
HISTORY MIXTAPES - Poverty and Homelessness with Dave Hitchcock
02/21/25 • 37 min
In this episode, historian Dave Hitchcock, a Senior Lecturer at Canterbury Christ Church University, discusses how his expertise in vagrancy and poverty in early modern England and British Atlantic world use of music, such as broadside ballads, set up his exploration of themes of poverty and homelessness across musical expression. He contextualizes songs reflecting modern urban poverty and illuminates underlying common themes that include individual versus structural explanations of poverty.
For the extended playlist on Spotify, visit https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0sSBtpIEob9cr99jzL1aiS?si=7a186db4bd3d4c7b.
The songs featured in this episode are available as a YouTube playlist.
In this episode, historian Dave Hitchcock, a Senior Lecturer at Canterbury Christ Church University, discusses how his expertise in vagrancy and poverty in early modern England and British Atlantic world use of music, such as broadside ballads, set up his exploration of themes of poverty and homelessness across musical expression. He contextualizes songs reflecting modern urban poverty and illuminates underlying common themes that include individual versus structural explanations of poverty.
For the extended playlist on Spotify, visit https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0sSBtpIEob9cr99jzL1aiS?si=7a186db4bd3d4c7b.
The songs featured in this episode are available as a YouTube playlist.
Previous Episode

HISTORY MIXTAPES - Jazz and the Rhythm Club Fire with Karen Cox
This episode explores the music at the center of the story historian Karen Cox is currently reconstructing about the Rhthym Club fire in Natchez, Mississippi, in 1940. Jazz music becomes a character in her story, illuminating not just the lives lost, but the movement and connections across space during the Great Migration.
Her playlist features:
“It’s Tight Like That” 1928, Jimmy Noone. You can hear piano, banjo, trumpet, clarinet, trombone. It follows that traditional jazz formula of highlighting individual instruments. He showcases the New Orleans sound – he was born on a plantation near New Orleans and played for a band in Storyville before headed to Chicago. It’s a Fox Trot.
“It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got that Swing)” composed by Duke Ellington, recorded in 1932 (he was working on the song in 1931 while in Chicago) A jazz standard, it foreshadowed the swing era that marked the 1930s. The original recording is a Fox Trot, but a fast one. Vocal by Ivie Anderson, who sang when Ellington performed. I didn’t notice this at first, but it’s recorded on Brunswick Records in Chicago (sometimes referred to as Brunswick Race Records)
“Marie,” (1937) written by Irving Berlin, recorded first by Tommy Dorsey. It was the last song to be played by Walter Barnes’ band in the Rhythm Club as people scrambled to try and save themselves. While it’s a song in which a man wonders if the woman he kissed will remember it and will surrender to his love. But one of the lyrics takes on a double meaning after the fire. What people will recall is tragedy and loss and trauma.
Marie, the dawn is breaking
Marie, you'll soon be waking
(Ooh, Marie)
To find you heart is aching
And tears will fall as you recall
(And tears will fall)
(I can’t help but think of the desperation inside of the Rhythm Club as it is playing.)
Part II: Suggest a pairing of songs that provide a contrast or set of perspectives on an idea or moment.
“When It’s Sleepy Time Down South,” (Recorded in 1931) Louis Armstrong, It’s a migration story. It also plays on stereotypical plantation themes. Mammy and “darkies are singing” and while it won him white fans, it angered African Americans. The lyrics were changed in the 1950s. The line with the “darkies” becomes “the folks are crooning.” (This one might also have been in Part I)
Contrasted with Billie Holiday’s version of “Strange Fruit” (Recorded in 1939) which tells a completely different story about the South. She didn’t write it, of course, but her interpretation of the lyrics is what makes it so powerful:
Bonus:
Walter Barnes’s version of “It’s Tight Like That” (1929) Brunswick Records, is far more upbeat than Jimmy Noone’s version. Also one of the few Barnes recorded.
Ella Fitzgerald, because she’s Ella Fitzgerald and her interpretation of jazz lyrics is still the best to me. “A-Tisket, A-Tasket” (recorded in 1938) was her first hit song, while she sang lead for the Chick Webb orchestra. He discovered her at the Apollo amateur contest. In 1942, the First she performed “A-Tisket, A-Tasket” in her first ever screen role on Abbott and Costello’s Ride ‘Em Cowboy.
Next Episode

HISTORY MIXTAPES - A Stealth Labor History of Mixtapes with Austin McCoy (Part I)
In this episode, historian Katherine Rye Jewell and historian Austin McCoy use their parents' record collections to interrogate the personal meanings of various music formats—from vinyl to cassettes to CDs—and their influence on their musical sensibilities . They discuss the role of mixtapes in hip hop and punk cultures, their significance in creating connections within underground scenes, and their transformation into digital playlists. The conversation highlights how their parents' music collections influenced their tastes, and how mixtapes served as a medium for artistic and emotional expression. The episode also explores the historical context of mixtape culture, its evolution, and its commercial aspects. Jewel and McCoy reflect on the emotional bonds forged through these music formats, encouraging listeners to share their own mixtape experiences.
This is part I of our conversation with Austin McCoy, and check out our collectively created playlist.
Also quoted in this episode:
Diamond, Michael, and Adam Horovitz. Beastie Boys Book. New York: Spiegel & Grau, 2018.
Masters, Marc. High Bias: The Distorted History of the Cassette Tape. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2023.
History Mixtapes - HISTORY MIXTAPES - Poverty and Homelessness with Dave Hitchcock
Transcript
I'll admit, doing these interviews with historians about how they incorporate music into their work has been eye opening for me. One of the reasons I started this podcast is because I am very interested in what the creative process looks like for historians, especially as I have lost touch with my own wellspring of creativity in recent months. I'm releasing this conversation with Dave Hitchcock as fifth in the series because it provides an exce
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