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The song's chorus came from a letter Merle received from his brother lamenting the death of World War II journalist Ernie Pyle, killed while covering combat in the Pacific in 1945. John Travis wrote, "It's like working in the coal mines. You load sixteen tons and what do you get? Another day older and deeper in debt." Merle also recalled a remark his father would make to neighbors when asked how he was doing: "I can't afford to die. I owe my soul to the company store. " This referred to coal-company owned stores where miners bought food and supplies with money advanced by the company, called "scrip".
In September, reeling from a demanding road and television production schedule, Ernie was informed by Capitol that he was approaching breach of contract. He needed to record two sides for a single release immediately. Armed with a box of fan mail, Cliffie Stone convinced Capitol head Lee Gillette to allow Ernie to record "Sixteen Tons", and Gillette agreed; it would be the B side of a country-blues swinger titled "You Don't Have To Be A Baby To Cry", a tune that Gillette and others at the label believed would be Ernie's biggest hit yet. On September 17, 1955, both songs are recorded at Capitol's Melrose Avenue Studios in Hollywood. To kick off the tempo for arranger Jack Fascinato, Ernie began snapping his fingers...mistakenly left on the master tape by Gillette and the engineers. On October 17, Capitol shipped the new record nationwide, and to deejays around the country, confident that "Baby" would be a hit. But, inexplicably, radio stations coast to coast began 'flipping' the single and playing the B side. Purely by accident, music history was about to be made.
Merle Travis--already celebrated as a guitar innovator and songwriter--was immortalized by the song. In later years, when performing the song himself, he altered the final stanza to, "I owe my soul...to Tennessee Ernie Ford." On July 29, 1956, he returned to his boyhood home of Ebeneezer, Kentucky, to unveil a granite monument the town built to immortalize his accomplishments, including Sixteen Tons. He died in 1983. In 1991, his ashes were buried under that monument, and remain there to this day. |
SIXTEEN TONS Merle
Travis Some
people say a man is made out of mud A poor
man's made out of muscle and blood Muscle
and blood, skin and bones... A mind
that's weak and a back that's strong Chorus You load
sixteen tons, and what do you get? another
day older and deeper in debt St.
Peter, don't you call me, 'cause I can't go I owe my
soul to the company store
I was
born one mornin' and the sun didn't shine I picked
up my shovel and I walked to the mine I loaded
sixteen tons of number nine coal and the
straw boss said, "well bless my soul!"
Chorus You
loaded sixteen tons, and what do you get? another
day older and deeper in debt St.
Peter, don't you call me, 'cause I can't go I owe my
soul to the company store I was
born one mornin' it was drizzlin' rain fightin'
and trouble are my middle name I was
raised in a cane-brake by an old mama lion can't no
high-toned woman make me walk no line Chorus You load
sixteen tons, and what do you get? another
day older and deeper in debt St.
Peter, don't you call me, 'cause I can't go I owe my
soul to the company store If you
see me comin', better step aside A lot of
men didn't, a lot of men died One fist
of iron, the other of steel If the
right one don't get you, then the left one will (Chorus) You load
sixteen tons, and what do you get? another
day older and deeper in debt St.
Peter, don't you call me, 'cause I can't go I owe my
soul to the company store "Sixteen Tons"
� Merle's Girls Music ~ All Rights Reserved
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In
August, 1946, Cliffie Stone, then an assistant
producer and talent scout for Capitol Records,
called Merle Travis (a Capitol hitmaker at that
time) about recording a 78 rpm album (four discs in
a binder) of folk songs. Capitol, seeing the success
of a Burl Ives album, wanted their own folk
music album. Merle
Later released on
Capitol's 1947 LP "Folk Songs From The Hills", the
song almost immediately began to generate
controversy, causing Travis himself, problems,
in the anti-communist, Cold War hysteria of the late
forties. Some in government saw songs dealing with
workers' woes, and folk music "activists" as
potentially subversive. It made no difference that
Travis was a true American patriot. Veteran Capitol
producer, Ken Nelson, who worked at WJJD radio in
Chicago in the late forties, recalled in a 1992
interview that FBI agents advised the station not to
play Travis' records, because they considered him a
"communist sympathizer," which was, of course,
completely untrue.
Ernie knew the
song from working with Travis on Cliffie Stone's
Hometown Jamboree, and revived it on his daily NBC
show early in 1955. Within five days, NBC received
over 1200 letters from viewers asking about the
song. In July, Ernie performed the song live
at the Indiana State Fair, in front of a capacity
crowd of 30,000. The response was deafening.
In eleven days
following its release, 400,000 singles are sold.
Demand for the song was so great, that Capitol
geared all its pressing plants nationwide to meet
the deluge of orders. In Twenty-four days, over one
million records were sold, and "Sixteen Tons" became
the fastest-selling single in Capitol's history. By
November, it had captured the top spot on every
major record chart in the country, and by December
15 (less than two months after it's release) more
than 2,000,000 copies were sold, making it the most
successful single ever recorded.