Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Music / StaggerLee

Go To

1->''"Police officer, how can it be?\
2You can 'rest everybody but cruel Stack O' Lee\
3That bad man, oh, cruel Stack O' Lee"''
4-->-- Mississippi John Hurt, "Stack O' Lee Blues"
5
6"Stagger Lee," also known as "Stack O' Lee," "Stackerlee," "Stagolee," etc.; is an American folk song. The song is a MurderBallad about a badass named Stagger Lee, who murders a man named Billy.
7
8The song dates back at least to the 1890's. The lyrics were first published in 1911, and the song was first recorded in 1923. Mississippi John Hurt's mellow blues version, titled "Stack O' Lee Blues" and recorded 1928, is considered a definitive early version. Music/LloydPrice's upbeat rhythm & blues version became a number one hit in 1958, solidifying the song's status as a standard.
9
10Versions of "Stagger Lee" have been recorded by a veritable who's who of popular music, including Music/DukeEllington, Music/CabCalloway, Music/WoodyGuthrie, Music/BobDylan, Music/ElvisPresley, Ike and Music/TinaTurner, Music/JamesBrown, Wilson Pickett, Music/GratefulDead, Music/TheClash, Music/NickCave, Music/{{Beck|Musician}}, and Music/TheBlackKeys.
11
12The song appears to be loosely based on a murder that took place in 1895. On Christmas Day in UsefulNotes/StLouis, "Stag" Lee Sheldon and William Lyons ("Billy"), who both had violent reputations, got into an argument. During the argument, Billy apparently took Stag's hat, prompting Stag to fatally shoot Billy.
13
14The story is told differently in different versions of the song. Stagger Lee is always depicted as an extremely dangerous criminal, who is sometimes an {{Antihero}} and sometimes a villain. Stag and Billy's argument is often related to gambling, in which Billy may have cheated. Stag's hat, a Stetson, is often mentioned; it is either stolen or won by Billy. Some versions state that the authorities were too afraid of Stagger Lee to arrest him; in others, he is hanged, sometimes followed by an epilogue where he usurps hell from the Devil.
15
16Stagger Lee has entered American folklore as an {{Archetype}} of a black badass, who would influence {{Blaxploitation}}, GangstaRap and parts of the Black Power movement.
17
18----
19!!Tropes:
20
21* AintTooProudToBeg: In at least one version, Billy pleads that Lee not shoot him because he has "three little children and a very sickly wife".
22* AntiHero: Despite his murderous ways, Stagger Lee is often an implicitly or explictly heroic figure. [[https://sites.google.com/site/thestaggerleefiles/stagger-lee-from-mythic-blues-ballad-to-ultimate-rock-n-record According to James P. Hauser]], this is due to his defiance of white authority.
23* {{Archetype}}: Stagger Lee is one of the ScaryBlackMan[=/=]AntiHero variety (the latter more in the context of black rebellion against white authority than anything else).
24* AssholeVictim: Billy is often this, as he tries to either cheat or rob Stagger Lee.
25* BerserkButton: You don't take Stagger Lee's hat from him.
26* {{Bowdlerise}}: Lloyd Price recorded a family-friendly version of the song for ''Series/AmericanBandstand'', in which Stagger Lee and Billy are two friends who fight over a woman and then make up.
27* ClusterFBomb: One particularly obscene version, originally taken down by a folk song collector from a New York prison inmate named "Big Stick" in 1967, and recorded by Johnny Otis' band Snatch and the Poontangs in 1969 and by Music/NickCave and the Bad Seeds in 1995.
28* DarkerAndEdgier: Music/NickCave's version, compared both to Lloyd Price's standard version, and to Johnny Otis' much more humorous take on the same lyrics. That said, some early versions are very bleak.
29* DealWithTheDevil: In some versions, Stagger Lee's badassery is due to this.
30* DeathByAdaptation: In many versions of the song, Stagger Lee is hanged, or shot by the police. The real Stag Lee Shelton was sentenced to 25 years in prison for the murder. He was eventually paroled, then imprisoned again, and he died in jail in 1912.
31* DepravedBisexual: In the Music/NickCave version, Stag goes home with Billy's wife to have sex with her, then rapes and kills Billy when he shows up.
32* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: Music/NickCave often adds a verse when he performs this song live in which the Devil shows up to take Stagger Lee to Hell, whereupon Stag simply [[BookEnds "puts four holes in his motherfuckin' head!"]] Badass doesn't even come close to describing that one.
33* DisproportionateRetribution: Stagger Lee kills Billy for cheating in a game and/or stealing his hat. Lampshaded by Mississippi John Hurt:
34-->"Gentleman's of the jury, what do you think of that?\
35Stack O' Lee killed Billy de Lyon about a five-dollar Stetson hat"
36* GamblingBrawl: In many versions of the song, the dispute between Stagger Lee and Billy Lyon begins with an argument over a dice game. The versions vary over whether Billy was actually cheating or whether Stag was just a sore loser.
37* HellHasNewManagement: Stagger Lee ends up as the new ruler of Hell in some versions. In live performances, Music/NickCave sometimes adds a verse in live performances in which Stag doesn't even go to Hell: When the Devil comes to collect his soul, [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu Stag simply shoots him.]]
38* HistoricalBadassUpgrade: Little is known about the real Stag Lee Shelton, but it's safe to assume that Stagger Lee's legendary badassery is ''[[{{Understatement}} slightly]]'' exaggerated in the song, especially in the versions where he takes on the Devil after killing Billy.
39* HistoricalBiographySong: For a lenient value of "historical", anyway. [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Shelton Lee Shelton]] really was convicted for the murder of Billy Lyon in 1897.
40* InTheStyleOf: The song has been recorded by [[http://www.staggerlee.com/pgs/the-list.php over 400 artists]] in a wide range of genres, including blues, folk, rhythm & blues, funk, pop, ska, disco, and rock.
41* KarmaHoudini: Stagger Lee, in versions where he escapes punishment. Billy's theft of his hat, on the other hand, never goes unpunished.
42* LyricalDissonance: Lloyd Price's version sounds very cheerful for a song about a murder.
43* MurderBallad: A classic example when it isn't bowdlerized (as in the [[ExecutiveMeddling version performed on ''American Bandstand'' by Lloyd Price]], in which [[{{Disneyfication}} Stag and Billy simply argue then end up the best of friends.]]
44* MyFavoriteShirt: By most accounts, Billy Lyon got shot for messing with Lee's prized Stetson hat.
45* ScaryBlackMan: The TropeCodifier, with a powerful presence in American culture to this day.
46* SequelSong: Dr. John's version is set to the same tune as Lloyd Price's, and tells the second half of the traditional story that Price didn't have time for.
47* SoreLoser: Stag, in the gambling versions that don't make it clear that Billy was cheating.
48* SoulBrotha: One of the prototypes.
49* TheSociopath: Stagger Lee, in Music/NickCave's version.
50* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: Many versions embellish or otherwise alter the historical record of "Stag" Lee Shelton's crime, whether it be the [[{{Bowdlerize}} sanitized]] Lloyd Price version, or the sexually explicit, profane prison-derived lyrics Music/NickCave employs.
51* VillainProtagonist: Stagger Lee, in versions where he is clearly the villain. Music/NickCave's version is a notable example.

Top