Lily of Laguna

{{Short description|British coon song written by Leslie Stuart}}

{{for|the 1938 film of the same name|Lily of Laguna (film)}}

{{EngvarB|date=October 2013}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2025}}

File:Leslie-Stewart-Lily of laguna 0-Cover.jpg

"Lily of Laguna" is a British coon song written in fake 'negro' dialect. It was written in 1896 by English composer Leslie Stuart. It was a music hall favourite, performed notably by blackface performers such as Eugene Stratton and G. H. Elliott. In the early 1940s Ted Fio Rito wrote the tune of a new verse and Paul Francis Webster wrote fresh lyrics{{cite web|title=ASCAP|url=https://www.ascap.com/repertory#ace/writer/10271053/FIORITO%20TED|website=ascap.com|accessdate=6 September 2017}} and it was stripped of its overtly racist lyrics to become a pure love song which continued to be popular into the 1950s.[https://sites.google.com/site/functionofmusichall/blacface-minstrels/famous-blaceface-performers Famous Blaceface Performers Eugene Stratton & George H.Elliott] An analysis and exploration of the function of Music Hall in its wider social context at The function of musichall. Accessed 2013[https://books.google.com/books?id=n3PHdGaUqIkC&dq=Lily+of+Laguna+stuart&pg=PA10 Popular Music in England 1840–1914: A Social History] By Dave Russell ,

Manchester University Press, 1997 , {{ISBN|0719052610}}

History

The song was first performed in Oxford in July 1898, and first reviewed in the Entr'acte on 23 July 1898.Lamb, p. 69. Laguna of the original song was a village of Native American cave-dwellers somewhere "100 miles off the main line en route to California proceeding from New Orleans." Lily was a cave-dwelling Indian girl. The song stood aside from Stuart's other works, in part because Stuart wrote both the music and the verses.Lamb, p. 70. Stuart wrote that "I wrote the words and music together to a large degree and, consequently, I was able to get effects that the canons of art lay down as being impossible... Instead of ending where, say, the average poet would compel me by the metre of his verse I, writing my own lyrics, add two bars more and get an entirely new effect".Lamb, pp. 70–71. The verse section contain a dramatic mood shift of iii minor, to ii minor, to I Major. The arrangement has an oboe obligato play the tune of Lily's call to her flock on her shepherdess's pipe.[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xxv5V3n77tg Lily Of Laguna, sung by Eugene Stratton] Recorded 1 February 1911, it was issued by HMV as a single sided 12" (Cat. No. 02341), later to be paired with: 'I May Be Crazy', Cat. No. C-556. Accessed April 2013

The song was regularly played throughout the rest of Stuart's life, although not as frequently as less demanding compositions.Lamb, p. 71. On the night of Stuart's death, 26 March 1928, it was performed by Herman Darewski band at the Coliseum Theatre, with Queen Soraya of Afghanistan in attendance.Stuart died at 3 a.m. 27 March. Lamb, p. 258.[https://books.google.com/books?id=HZQemZyozqwC&dq=Lily+of+Laguna+racist&pg=PA331 Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Volume 8: Genres: North America]

Bloomsbury Publishing, 2012, Page 331 {{ISBN|1441160787}}

A reaction to overtly racist lyrics in coon song began to take place in the twentieth century and Bing Crosby and Mary Martin performed the less racially offensive version by Fio Rito and Webster of this song in 1942 which is primarily based on the chorus of the original song, i.e., "She's my lady love".[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KC8qDZ0qRss Bing Crosby Mary Martin , Lily of Laguna] 1941 78RPM DECCA RECORD. Accessed April 2013 The song was transformed in a number of ways: the racial imagery was replaced with lines referencing sailors, ships, docks, and lollipops; the entire verse sections which, in the original, contains the dramatic mood shift was updated to the jazzy big band sound that was popular at the time; and a woman (Mary Martin) now sang lyrics from the female perspective.[http://www.discogs.com/Bing-Crosby-And-Mary-Martin-Lily-Of-Laguna-Wail-Till-The-Sun-Shines-Nellie/release/3468494 Bing Crosby And Mary Martin – Lily Of Laguna] Label: Decca – 18278 Format: Shellac, 10", 78 RPM Country: US Released: 1942 at http://www.discogs.com {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120421065208/http://www.discogs.com/ |date=21 April 2012 }}

Meaning

The original song lyrics tell the story of a lonely black American man who falls in love with a woman from the Laguna tribe of Pueblos of New Mexico. Every evening he waits to hear her call her sheep and cattle so that he can go to her unseen by her father.See Wikisource material. Laguna, is Spanish, cognate with "lagoon", meaning "lake", and derives from a now dry lake located on the tribe's ancestral lands. The real indigenous name of the tribe is Kawaik.Pritzker, Barry M. A Native American Encyclopedia: History, Culture, and Peoples. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000. {{ISBN|978-0-19-513877-1}}[https://web.archive.org/web/20120224132247/http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/route66/pueblo_laguna.html Pueblo of Laguna Laguna, New Mexico] US National Park Service, Route 66, Accessed April 2013

Chorus

She's ma lady love, she is ma dove, ma baby love,

She's no gal for sittin' down to dream,

She's de only queen Laguna knows;

I know she likes me, I know she likes me

Bekase she says so; She is de Lily of Laguna,

she is ma Lily and ma Rose.

Notable recordings

Ted Fio Rito recorded a less racially offensive version of the song with reworked lyrics for Decca Records on 10 February 1942 (catalog 4258A).{{cite web|title=The Online Discographical Project|url=http://www.78discography.com/Dec4000.htm|website=78discography.com|accessdate=6 September 2017}} The following month, on 13 March 1942, Bing Crosby and Mary Martin recorded their version with the new lyrics as well.{{cite web|title=A Bing Crosby Discography|url=http://www.bingmagazine.co.uk/bingmagazine/crosby1bDecca.html|website=BING magazine|publisher=International Club Crosby|accessdate=28 July 2017}}

Stanley Holloway released this song as a 45 rpm single in 1960.[http://www.discogs.com/Stanley-Holloway-Lily-Of-Laguna/release/1962319 Stanley Holloway – Lily Of Laguna] at discogs.com. Label: Pye Records – 7N 15302 Accessed April 2013

The song was covered by Alvin and the Chipmunks for their 1960 album Around the World with The Chipmunks.

Footnotes

{{cite wikisource |title=The Lily of Laguna |last=Stuart |first=Leslie |year=1898 |publisher=J Albert & Son, under license from Francis Day and Hunter}}

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References

  • Andrew Lamb (2002). [https://books.google.com/books?id=arsbsDewXqIC Leslie Stuart: composer of Floradora]. Routledge. {{ISBN|0-415-93747-7}}.
  • Banton M, (1980), The Idiom of Race: A Critique of Presentism, Research in Race and Ethnic Relations, vol.2, pages 21–42
  • Bratton J S, (1986), Music Hall Performance and Style, Milton Keynes : Open University Press
  • Mackenzie J M, (1984), Propaganda and the Empire: the Manipulation of British Public Opinion, Manchester: Manchester University Press
  • Mellor G J, (1970), Northern Music Hall, Newcastle : Frank Graham
  • Padgett K W, Black-face – A Brief History of Blackface, San Diego, found at www.black-face.com
  • Rosset N, (2005), The Birth of the African Glen: Blackface Minstrelsy Between Presentation and Representation, Rethinking History, vol.9, no.4, pages 415–428
  • Cheshire D.F, (1974) Music Hall in Britain, Devon: David and Charles