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Don't You Lie to Me

"Don't You Lie to Me"
Don't You Lie to Me single cover.jpg
Single by Tampa Red
B-side "Anna Lou Blues"
Released 1940 (1940)
Format 10-inch 78 rpm record
Recorded Chicago, May 10, 1940
Genre Blues
Length 2:55
Label Bluebird (no. B-8654)
Writer(s) Tampa Red a.k.a. Hudson Whittaker
Tampa Red singles chronology
"It Hurts Me Too"
(1940)
"Don't You Lie to Me"
(1940)
"She Loves Just Right"
(1941)

"Don't You Lie to Me" (sometimes called "I Get Evil") is a blues song recorded by Tampa Red in 1940. It became a standard of the blues, with recordings by various artists. The song was also interpreted by rock and roll pioneers Fats Domino and Chuck Berry.

"Don't You Lie to Me" was recorded by Tampa Red approximately midpoint in his prolific recording career, representing the transition from his earlier hokum recordings to his later early Chicago-blues combo style. This was the same period when he began playing the electric guitar and recorded his best-known blues classics, including "It Hurts Me Too", "Love with a Feeling", and "Anna Lou Blues", the B-side of "Don't You Lie to Me".

The song is a mid-tempo twelve-bar blues that features Tampa Red playing jazz-inflected single-note guitar fills behind his vocals. Blind John Davis provided the piano accompaniment with an unidentified bass player and, as a throwback to his earlier days, Red added a twelve-bar kazoo solo. Although many later versions are credited to other artists, they usually use some, if not most, of Tampa Red's lyrics:

There're two kind of people I just can't stand
And that's a lying woman and a sneakin' man
So don't you lie to me, don't you lie to me
Because it makes me mad, and I get evil as a man can be

Fats Domino recorded "Don't You Lie to Me" early in his career in 1951 (Imperial 5123). He used most of Tampa Red's lyrics and, although there is a full backing band, his trademark piano accompaniment dominates the recording. Domino received sole credit for the song, as did Chuck Berry when he recorded a roll and roll version for his 1961 album New Juke-Box Hits.The Rolling Stones recorded Berry's version in 1964, which was not released until their Metamorphosis album in 1975; in 1972 they performed the song in concert. The Pretty Things also recorded Berry's version for their 1965 self-titled debut album.


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