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(詳細はjug band tradition, but gained wider popularity after several folk and blues artists recorded it in the 1960s. Although different artists have recorded different verses, the chorus has remained consistent: ::Stealin', stealin', pretty mama don't you tell on me ::I'm stealin' back to my same old used to be ==Origins== The lines “If you don’t believe I love you, look what a fool I’ve been / If you don’t believe I’d fall for you, look what a hole I’m in” were recorded by the New Orleans jazz musician (Clarence Williams ) in 1921 and again by Leona Williams in 1922 as “If You Don't Believe I Love You, Look What a Fool I've Been.” Gus Cannon claimed to have written the opening line, "Put your arms around me like a circle 'round the sun." On this basis, Cannon is sometimes credited with authorship of the song. However, this line doesn’t appear in any of his recorded songs. It does appear in the folk song “I Know You Rider” and may actually predate Cannon. Another lyric associated with Gus Cannon is “She's a married woman, but she comes to see me all the time,” which appeared in his (“Minglewood Blues,” ) recorded January 30, 1928. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Stealin'」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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