Compositions
Handy's songs do not always follow the classic 12-bar pattern, often having 8- or 16-bar bridges between 12-bar verses.
- "Memphis Blues", written 1909, published 1912. Although usually subtitled "Boss Crump", it is a distinct song from Handy's campaign satire, "Boss Crump don't 'low no easy riders around here", which was based on the good-time song "Mamma Don't Allow It."
- "Yellow Dog Blues" (1912), "Your easy rider's gone where the Southern cross the Yellow Dog." The reference is to the crossing at Moorhead, Mississippi, of the Southern Railway and the local Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad, called the Yellow Dog. By Handy's telling locals assigned the words "Yellow Dog" to the letters Y.D.(for Yazoo Delta) on the freight trains that they saw.
- "Saint Louis Blues" (1914), "the jazzman's Hamlet."
- "Loveless Love", based in part on the classic, "Careless Love". Possibly the first song to complain of modern synthetics, "with milkless milk and silkless silk, we're growing used to soulless soul."
- "Aunt Hagar's Blues", the biblical Hagar, handmaiden to Abraham and Sarah, was considered the "mother" of the African Americans.
- "Beale Street Blues" (1916), written as a farewell to the old Beale Street of Memphis (actually called Beale Avenue until the song changed the name); but Beale Street did not go away and is considered the "home of the blues" to this day. B.B. King was known as the "Beale Street Blues Boy" and Elvis Presley watched and learned from Ike Turner there.
- "Long Gone John (From Bowling Green)", tribute to a famous bank robber.
- "Chantez-Les-Bas (Sing 'Em Low)", tribute to the Creole culture of New Orleans.
- "Atlanta Blues", includes the song known as "Make Me a Pallet on your Floor" as its chorus.
- "Ole Miss Rag" (1917), a ragtime composition, recorded by Handy's Orchestra of Memphis.
Read more about this topic: W. C. Handy