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Roots of Bob No. 5: To Ramona (1 viewing) (1) Guest
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TOPIC: Roots of Bob No. 5: To Ramona
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lostchords (User)
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Roots of Bob No. 5: To Ramona 1 Year, 4 Months ago  
"To Ramona", Bob Dylan's "open letter to a wounded woman whose fate disturbs him" (Oliver Trager, p. 634) is surely among his most beautiful songs and thankfully it has stayed in his live repertoire until today.

mp3: 6.1.1974, Philadelphia, early show

The melody is a simple 3/4 time country waltz and it sounds as if it was derived from Rex Griffin's "The Last Letter" (1937):

Why do you treat me as if I were only a friend,
What have I done that makes you so distant and cold,
Sometimes I wonder if you'll be contented again,
Will you be happy when you are withered and old.

I cannot offer you diamonds and mansions so fine
I cannot offer you clothes that your young body crave
But if you'll say that you long to forever be mine
Think of the heartaches all the tears and the sorrow you'll save.

When you are weary and tired of another man's gold
When you are lonely remember this letter my own
Don't try to answer me though I've suffered anguish untold
If you don't love me I just wish you would leave me alone.

While I am writing this letter I think of the past
And of the promises that you are broking so free
But to this world I will soon say my farewell at last
I will be gone when you read this last letter from me.


Rex Griffin (1912 - 1959) from Alabama started out in the early 1930s as a songwriter and singer firmly rooted in the Jimmie Rodgers tradition. In fact once he was called the missing link between Rodgers and Hank Williams who obviously got "Lovesick Blues" from him. Though he wrote some excellent songs he isn't that well known today. Griffin never had much commercial success but he was for example an important influence for Ernest Tubb. Not at least Carl Perkins took "Everybody's Tryin' To Be My Baby" from him. He made his last recordings in 1946 and died in 1959 in New Orleans. His complete recordings are at the moment available as 3-disc box-set from Bear Family

"The Last Letter" is one of the saddest Country songs ever, that genre's "most disturbing suicide song, deeply affecting in its plaintive simplicity", conjuring "a mood of utter loneliness unequaled in country music. Griffin's recording [...] features just him and his guitar, emphasizing the aloneness of the singer. There are no instrumental breaks, just a relentless stream of verses expressing the singer's sorrow, accompanied by Griffin's simple strumming. [...] The sparse instrumentation, simple melody and Griffin's plaintive, anguished vocals transform those desperate, forlorn lyrics into something uncomfortably real and immediate. Even now, nearly 60 years after Griffin recorded it, the heartfelt pain expressed in 'The Last Letter' deeply resonates" ( Don Yates )
------------------
- NPR, What's In A Song: Country music historian Bill Malone reminiscing about "The Last Letter" (with snippets of the versions by Griffin and the Carter Family&quot
- Rex Griffin, "The Last Letter" mp3
About Rex Griffin: CNT , Nashville Songwriter's Hall Of Fame
----------------------

Griffin's recording wasn't such a great hit but it in the following years the song found its way into the repertoire of other singers. The Carter Family performed it over the radio (now available on On Border Radio Vol. 2), the Blue Sky Boys (1938), Jimmie Davis (1939) and Gene Autry (1940, mp3) recorded it soon after Griffin and it has become a Country standard since then. In the early 60s Rambin' Jack Elliott did a fine version on his first LP for Prestige (1961), Willie Nelson included it on Here's Willie Nelson (1963), Ernest Tubb on his Rex Griffin tribute album Just Call Me Lonesome (1963) and the Blue Sky Boys revived it for their 1964 reunion Live LP In Concert . So Dylan surely knew "The Last Letter". Sadly the discussion about Dylan's borrowings has in the last years degenerated into legal talk á la " he has stolen this, let's sue him". But this kind of reworking of older melodies was common practice at least until the 60s when among the Folk Revivalists every song from Country, Folk or Blues was thought to be a traditional. And Dylan was not the only one inspired by this song. I think "A Couple More Years" (Shel Silverstein/Dennis Loccoriere) is based on it too.
-----------------------------------------
Bob Dylan, A Couple More Years, Portland 3.12.1980 mp3
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The lyrics of "To Ramona" are at least distantly related to "The Last Letter" but they are much closer to "My Melancholy Baby", a popular music standard by Ernie Burnett & George A. Norton written in 1912.
sheet music 1
sheet music 2

[verse 1]
Come, sweetheart mine, don't sit and pine;
Tell me of the cares that make you feel so blue.
What have I done? Answer me, Hon;
Have I ever said an unkind word to you?
My love is true, and just for you;
I'd do almost anything at any time.
Dear, when you sigh or when you cry,
Something seems to grip this very heart of mine.

(Refrain)
Come to me my melancholy baby,
Cuddle up and don't be blue
All your fears are foolish fancies, may be
You know dear, that I'm in love with you.
Ev'ry cloud must have a silver lining;
Wait until the sun shines through.
Smile my honey, dear, while I kiss away each tear,
Or else I shall be melancholy too.

(verse 2)
Birds in the trees, whispering breeze,
Could not fail to lull you into peaceful dreams.
So tell me why sadly you sigh
Sitting at the window where the pale moon beams.
You shouldn't grieve; try and believe
Life is always sunshine when the heart beats true.
Be of good cheer; smile through your tears;
When you're sad it makes me feel the same as you.


Later the verses were often left out and only the refrain was sung.

"My Melancholy Baby" is one of the "cuddling"-songs that were quite popular in the 1910s: "In the years before World War I, songs were often about young lovers trying to spend some time cuddling close. The new conversational style made lyrics sound like extensions of everyday talk. Many songs were seductive even though the tone was playful rather than passionate [...] there is no mistaking their sexual intentions [...]. 'My Melancholy Baby' is the most interesting [cuddling song] because of its young man's capacity for emphaty. Because the girl is so sad, he invites her to sit close. In the song's most suggestive line, given emphasis through alliteration, he first tells her that her fears 'are foolish fancy' [...] Eventually she sits beside him to cuddle as he atempts to woo her gently ('Come on and smile, my honey dear; while I kiss away each tear' and then concludes with a lyrical twist that appeals to her capacity for emphaty: 'Or else I shall be malancholy too'" (Furia & Lasser, p. 7).

In 1915 this song was a hit for Walter van Brunt (recording was available here), then in 1928 for Gene Austin (who, by the way, also recorded a song "Ramona&quot and in 1939 for Bing Crosby. Besides that it was performed and recorded by nearly everybody including Bob's favourite "girl from next door" Judy Garland who sang it in A Star Is Born (1954).

------------------
- a set of 4 mp3s in a zip folder - 4 different versions of “My Melancholy Baby” by Seger Ellis (with the Dorsey Brothers, 1928), Mildred Bailey (1938), Bing Crosby (1939), Frank Sinatra (1945)
- Al Bowlly, My Melancholy Baby, 1930s, from YouTube
------------------------------

"My Melancholy Baby" and "To Ramona" share the basic topic, the general mood and the conversational style and it could easily have served as a starting-point and model for Dylan. The opening lines are very closely related, Dylan's may be simply a more poetical rewrite in other words:

Come to my my melancholy baby
Cuddle up and don't feel blue
[...]
Wait until the sun shines through

Ramona, come closer,
Shut softly your watery eyes.
The pangs of your sadness
Shall pass as your senses will rise.


The idea that all her "fears are foolish fancy" is revived a couple of times in "To Ramona":

It's all just a dream, babe,
A vacuum, a scheme, babe [...]

You've been fooled into thinking [...]

If you really believe that [...]


And Dylan's final twist "I'll come and be crying to you" looks like an echo of "[...] or else I shall be melancholy, too".

The major differences between these two songs - besides the musical setting - are the writing style and the language. Dylan's tone is still conversational but he is much more poetical, including "vivid imagery" (Trager) and florid aphorisms. His lyrics are much less concise but more elaborate. He is not simply trying to talk a girl out of her sadness, the song is less playful but has a more serious background. With "There's no use in tryin'/T' deal with the dyin'" he incorporates the suicide motif from "The Last Letter". And not at least "To Ramona" offers a darker, less positive outlook. Dylan replaces the optimistic and encouraging idea that "ev'ry cloud must have a silver lining;" with the pessimistic conclusion "deep in my heart I know there's no help I can bring".

This song may have an autobiographical background: "Well, that's pretty literal. That was just somebody I knew" (Dylan in "Biograph"-liner notes). But it is filtered through common song models and formulas. Dylan was of course part of the songwriting tradition. One of his major techniques - not only in his early years - was to take a song or topic from popular music tradition and give it a different shape, often with the help of a song taken from Country, Folk or Rock'n Roll.

Literature:
Philip Furia/Michael Lasser, America's Songs. The Stories Behind The Songs Of Broadway, Hollywood And Tin Pan Alley, New York & London 2006
Ronnie Pugh, Ernest Tubb. The Texas Troubadour, 1996
Oliver Trager, Keys To The Rain. The Definitive Bob Dylan Encyclopedia, New York 2004<br><br>Post edited by: lostchords, at: 2007/08/05 05:39
 
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Roots of Bob No. 5: To Ramona
lostchords 2007/07/08 23:42
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LostJohn 2007/07/09 00:35
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lostchords 2007/07/09 03:34
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Bob T. Guevara 2007/07/09 10:53
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