The A-side was "Georgia Grind", whilst "Dead Man Blues" written by Jelly Roll Morton was on the flip side.
[3] In the same year, other versions were cut by Perry Bradford's Georgia Strutters, Caroline Johnson, and by Tom Morris and his Seven Hot Babies.
[1] In 1933, Lucille Bogan returned to New York, and, apparently to conceal her identity, began recording as 'Bessie Jackson' for the Banner label of ARC.
"[14] This take included the full salacious lyrics, written by Bud Allen, to turn the number into a dirty blues standard.
[28] In April 1928, Henry Williams and Eddie Anthony reworked the song and released it as "Georgia Crawl" on Columbia Records.
Considerably less successful, it was nevertheless recorded by the State Street Ramblers with Jimmy Blythe (1931)[3] and also the Memphis Night Hawks with Roy Palmer (1932).