Unsolved:Run Devil Run oil

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Run Devil Run oil is one of several charm oils used by Mexican curandero folk healers supposedly to ward off bad luck and remove jinxes.[1] Other names include "Vete Diablo", "Corre Diablo", "Contra Enemigo", "Keep Away Evil" oil, and so on. The oil was mentioned in a Los Angeles Times article in April 1992, which described the sale in a botánica of bottles of "Go Away Evil" oil and "Run Devil Run" bath oil – credited with keeping gang members away.[2]

The oil came to more widespread prominence in 1999 after Paul McCartney wrote a song called "Run Devil Run" and used the song as the title track for his album Run Devil Run.[3]

References

  1. Austin, San Antonio & the Hill Country. Lonely Planet. 2004. p. 163. https://archive.org/details/lonelyplanetaust00sara. "It's basically a religious and Santeria superstore (mixed with a bit of voodoo), selling items to rid you of the problem of your choice: Get-Rich candles; Do-As-1-Say floor wash; Jinx Removal air-freshener; Run-Devil-Run and Get-out-of-Jail oil; ..." 
  2. Miles Corwn (20 April 1992). "A Botanica Is Ready to Help When Evil Spirits Come Calling". LA Times. http://articles.latimes.com/1992-04-20/local/me-316_1_evil-spirits. "Limon buys a tiny bottle of oil with "Go Away Evil" emblazoned on the label to sprinkle on her neighbor's doorstep. ... She buys a bottle of "Run Devil Run" bath oil for her son, to keep gang members away." 
  3. Howard Sounes (2010). Fab: An Intimate Life of Paul McCartney. p. 496. ISBN 9780007237067. https://archive.org/details/fabintimatelifeo0000soun/page/496. "... most of them obscure, with a couple of newly written tracks including the title song, 'Run Devil Run', inspired by a voodoo remedy Paul had picked up in Atlanta to ward off evildoers, thieves and liars."