The song's lyrics discuss popular health foods of the time. The verses make "absurd" claims about the supposed benefits of these foods,[12] and the chorus runs:
Black strap molasses and the wheat germ bread Makes you live so long you wish you were dead You add a little yogurt and you'll be well fed On the black strap molasses and the wheat germ bread.[13]
One contemporary review interpreted the lyrics as referring specifically to the "Live Longer" diet advocated by nutritionist Gayelord Hauser.[14] Hauser, labeled a "quack" by the American Medical Association, gained widespread popularity in the mid-twentieth century promoting "wonder foods" including blackstrap molasses, wheat germ, and yogurt, as well as brewer's yeast and powdered milk.[15] He was known as a nutrition guru to many Hollywood celebrities.[15]
Release and reception
The version of Black Strap Molasses featuring Wyman, Durante, Marx, and Kaye was released in August 1951.[4] It was released as the B-side of a single, along with a recording of "How D' Ye Do and Shake Hands", from Disney's then-recent film Alice in Wonderland, sung by the same "all-star" cast.[14] As part of a promotion campaign for the single, Decca Records partnered with Balanced Foods, Inc., a company associated with Hauser's diets, to provide DJs and record distributors with pint bottles of blackstrap molasses and loaves of wheat germ bread.[10]Black Strap Molasses was catalogued in 78rpm record format as Decca 27748, and in 45rpm format as Decca 9-27748.[5]
The song was a hit in the US,[16] reaching number 29 on the overall Billboard charts on September 22, 1951.[3][17][18]Billboard magazine's staff review called it "catchy" and a "sock performance", giving it an aggregated rating of "excellent".[14] Film writer Allan Eyles wrote that the song represented Marx's "greatest success as a singer".[6]
The song was banned by some radio networks because it was perceived as containing "free plugs" for molasses and the patent medicineHadacol; ABC agreed to program it only after a reference to Hadacol was removed.[7]CBS banned it entirely, on the grounds that it contained "medical advice" which could lead listeners to believe that molasses was "good for sexual debility, insomnia, nerves and underweight condition."[7] A different version of Black Strap Molasses, a "rhythm paean to Gaylord Hauser" by Tommy Dorsey and his orchestra, had been released earlier and reviewed in Billboard as "a rambling, rather dull slice."[19] Dorsey's version had been banned from programming by NBC and ABC because, representatives said, the song mentioned commercial products in competition with the networks' sponsors.[4]
The single was released in the UK, catalogued as Brunswick 04794, and later re-released on several record and CD collections.[20]
^Yahn, M. A. (2007). The Music of the Marx Brothers: A Bio-discography of the Works of Groucho, Harpo, Chico, Gummo, and Zeppo Marx. PublishAmerica. p. 25. ISBN978-1-4241-6971-9.