"Little Brown Jug" is a song written in 1869 by Joseph Eastburn Winner, originally published in Philadelphia with the author listed as Winner's middle name "Eastburn." It was originally a drinking song. It remained well known as a folk song into the early 20th century. Like many songs which make reference to alcohol, it enjoyed new popularity during the Prohibition era. In 1939, bandleader Glenn Miller recorded and broadcast his swing instrumental arrangement of the tune with great success, and the number became one of the best known orchestrations of the American Big Band era. The same melody was used for the song "My Ding-a-Ling" written by Dave Bartholomew, which became a Number 1 hit in 1972 for Chuck Berry.
1939 Glenn Miller recording
In 1939, Glenn Miller and His Orchestra released a hit version of the song on RCA Bluebird, as an A side 78 single, B-10286-A, in a new arrangement by Bill Finegan backed with "Pavanne". The recording was an early chart hit for Glenn Miller. The song was performed in Glenn Miller's Carnegie Hall concert that year and became a staple of the Glenn Miller Orchestra repertoire and a classic of the Big Band era. The personnel on the Glenn Miller recording: Saxes: Hal McIntyre, Tex Beneke, Wilbur Schwartz, Stanley Aronson, Al Klink; Trumpets: Bob Price, R. D. McMickle, Legh Knowles; Trombones: Glenn Miller, Paul Tanner, Al Mastren; Piano: Chummy MacGregor; String Bass: Rowland Bundock; Guitar: Allen Reuss; Drums: Moe Purtill. The song was featured in and was central to the plot of the 1953 Universal Pictures film biography The Glenn Miller Story starring James Stewart and June Allyson. The Universal International Orchestra under the direction of Joseph Gershenson released a recording of the song from The Glenn Miller Story soundtrack as a single backed with "A String of Pearls" on Decca Records in the U.S. and on Brunswick Records in the UK in 1954.
The song's lyrics are about a man and his wife and their hard life due to alcoholism. The tone and tune, however, are bright and cheerful. The first verse of the song is:
I tell you what we'd lots of fun. The Chorus of the song goes: "Ha ha ha, You and me, Little Brown Jug, Don't I love Thee" As a children's song, the lyrics are often changed. Sometimes a verse is modified to fit the melody and rhythm of the tune. In modern versions of the song, the language is often updated to eliminate the archaic second-person pronoun "thee" so that it reads: "Ha ha ha, yes it's true, Little Brown Jug, how I love you" In the 1948 Famous StudiosScreen Song animated short titled "Little Brown Jug", a "bouncing ball" cartoon, it is sung with the music credited to Winston Sharples and entirely new lyrics by Buddy Kaye.
Other recordings
The song has been recorded by the following performers in addition to those listed above:
Joe Biviano, his Accordion and Rhythm Sextette released a recording of the song as a 78 on Sonora Records.
Arthur Godfrey released a version with lyrics on Crown Records accompanied by Archie Bleyer and his Orchestra.
Art Van Damme released a version as a 78 on Capitol Records as 57-570.
Louise Massey and the Westerneers released it as a Polka instrumental on Columbia as 20245.
Lenny Dee released the song on Decca as an organ solo.
John Kirby and his Orchestra released it on Okeh Records.
Chubby Parker released "Little Brown Jug" as a 78 on Silvertone as 25013.
Ken Griffin released the song on Rondo Records.
Stuart Robertson released it on HMV.
Phil Cardew and his Corn Huskers as a square dance on Parlophone.
Frank Crumit released it on HMV.
George Wade on RCA Victor as a square dance.
Bluebird Foreign Band on RCA Bluebird.
The Billy May Orchestra released the song on Capitol.
Uncle Josh in the cylinder record "Uncle Josh's Huskin' Bee" says after a few lines are sung from it,"I always liked that little brown jug".
The chorus lyrics are used in a modified form in the song "The Coral Room" by Kate Bush on the albumAerial, referring to a song her mother sang in the kitchen: "Little brown jug, don't I love thee/Ho ho ho, hee, hee, hee."
Teresa Ellen Talley adapted the tune into a commercial jingle for Dynamo laundry detergent in 1975.