Down by the river kid game

FunctionsClapping Game, Hand and Finger Play, Language Play and Physical Play

Down by the Banks is a clapping game played by (normally ) girls.

Details

At School 16

Players: 3
Girls
Age: 7-8
Props: None

At School 13

Players: 8+
Girls
Age: 11

Down by the Banks
Down by the banks of the hanky pank
Where the bull frogs jump from plank to plank
With a hip, hop belly flop
Watch yourself or you'll be OUT!

At School 12

Players: 5
Girls
Age: 11 -12
Props: None

The players sit cross-legged in a circle, with their hands resting on their knees, palms up, and with their right hands resting on top of the person on their right's left hand. Someone starts the rhyme by saying 'Down', and bringing their right hand across to hit the player on their left's hand. That player does the same action with her right hand to the next player, and it goes around the circle in time with the beat of the rhyme. When the rhyme ends, if the last person's hand is hit on the word 'out', they are out. If they manage to avoid being hit, the person who tried to hit them is out instead.
The rhyme is:

Down by the banks of the hanky-panky
Where the bullfrogs jump from bank to banky,
With a hip, hop, crackle and a pop,
Hip, hop, crackle and a pop,
O-U-T spells out!

Played at

[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PtnTFj9xjKw[/embedyt]

Being taken away from “The Motherland” caused Africans to be stripped of many things. What remained with them was their culture, their religion/folklore, and their music. They even took the European traditions that were forced upon them and conformed them to the “African aesthetic ideals”. Africans always seemed to find a way to make it through, even in the toughest times. One of the ways they were able to do so was through music.

Even in Africa, it was custom to sing while one worked, so its only natural that they carried that practice with them to the New World. They used songs in order to keep a steady pace when working. Many things like unbroken rhythms and call and response phrases were ubiquitous in work songs. These patterns carried on within the children, who then made up their own songs in order to pass the time and have fun. These songs also featured unbroken rhythms and call and response phrases. It also introduced pauses in the songs that were usually filled with rhythm clapping or body movement of some sort.

When Europeans took Africans from their homes, they took them from many different places. It was soon discovered that although they did not know the same language or have the same religious practices, the music that they sang and danced to were quite similar. They all had a similar foundation, and each culture provided different styles to that same foundation which caused African and African American culture to evolve even more.

No one made money off of these hand games, they were used as a source of entertainment for young children. These games did, however, build a foundation that rhythm in many songs is based upon.

Even today, many children still play what is now known as “Hand Games”. I never realized how diverse the lyrics to the hand games had become. Growing up, I thought the version I sang was the one that everyone in the world knew because everyone around me knew it. Even when I moved to different parts of the state of Georgia, the lyrics were about the same except for maybe a couple of words. Coming to college was the first eye-opener that happened for me in regard to these games. When I would reminisce about my childhood and the games we played, my friends would join in. Almost all the games started the same way. The foundation of the songs was the same, but as we began to go further into the song, we realized that the lyrics were drastically different.

We all laughed and were quite confused when we heard the different variations of the song. Each one of us grew up with a specific way to sing these songs and to see them performed in a totally different way actually shocked us. A friend and I who were from the same state, but not from the same neighborhoods and had just met in college, still grew up learning the exact same lyrics to these songs. This shocked us even more because even people who had never met still knew the same lyrics to these songs.

One of my favorite games to play was called “Down by the River”. The song was quite silly but was loved by all. The lyrics were:

Down by the river, Hanky Panky/ Bullfrog jumps from bank to bank/ I said, “Eeps, Iyeps, Opes, Oops”/Chilly willy ding dong/ Yo mama smell like King Kong…. and so on and so forth.

I asked a friend who was from a different state to tell me her version of the lyrics to the exact same song. The lyrics were:

Down by the Riverside, Hanky Panky/ Said, “A bullfrog, a bullfrog”/ “Your momma stanky”/ Said a “Fee, Fi, Fo, Fum”/ pass it to the bullfrog…. 

Although the lyrics were different, the hand motions and rhythm was still the same. This discovery confirmed the belief that African culture has never ceased to run within our traditions, and even in our blood from something as simple as a game song.

By Candace Carter and Shalyn Carthan

How do you play down by the river game?

The game's song is sang to a specific rhythm as participants clap their hand on the palm in their other hand. This clap is passed around the circle until the song ends, where the person who the song ended on must leave the circle. Circle closes in and the song and clapping starts again.

What is the game where you sit in a circle and slap hands?

Ninja is a fun off-beat game involving each participant. Participants form a circle and on the count of three strikes a ninja pose and freeze in the position. The object of the game is to get each every person out by slapping the hands of the opponents around you.

Where the bullfrogs jump from bank to bank game?

Down by the banks of the Hanky Panky, Where the bull frogs jump from bank to banky, With a flip, flop, flippity, flop, Leap off a lily pad and go KERPLOP!