| Down in Louisiana
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| There’s a grand piano-playing man;
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| He knows that they can’t kid him
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| 'Cause he’s got hot rhythm in his hand
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| The blues that he’ll compose will thrill you
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| From your head to your toes
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| He called his song «Black Rhythm,»
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| 'Cause his black hands did it 'neath the moon
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| The keys he plays on sweetly
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| And you’re left completely in a swoon
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| The melancholy strum
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| Mixed with the rum-tum of melodious blues
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| When he plays the blue note
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| And adds a new note
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| You’ll think that he wrote a symphony
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| But he’s just improvising
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| On a southern mammy melody
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| You’ll quit your pouting
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| And start a’shouting
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| No need in doubting he knows the keys
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| He can lay on the white ones
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| Can play on the black ones with ease
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| The way he plays Black Rhythm
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| Makes the gang stick with him all night long
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| Forget the hour is late
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| They hear him syncopate his mournful song
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| A’humming like the breeze
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| A' strumming lightly on those ivories |