Chicken (2) "Chicken" Version 3 Kallick

Chicken Don't Roost Too High- Version 3
 "Chicken" by Kathy Kallick

Dat’s the Way to Spell Chicken/C-H-I-C-K-E-N/Ragtime Chicken Joe/Chicken

Old-time Song with fiddle breaks; Written by Bob Cole and J. Rosamund Johnson

ARTIST: "Chicken" Kathy Kallick combined versions of Dat’s the way to Spell Chicken from the McGee Brothers, Red Clay Ramblers, and Jody Stecher.

CATEGORY: Fiddle and Instrumental Tunes

DATE: 1909 Bob Cole and J. Rosamund Johnson in 1899; (recording 1924, Henry Whitter) "There is No Chicken That Can Roost Too High For Me" by W.J. Simons, published in 1899. Fred. Lyons “Dem Chickens Roost Too High”c1887; Dat’s the way to Spell Chicken by Sidney L. Perrin and Bob Slater, 1902;

RECORDING INFO: Uncle Tom Collins, "Chicken, You Can't Roost Too High for Me" (OKeh 45140, 1927) Dixie String Band, "Chicken Don't Roost Too High for Me" (Puritan 9160, n.d. but prob. c. 1926) Georgia Potlickers, "Chicken, Don't Roost Too High" (Brunswick 595, 1932; rec. 1930) Earl Johnson & his Clodhoppers, "They Don't Roost Too High for Me" (OKeh 45223, 1928; on Cornshuckers2) Riley Puckett, "Chicken Don't Roost Too High for Me" (Columbia 150-D, 1924) Uncle Tom Collins, "Chicken Can't Roost Too High for Me" (OKeh 45140, 1927) Henry Whitter, "Chicken Don't Roost Too High for Me" (OKeh 40077, 1924) Jones, Grandpa. 24 Great Country Songs, King 967, LP (1975), trk# A.04 [1950] McClung Brothers. West Virginia Hills. Early Recordings from West Virginia, Old Homestead OHCS 141, LP (1982), 9 [1927/03/07] (Chicken, [Oh Chicken]) Webb, Bob; and Craig Edwards. Cluck Old Hen, Richmond Webb RWA 4303, CD (2004), trk# 13 (Mister Chicken) "Ragtime Chicken Joe" by "Fiddling Doc Roberts Trio" Conqueror 8566, McGee Brothers (1927), Kirk McGee (1927), Asa Martin (1933 under the title 'Ragtime Chicken Joe' and Tobacco Tags (1939 under the title 'De Way to Spell Chicken'.

RELATED TO: C-H-I-C-K-E-N; Dem Chickens Roost Too High

OTHER NAMES: Rooster Don't Roost to High for Me; Dem Chickens Roost Too High; There Is No Chicken That Can Roost Too High for Me; Ragtime Chicken Joe;

SOURCES: BrownIII 434, "Chicken" (1 short text) Roud #11777; E.C Perrow;

NOTES: Lyrics: "Chicken, oh, you chicken, went up in a balloon, Chicken, oh, you chicken, roost behind the moon.... Tell it all to the bad boy, chicken don't roost so high... When they see me coming All round this old plantation, There can't be a chicken seen." Singer tells chicken not to roost too high, but to come down out of his tree. Sometimes there are other verses about chasing a chicken to kill and eat, but mostly this is a fiddle tune with incidental verses.

“Dat’s the way to Spell Chicken” by Sidney L. Perrin and Bob Slater, 1902 is the source of Ragtime Chicken Joe/C-H-I-C-K-E-N versions. Many versions, like "Ragtime Chicken Joe" by "Fiddling Doc Roberts Trio" Conqueror 8566, add the “Chicken don’t roost too high” verse, combining the two songs. The McGee version was called "C-H-I-C-K-E-N Spells Chicken", and it appears on collection "Sam McGee Complete Works 1926-1934" CD Document 8036, 1999. It was also recorded by Mississippi John Hurt (as "C-H-I-C-K-E-N Blues" also with a verse from “Chicken don’t roost too high”), the Red Clay Ramblers, Tom Paxton, and Van Dyke Parks. One version by John Hurt includes the chorus only. The other recording that includes a verse ("Chicken, don't you roost too high for me") is played in the key of C.

Fred. Lyons wrote “Dem Chickens Roost Too High”c1887, which is a different song that introduces the “Chicken roost too high” lyrics.

“Chicken Don’t Roost Too High for Me,” is listed by Meade as written by Bob Cole and J. Rosamund Johnson in 1899. According to Saints and Songsters by Paul Oliver "There is No Chicken That Can Roost Too High For Me" by W.J. Simons, was published in 1899. To what extent the 1887 “Dem Chickens Roost Too High” version had an influence on these subsequent versions is unknown.

Here is "Chicken/Dat’s the way to Spell Chicken" by Kathy Kallick: 


CHICKEN- Kathy Kallick


In a little country school house where the children used to go,
There went a little red-haired boy by the name of Ragtime Joe.
One day the teacher called on the class to spell a certain kind of bird,
The kind of bird it was a chicken, and they could not spell that word.

So the teacher called on Ragtime Joe to spell that word for them,
He did not hesitate a bit, this is the way he began:

C - that's the way to begin
H - that's the next letter in
I - that is the third
C - time to season up the bird
K - I'm fitting in
E - getting near the end
C-H-I-C-K-E-N
That is the way to spell chicken.

Parson Johnson gave a concert in the old school house one night,
He hired a lot of fellers that could sing and could recite;
When they pulled the curtain, everything went wrong
Until - the children loudly called, "Let's hear from Ragtime Joe."

He sang a ragtime jukin' tune, but it did not go so well,
He said, "I went 'cross on that, so I guess I'll have to spell,"
Then he told the audience he had composed this chicken song
And when he sang these words to them, he took the house by storm.

[Chorus]