Digah's Stomp
Thomas 'Fats' Waller Lyrics


We have lyrics for these tracks by Thomas 'Fats' Waller:


Ain't Misbehavin' No one to talk with All by myself No one to walk…


The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos

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Comments from YouTube:

FlyingBanjosInc

Oh man, this song is in Eraserhead. When Henry's walking home, through the piles of dirt. Good on you Fats.

jampro2002

Fats Waller is probably my greastest music hero. Most people don't realise how accomplished he was on the organ as well as the piano. Quite staggering how he managed to produce so much amazing stuff in his short life.

Phileas Fogg

I completly agree!

Johnny W

The restoral is uncanny--listen with a sub-woofer, what a gorgeous powerful instrument!

Matt199

YES! The song from Eraserhead that has eluded me for YEARS! I listened to so many Fats songs but never heard this one. I was beginning to think it was not a Fats song and just a few seconds long pieced together tune David Lynch made with a Fats type "feel". Or an organ tune by some obscure and now mostly forgotten 20s organ player that I would never find.

E.PLUMBUS UNUM

The Pipe Organ jazz that fats recorded was done in Camden NJ back in the late 1920's. RCA owned a building that had been a church and the organ heard in this and other recordings was in that building. I live about 12 miles from Camden and I will tell you that there are still parts of this once great city that look as though they could have been right out of David Lynch's Erasorhead. Ironically, Mr Lynch lived right across the River in Philadelphia {my home town) while in college. There's no doubt these areas influenced his classic film. There's something almost timeless about this music. You can certainly place it in it respective place in history but if you disregard that aspect of it, it has an almost otherworldly air about it.

Bob Jones

Many thanks, I used to have an album of Mr Waller's pipe organ material, wonderful.

BlueBlackJazz

This piece is called "Digah's Stomp" and was recorded in 1927.

Lembit Punapart

Waller is brilliant.

fatsfan70

I like this very much indeed, thank you. Can you give any more detail please - date/venue/was it ever issued - it seems to have slipped through the discographers net. His son Maurice's book or Alyn Shipton's don't mention it. And I second jampro2002's comment!

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