|Victor Unissued

"Home Call" (Alternate take 2)

|Victor Unissued

"Whisper Your Mothers Name" (Alternate Take 1)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="12" |Oct 22, 1929

"Whisper Your Mothers Name" (Alternate Take 2)

|Victor Unissued

"The Land of My Boyhood Dreams" (Alternate Take 1)

|Victor Unissued

"The Land of My Boyhood Dreams" (Alternate Take 2)

|Victor Unissued

"The Land of My Boyhood Dreams" (Alternate Take 3)

|Victor Unissued

"Blue Yodel 6" (Alternate Take 1)

|Victor Unissued

"Blue Yodel 6" (Alternate Take 2)

|Victor Unissued

"Yodeling Cowboy" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

"My Rough and Rowdy Ways" (Alternate Take 1)

|Victor Unissued

"My Rough and Rowdy Ways" (Alternate Take 2)

|Victor Unissued

"I've Ranged, I've Roamed, and I've Travelled" (Alternate Take 1)

|Victor Unissued

"I've Ranged, I've Roamed, and I've Travelled" (Alternate Take 2)

|Victor Unissued

"Mississippi River Blues" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="5" |Atlanta, Georgia

|Nov 13, 1929

"Blue Yodel 7" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="2" |Nov 26, 1929

"She was Happy Till She Met You" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

"Blue Yodel 11" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|Nov 27, 1929

"Why Did You Give Me Your Love?" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|Nov 28, 1929

"My Blue Eyed Jane" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="7" |Hollywood, California

| rowspan="2" |June 30, 1930

"Moonlight and Skies" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

"Take Me Back Again" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|July 2, 1930

"Those Gambler's Blues" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|July 5, 1930

"I'm Lonesome Too" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|July 7, 1930

"For the Sake of Days Gone by" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|July 8, 1930

"T.B. Blues" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|July 11, 1930

"Travellin' Blues" (Alternate Take 1)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="3" |San Antonio, Texas

| rowspan="3" |Jan 31, 1931

"Travellin' Blues" (Alternate Take 2)

|Victor Unissued

"Jimmie The Kid" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

"Why There's A Tear in My Eye" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="10" |Louisville, Kentucky

|June 10, 1931

"Let Me Be Your Sidetrack" (Alternate Take 1)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="2" |June 11, 1931

"Let Me Be Your Sidetrack" (Alternate Take 2)

|Victor Unissued

"When The Cactus is in Bloom" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="4" |June 15, 1931

"Gambling Polka Dot Blues" (Alternate Take 1)

|Victor Unissued

"Gambling Polka Dot Blues" (Alternate Take 2)

|Victor Unissued

:"Looking For A New Mama" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

"What's It?" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="2" |June 16, 1931

"My Good Gal's Gone Blues" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

"Southern Cannonball" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|June 17, 1931

"Jimmie Rodgers' Puzzle Record" (Alternate Pressing)

|Victor Unissued

|Camden, New Jersey

|Oct 27, 1931

"Roll Along Kentucky Moon" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="5" |Dallas, Texas

|Feb 2, 1932

"Hobo's Meditation" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|Feb 3, 1932

"My Time Ain't Long" (Alternate Take 1)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="2" |Feb 4, 1932

"My Time Ain't Long" (Alternate Take 2)

|Victor Unissued

"Mississippi Moon (Later Version)" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|Feb 5, 1932

"In The Hills of Tennessee" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="4" |Camden, New Jersey

|Aug 10, 1932

"Prohibition Has Done Me Wrong" (Unreleased)

|Victor Unissued

| rowspan="2" |Aug 11, 1932

"Whippin' That Old T.B." (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

"No Hard Times" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|Aug 15, 1932

"Dreaming With Tears in My Eyes" (Alternate Take)

|Victor Unissued

|New York City, New York

|May 18, 1933

Overdubbed recordings<ref>{{Cite web |last=Family |first=Bear |title=Jimmie Rodgers Box set: The Singing Brakeman (6-CD Deluxe Box Set) |url=https://www.bear-family.com/rodgers-jimmie-country-the-singing-brakeman-6-cd-deluxe-box-set.html |access-date=2024-04-26 |website=Bear Family Records |language=en}}</ref>

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|+

!Song Title

!Label

!Year

!Notes

In The Jailhouse Now No. 2 (Overdubbed Version)

| rowspan="8" |RCA

| rowspan="8" |1955

| rowspan="8" |Overdubbed by The Rainbow Ranch Boys

Blue Yodel 8 (Muleskinner Blues) (Overdubbed Version)
Peach Pickin' Time In Georgia (Overdubbed Version)
Mother, Queen Of My Heart (Overdubbed Version)
Never No Mo' Blues (Overdubbed Version)
Blue Yodel (T For Texas) (Overdubbed Version)
Daddy And Home (Overdubbed Version)
Memphis Yodel (Overdubbed Version)

Filmography

class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center;"
scope="col" | Year

! scope="col" | Director

! scope="col" | Film

! scope="col" | Studio

!Note

1930

| Jasper Ewing Brady

|! rowspan="2"| The Singing Brakeman

|! rowspan="2"| Columbia Pictures

| rowspan="2" |Both Recordings were recorded on the same day in 1930.

Just had different directors. Released within a month of each other.

the Basil Smith Recording is the more popular one.

1930

| Basil Smith

References

{{reflist}}

;Sources

  • {{cite book|author=Bolig, John R.|year=2017|title=The Bluebird Label Discography|publisher=UC Santa Barbara Library|isbn=978-1-7351787-2-1|url=https://adp.library.ucsb.edu/BoligBluebirdLabel.pdf|access-date=December 8, 2020}}
  • {{cite book|author=Bond, Johnny|year=1978|title=The Recordings of Jimmie Rodgers: An Annotated Discography|publisher=John Edwards Memorial Foundation}}
  • {{cite book|author=Dicaire, David|year=2015|title=The First Generation of Country Music Stars: Biographies of 50 Artists Born Before 1940|publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-0-786-48558-1}}
  • {{cite book|author=Heylin, Clinton|year=2015|title=It's One For The Money|publisher=Hachette UK|isbn=978-147-211200-2}}
  • {{cite journal|author=Bond, Johnny|year=1977|title=The Hit Songwriter that Nashville Forgot (but not the rest of us)|journal=JEMF Quarterly|publisher=John Edwards Memorial Foundation|volume=13|number=45|url=https://archive.org/stream/jemfquarterlyser1977john/jemfquarterlyser1977john_djvu.txt|via=Archive.org|access-date=December 4, 2020}}
  • {{cite book|author=Kahn, Ashley|year=2020|title=George Harrison on George Harrison: Interviews and Encounters|publisher=Chicago Review Press|isbn=978-1-641-60054-5}}
  • {{cite book|author=Mazor, Barry|year=2009|title=Meeting Jimmie Rodgers: How America's Original Roots Music Hero Changed the Pop Sounds of a Century|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-199-71666-1}}
  • {{cite news|author=Paducah Sun-Democrat staff|year=1931|date=April 5, 1931|title=Classifieds|work=Paducah Sun-Democrat|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/64819050/the-paducah-sun-democrat/|via=Newspapers.com|access-date=December 7, 2020}}{{open access}}
  • {{cite book|author=Peterson, Richard|year=2008|title=Discovering Country Music|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=978-0-313-35246-1}}
  • {{cite book|author=Porterfield, Nolan|year=2007|title=Jimmie Rodgers: The Life and Times of America's Blue Yodeler|publisher=Univ. Press of Mississippi|isbn= 978-1-604-73160-6}}
  • {{cite book|author=Pugh, Ronnie|year=1998|title=Ernest Tubb: The Texas Troubadour|publisher=Duke University Press|isbn=978-0-822-32190-3}}
  • {{cite book|author=Russel, Tony; Pinson, Bob|year=2004|title=Country Music Records: A Discography, 1921-1942|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-199-88154-3}}
  • {{cite book|author=Smith, John|year=1999|title=Another Song to Sing: The Recorded Repertoire of Johnny Cash|publisher=Scarecrow Press |isbn=978-0-810-83629-7}}
  • {{cite book|author=Sullivan, Steve|year=2013|title=Encyclopedia of Great Popular Song Recordings|volume=1|publisher=Scarecrow Press|isbn= 978-0-810-88296-6}}
  • {{cite book|author=Teachout, Terry|year=2009|title=Pops: A Life of Louis Armstrong|publisher=Houghton Mifflin Harcourt|isbn=978-0-151-01089-9}}
  • {{cite book|author=UC Santa Barbara Library Staff|year=2020|title=Rodgers, Jimmie - Discography of American Historical Recordings|url=https://adp.library.ucsb.edu/index.php/mastertalent/detail/105649/Rodgers_Jimmie|work=UC Santa Barbara Library|access-date=December 8, 2020}}