"Pistol Packin' Mama" is a 1943 song with the words composed by Al Dexter, who adapted the melody from Boil Them Cabbage Down. [1] The song is notable in that it was the first number one on the Juke Box Folk Records chart, which was later known as the Hot Country Songs chart. The version performed by Bing Crosby and the Andrews Sisters[2] was the first number on the Juke Box Folk records charts followed by the original version (recorded March 18, 1942) performed by Al Dexter[3] released on Okeh 6708.[1] The B-side of the Al Dexter version of "Pistol Packin' Mama, a song entitled "Rosalita", would hit number one on the same chart later in the year. The song is also featured in the video game Fallout 4 on the in-game radio.
Patty Andrews recalled that she and her sisters were quite amused and had to restrain their laughter when Crosby ad libbed "lay that thing down before it goes off and hurts somebody."[2]
Louis Jordan was performing a "hillbilly rendition" of the song, which drew laughs, during a November 1943 appearance in a show at the Orpheum Theater in Los Angeles.[4]
Gene Vincent's 1960 British hit version features Georgie Fame on piano.
The Flamin' Groovies did a cover the song on their 1969 debut album Supersnazz.
The chorus of the song was used for the 1970s UK television advertising campaign for Rowntree's Fruit Pastilles, with the punning tag line "Pastille Pickin' Mama, pass those pastilles round".[5]
There is also a version of the song on an album titled A.P.C. Presents: The Unreleasable Tapes with Bryan Adams being credited with the lead vocals.[6]
It is also continually referenced in Spike Milligan's "Goodbye Soldier", which is part of his memoirs of the war and just after it. In it he states that as Mussolini did not like Jazz, after he was defeated the Italians were getting into Jazz, and as this song was popular at the time this was one of the songs Milligan and his group was often asked to sing, he also states that this is one of the main songs sung by Italian Jazz Bands (in fact he states that some bands only ever sung this song)
References
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Albums |
- Music of Hawaii (1939)
- Victor Herbert Melodies, Vol. One (1939)
- Patriotic Songs for Children (1939)
- Cowboy Songs (1939)
- Victor Herbert Melodies, Vol. Two (1939)
- George Gershwin Songs, Vol. One (1939)
- Ballad for Americans (1940)
- Favorite Hawaiian Songs (1940)
- Christmas Music (1940)
- Star Dust (1940)
- Hawaii Calls (1941)
- Small Fry (1941)
- Crosbyana (1941)
- Under Western Skies (1941)
- Song Hits from Holiday Inn (w/ Fred Astaire) (1942)
- Merry Christmas (1945)
- Selections from Going My Way (1945)
- Selections from The Bells of St. Mary's (1946)
- Don't Fence Me In (1946)
- The Happy Prince (1946)
- Selections from Road to Utopia (1946)
- Stephen Foster Songs (1946)
- What We So Proudly Hail (1946)
- Favorite Hawaiian Songs, Vol. One (1946)
- Favorite Hawaiian Songs, Vol. Two (1946)
- Blue Skies (w/ Fred Astaire) (1946)
- Jerome Kern Songs (1946)
- St. Patrick's Day (1947)
- Victor Herbert Songs (1947)
- Cowboy Songs, Vol. One (1947)
- Selections from Welcome Stranger (1947)
- Our Common Heritage (1947)
- El Bingo (1947)
- The Small One (1947)
- The Man Without a Country (1947)
- Drifting and Dreaming (1947)
- Blue of the Night (1948)
- Selections from Showboat (1948)
- The Emperor Waltz (1948)
- St. Valentine's Day (1948)
- Bing Crosby Sings with Al Jolson, Bob Hope, Dick Haymes and the Andrews Sisters (1948)
- Selections from Road to Rio (1948)
- Bing Crosby Sings with Judy Garland, Mary Martin, Johnny Mercer (1948)
- Bing Crosby Sings with Lionel Hampton, Eddie Heywood, Louis Jordan (1948)
- Cowboy Songs, Vol. Two (1948)
- Auld Lang Syne (1948)
- A Connecticut Yankee In King Arthur's Court (1949)
- Bing Crosby Sings Songs By George Gershwin (1949)
- South Pacific (1949)
- Christmas Greetings (1949)
- Ichabod - The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (1949)
- Top o' the Morning / Emperor Waltz (1949)
- Songs from Mr. Music (1950)
- Go West Young Man (1950)
- Le Bing: Song Hits of Paris (1953)
- Some Fine Old Chestnuts (1954)
- Selections from White Christmas (1954)
- Bing: A Musical Autobiography (1954)
- High Tor (1956)
- A Christmas Sing with Bing around the World (1956)
- High Society (w/ Frank Sinatra, Grace Kelly, and Louis Armstrong) (1956)
- Songs I Wish I Had Sung the First Time Around (1956)
- Bing Sings Whilst Bregman Swings (1956)
- Bing with a Beat (1957)
- A Christmas Story (1957)
- Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves (1957)
- Never Be Afraid (1957)
- Jack B. Nimble – A Mother Goose Fantasy (1957)
- New Tricks (1957)
- Fancy Meeting You Here ( w/ Rosemary Clooney) (1958)
- How the West Was Won (1959)
- Bing & Satchmo (w/ Louis Armstrong) (1960)
- 101 Gang Songs (1960)
- Holiday in Europe (1960)
- The Road to Hong Kong (1962)
- On the Happy Side (1962)
- On the Sentimental Side (1962)
- I Wish You a Merry Christmas (1962)
- Reprise Musical Repertory Theatre (1963)
- Return to Paradise Islands (1963)
- Bing Crosby Sings the Great Country Hits (1963)
- America, I Hear You Singing (w/ Frank Sinatra and Fred Waring) (1964)
- 12 Songs of Christmas (w/ Frank Sinatra and Fred Waring) (1964)
- That Travelin' Two-Beat (w/ Rosemary Clooney) (1965)
- Bing 'n' Basie (w/ Count Basie) (1972)
- A Couple of Song and Dance Men (w/ Fred Astaire) (1975)
- Seasons (1977)
- Bing Crosby: The Voice of Christmas (1998)
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Related |
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- LaVerne Andrews
- Maxene Andrews
- Patty Andrews
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Singles |
- "Bei Mir Bist Du Schön"
- "Nice Work If You Can Get It"
- "Shortenin' Bread"
- "Oh! Ma-Ma!"
- "Beer Barrel Polka (Roll Out the Barrel)"
- "Ciribiribin (They're So In Love)"
- "Say Si Si (Para Vigo Me Voy)"
- "The Woodpecker Song"
- "Beat Me Daddy, Eight to the Bar"
- "Scrub Me, Mama, With a Boogie Beat"
- "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy"
- "I Yi, Yi, Yi, Yi (I Like You Very Much)"
- "(I'll Be With You) In Apple Blossom Time"
- "Sonny Boy"
- "Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree"
- "Mister Five By Five"
- "Pistol Packin' Mama"
- "Jingle Bells"
- "Shoo-Shoo Baby"
- "Down In the Valley"
- "Straighten Up and Fly Right"
- "Tico Tico"
- "Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby"
- "A Hot Time In the Town of Berlin"
- "Don't Fence Me In"
- "Rum and Coca-Cola"
- "Accentuate the Positive"
- "The Three Caballeros"
- "Along the Navajo Trail"
- "Get Your Kicks On Route 66"
- "I Don't Know Why"
- "House of Blue Lights"
- "Rumors Are Flying"
- "Winter Wonderland"
- "There's No Business Like Show Business"
- "Near You"
- "Civilization (Bongo, Bongo, Bongo)"
- "Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town"
- "Sabre Dance"
- "Underneath the Arches"
- "You Call Everybody Darling"
- "Don't Rob Another Man's Castle"
- "I Can Dream, Can't I?"
- "Charley, My Boy"
- "Have I Told You Lately That I Love You"
- "The Wedding Samba"
- "I Wanna Be Loved"
- "A Bushel and a Peck"
- "Mele Kalikimaka"
- "Sparrow in the Tree Top"
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- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Abrams, Steven and Settlemier, Tyrone. "The Online Discographical Project – Okeh (CBS) 6500 - 6747 (1941 - 45)". Retrieved February 21, 2011
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Tape 1, side A.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Billboard Nov 27, 1943. page 23
- ↑ "Rowntree’s Fruit Pastilles (3): 1972" at eadington.org.uk
- ↑ emusic.com