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{{TuneAnnotation
|f_annotation='''TITUS' REEL.'''  American, Reel (2/4 time). A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB. Clem Titus was a blackface minstrel performer
|f_annotation='''TITUS' REEL.'''  American, Reel (2/4 time). A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB. Clem Titus was a blackface minstrel performer whose name  appears in '''Coes Album of Jigs and Reels''' (1876) and '''Ryan's Mammoth Collection''' (1883), where a few tunes are attributed to him in each collection. There is very little information about Titus, but he and another contributor to the Coes and Howe collections, [[biography:Zeke Backus]], are mentioned in Col. Thomas Allston Brown's articles in the '''New York Clipper''' (22 June 1889) and his volume '''A History of the New York Stage''', vol. 1 (1903, pp. 361-362), in an entry detailing "White's Melodeon", "the first cheap theater" in New York. It opened in 1846 at 53 Bowery, burned om 1847, was rebuilt, and burned a second time in 1849, after which a five story house was erected on the site.
<blockquote>
''Negro minstrelsy by White's Serenaders was its principal attraction...Among those who became famous''
''in the minstrel world afterwards, and who appeared here, were Master Juba, Neil Hall, tambourine,''
''Bill Smith, bones (Smith was noted for his large mouth); Fran Stanton, banjo; Clem Titus, violin jig''
''player, and Zeke Backus, violin and reel accompanist.''
</blockquote>
Titus died in Apalachacola (presumably Apalachicola, Florida, near Tallahassee) sometime before September, 1862, when his name appears in a list of deceased minstrel performs in the '''New York Clipper''' (6 September 1862). See also James Buckley's "[[Titus Banjo Jig]]," likely associated with Clem. 
|f_printed_sources=George H. Coes ('''Coes Album of Jigs and Reels, something new, for professional and amateur violinists, leaders of orchestras, quadrille bands, and clog, reel and jig dancers; consisting of a Grand Collection of entirely New and Original Clog-Hornpipes, Reels, jigs, Scotch Reels, Irish Reels and Jigs, Waltzes, Walk-Arounds, etc.'''), 1876; p. 28.
|f_printed_sources=George H. Coes ('''Coes Album of Jigs and Reels, something new, for professional and amateur violinists, leaders of orchestras, quadrille bands, and clog, reel and jig dancers; consisting of a Grand Collection of entirely New and Original Clog-Hornpipes, Reels, jigs, Scotch Reels, Irish Reels and Jigs, Waltzes, Walk-Arounds, etc.'''), 1876; p. 28.
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 03:55, 25 March 2021


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X:1 T:Titus’ Reel C:Clem Titus M:2/4 L:1/8 R:Reel B:Coes Album of Jigs and Reels, something new, for professional and amateur violinists, B:leaders of orchestras, quadrille bands, and clog, reel and jig dancers; consisting of a B:Grand Collection of entirely New and Original Clog-Hornpipes, Reels, jigs, B:Scotch Reels, Irish Reels and Jigs, Waltzes, Walk-Arounds, etc. (1876, p. 28) N:Coes performed with the San Francisco Minstrels in California from 1852 to 1859. Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:A e/d/|c/B/A/c/ B/A/G/B/|A/c/e/g/ a/e/f/d/|1 c/B/A/c/ B/A/G/B/|A/c/e/g/ ae/d/:|2d/c/B/A/ g/A/B/c/|B/A/G/B/ A|| |:e/f/|=g>a g/f/e/d/|c/d/e/f/ =g(3e/f/g/|a>b a/=g/e/f/|g/e/d/B/ A/d/e/f/| =g>a g/f/e/d/|^c/d/e/f/ =g(3e/f/g/|a>b a/=g/e/f/|=g/e/d/B/ A:|



TITUS' REEL. American, Reel (2/4 time). A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB. Clem Titus was a blackface minstrel performer whose name appears in Coes Album of Jigs and Reels (1876) and Ryan's Mammoth Collection (1883), where a few tunes are attributed to him in each collection. There is very little information about Titus, but he and another contributor to the Coes and Howe collections, biography:Zeke Backus, are mentioned in Col. Thomas Allston Brown's articles in the New York Clipper (22 June 1889) and his volume A History of the New York Stage, vol. 1 (1903, pp. 361-362), in an entry detailing "White's Melodeon", "the first cheap theater" in New York. It opened in 1846 at 53 Bowery, burned om 1847, was rebuilt, and burned a second time in 1849, after which a five story house was erected on the site.

Negro minstrelsy by White's Serenaders was its principal attraction...Among those who became famous in the minstrel world afterwards, and who appeared here, were Master Juba, Neil Hall, tambourine, Bill Smith, bones (Smith was noted for his large mouth); Fran Stanton, banjo; Clem Titus, violin jig player, and Zeke Backus, violin and reel accompanist.

Titus died in Apalachacola (presumably Apalachicola, Florida, near Tallahassee) sometime before September, 1862, when his name appears in a list of deceased minstrel performs in the New York Clipper (6 September 1862). See also James Buckley's "Titus Banjo Jig," likely associated with Clem.


Additional notes



Printed sources : - George H. Coes (Coes Album of Jigs and Reels, something new, for professional and amateur violinists, leaders of orchestras, quadrille bands, and clog, reel and jig dancers; consisting of a Grand Collection of entirely New and Original Clog-Hornpipes, Reels, jigs, Scotch Reels, Irish Reels and Jigs, Waltzes, Walk-Arounds, etc.), 1876; p. 28.






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