The Auctioneer

"The Auctioneer"
Single by Leroy Van Dyke
Released 1956 (1956)
Genre Country
Writer(s) Leroy Van Dyke
Buddy Black
Leroy Van Dyke singles chronology
"The Auctioneer"
(1956)
"Walk On By"
(1961)

"The Auctioneer" (also known as "The Auctioneer's Song") is a 1956 country song by Leroy Van Dyke.[1] It was co-written with Buddy Black.[2]

The song is notable for its interspersal of auction chants.

Origin

Van Dyke was inspired to write the song from his own experiences as an auctioneer[3] and those of his second cousin, Ray Sims.[4]

He wrote it while stationed in Korea during the Korean War, and first performed it to troops on the same bill as Marilyn Monroe.[3] After finishing his service, Van Dyke entered the song in a Chicago talent contest.[3] It gained him a record contract with Dot Records. "The Auctioneer" subsequently topped the pop music chart,[3] selling 2.5 million copies.[5]

Storyline

The song talks of a young Arkansas boy who would skip school and visit a local auction barn. Becoming mesmerized by the auction chant, he decides he wants to be an auctioneer, regularly practicing the chant behind the family barn.

Though his parents are initially unhappy with his career choice, eventually they relent, but (not wanting their family name to be ruined by poor auctioneering skill) they send him to auction school to properly learn the trade.

He returns home a full-fledged auctioneer. Over time, he becomes "the best in all the land", having so much business that he ends up buying "a plane to get around".

Covers

"The Auctioneer" has been covered by numerous artists, most notably Lynn Anderson, and by Steve Goodman, who played it live while opening for Steve Martin. It was also included on his posthumous album, No Big Surprise. In the year 1990, the song was performed by Bert Southwood, in cooperation with Playtown Sound Audio Services.

Other versions

Czech singer-songwriter Michal Tučný adapted the lyrics and translated it into the Czech language under the name Prodavač ("Shop assistant") sometimes between 1974 and 1980.[6] He describes his childhood admiration of a shop assistant in a local store, followed by his own entry into this profession, from which he ultimately turned to music. Finally he concludes, that in Year 2000 there may be no LP records or gramophones, but trade will flourish anyway, and he (half-jokingly) dreams about becoming a store manager.[7]

Footnotes

Sources

  • American Film Institute (1997), The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States: Feature Films, 1961-1970, 2, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-20970-2 
  • Mays, James C (2006), Savvy Guide to Buying Collector Cars at Auction, Indy Tech Publishing, ISBN 0-7906-1322-0 
  • Murrells, Joseph (1978), The Book of Golden Discs, London: Barrie & Jenkins, ISBN 0-214-20480-4 
  • Peppiatt, Francesca (2004), Country Music's Most Wanted: The Top 10 Book of Cheatin' Hearts, Honky-Tonk Tragedies, and Music City Oddities, Dulles, VA: Brassey's, ISBN 1-57488-593-6 
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