Got My Mojo Working Explained

Got My Mo-Jo Working
Cover:Got My Mo-Jo Working single cover.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Ann Cole and the Suburbans
B-Side:I've Got a Little Boy
Recorded:1956
Genre:Blues
Length:2:37
Label:Baton

"Got My Mojo Working" is a blues song written by Preston "Red" Foster and first recorded by R&B singer Ann Cole in 1956. Foster's lyrics describe several amulets or talismans, called mojo, which are associated with hoodoo, an early African-American folk-magic belief system.

In 1957, Muddy Waters released the song with some different lyrics and a new musical arrangement. It was a feature of his performances throughout his career, with a live version recorded in 1960 identified as the best known. Waters' rendition has received several awards and otherwise recognized by various organizations and publications. As a blues standard, it has been recorded by numerous blues and other artists.

Origins

The song was written by Preston "Red" Foster, an African-American musician unrelated to the actor of the same name. Music publisher and executive Sol Rabinowitz described Foster as "one of the shyest human beings I've ever met", and a judge in the early 1970s described him as "a Black man, about forty years of age... with bleached blonde hair and highly modish clothing [who] sat quietly in the courtroom."[1]

According to Rabinowitz, Foster approached him in the mid-1950s with several songs. Rabinowitz recalled:

In his biography of Muddy Waters, Robert Gordon gave a similar account: Waters and his band learned the song while backing Cole on a Southern tour and promptly recorded it after returning to Chicago.[2] Rabinowitz claims he regularly sent Foster checks for songwriting royalties amounting to $20,000–30,000 a year in the 2000s. Foster later set up GetIt Records in Jamaica, New York, and released singles under his own name and as "The Mojo Kid".

Music historian Larry Birnbaum states that the 1955 R&B hit "Hands Off", written by Jay McShann, which he recorded with singer Priscilla Bowman, was the "obvious basis" for "Got My Mojo Working". The two songs were combined by Elvis Presley while jamming in the recording studio in 1970 and were released on the 1971 album Love Letters from Elvis.[3]

Muddy Waters rendition

Got My Mojo Working
Type:single
Artist:Muddy Waters
B-Side:Rock Me
Recorded:December 1, 1956
Genre:Blues
Label:Chess
Producer:Leonard Chess, Phil Chess

While Cole's version of "Got My Mojo Working" reflects more of a doo-wop style, Muddy Waters emphasizes a driving rhythm.[2] AllMusic critic Matthew Greenwald also notes the song's rhythm: "A sturdy jump blues rhythm and tempo drive the song, while a basic 1/4/5 chord progression defines the melody. The meeting of these two styles is the basis for the rock & roll genre and makes the song one of the most influential."[4]

Waters used many of Foster's lyrics,[2] but added a reference to acquiring a mojo from his 1950 song "Louisiana Blues": "I'm goin' down in New Orleans, get me a mojo hand, I'm 'on show all you good lookin' women, yes how to treat your love". His popular 1954 song, "Hoochie Coochie Man", written by Willie Dixon, also mentions a mojo. According to Waters:Waters recorded the song on December 1, 1956, for Chess Records in Chicago.[5] Both Little Walter[6] and James Cotton[5] have been mentioned as supplying the harmonica parts.

"Got My Mojo Working" was a feature of Muddy Waters' live performances over the years, with a popular version appearing on his At Newport 1960 album.[7] Writing for the Blues Foundation, when the song was recognized as a "Classic of blues recording" in 1984, blues historian Jim O'Neal noted that "The two-part rendition that secured the song’s renown was on the groundbreaking LP Muddy recorded live at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1960."[8] He also called the song "a standard in countless blues band repertoires".[8] Waters' rendition is included on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time at number 202.[9] In 1999, it received a Grammy Hall of Fame Award[10] and it is identified as one of the "Songs of the Century" by the RIAA.

Copyright issues

The song has been the subject of copyright litigation. Muddy Waters heard Ann Cole perform it while she was on tour with him in 1956. He modified the words, and attempted to copyright his own version. Dare Music, Inc., holder of the Preston Foster copyright, and Arc Music Group, holder of the Morganfield copyright, settled out of court, with Arc deferring to Dare's copyright.

In Strachborneo v. Arc Music 357 F. Supp 1393 (S.D. N.Y. 1973), Ruth Stratchborneo sued co-defendants Arc Music, Dare Music, McKinley Morganfield (Muddy Waters) and Preston Foster, claiming that all had infringed on her copyright in the song "Mojo Workout". In disagreement with Plaintiff Stratchborneo's claim, the ruling held that the term "Mojo" was essentially in the public domain and that the various uses of it in recordings by Ann Cole, Muddy Waters, Jimmy Smith and Bill Cosby did not, therefore, constitute infringement:Importantly, the ruling also unequivocally established the copyright of Preston Foster and Dare Music, Inc. in the song "Got My Mojo Working":

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Strachborneo v. Arc Music . USC Gould School of Law . 2012 . 2020-02-08.
  2. Book: Gordon , Robert . Can't Be Satisfied: The Life and Times of Muddy Waters. New York City. Little, Brown. 2002. 0-316-32849-9. 149.
  3. Book: Birnbaum , Larry . Before Elvis: The Prehistory of Rock 'n' Roll. 2012. Lanham, Massachusetts. Scarecrow Press. 978-0-8108-8629-2. 182.
  4. Web site: Muddy Waters: 'I've Got My Mojo Working' – Review. Greenwald. Matthew. AllMusic. May 22, 2015.
  5. Muddy Waters: Chess Box. Muddy Waters. 1989. Palmer. Robert. Robert Palmer (American writer). Box set booklet. Chess/MCA Records. CHD3-80002. 154264537. 28.
  6. Wight. Phil. Rothwell. Fred. The Complete Muddy Waters Discography. Blues & Rhythm. 200. 1991. 42.
  7. Web site: Muddy Waters: At Newport – Review. AllMusic. Cub. Koda. Cub Koda. November 21, 2020.
  8. Web site: 1984 Hall of Fame Inductees: Got My Mojo Working – Muddy Waters (Chess album track, 1960). O'Neal. Jim. Jim O'Neal. The Blues Foundation. 1984. November 21, 2020.
  9. Rolling Stone. December 9, 2004. The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. Rolling Stone. 963. July 4, 2023.
  10. Web site: Grammy Hall of Fame Awards – Past Recipients . . 1999 . May 22, 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150707235113/http://www.grammy.org/recording-academy/awards/hall-of-fame . July 7, 2015 .