Annotation:Captain Jinks: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "[[{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Tune properties and standard notation]] ---- <p><font face="garamond, serif" size="4"> '''CAPTAIN JINKS/JINX'''. AKA and see "Down the Ohio." American (origina...") |
No edit summary |
||
(21 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{TuneAnnotation | |||
|f_tune_annotation_title=Captain Jinks | |||
|f_annotation='''CAPTAIN JINKS/JINX'''. AKA and see - {{#show:Captain Jinks|?Is also known as}}. American (originally), Canadian; Single Jig and Air. USA; Pa., New York State: Canada, Ottawa Valley. G Major (Bronner, Ford, Guntharp, S. Johnson, Roche, Shaw): D Major (Bayard, Begin, Phillips, Sweet). Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Begin, Shaw, Sweet): AAB (Guntharp, Phillips): ABB (Bayard): AABA (S. Johnson): AABB (Bronner, Ford, Roche). The title is taken from a popular song of the 19th century, "Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines," which Sigmund Spaeth ('''A History of Popular Music in America''') states was composed by an English music hall singer named William Horace Lingard who had emigrated to America. Lingard was the manager of Wood's Theatre in New York City..."a protean man who was an accomplished female impersonator, the lyricist for 'Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines', and, in 1867, the much acclaimed renderer of Lingard's Great Statue Song, a quick-change routine in which, with only a few seconds' pause between metamorphoses, he transformed himself from Mayor John T. Hoffman to Governor Horatio Seymour to Horace Greeley to Benjamin F. Butler to Ulysses S. Grant to President Andrew Johnson." (E. J. Khan, '''The Merry Partners: the Age and Stage of Harrigan & Hart''', 1955, p. 152). Confirming that Lingard wrote the lyrics, Denes Agay ('''Best Loved Songs of the American People''', pp. 156-157) however, credits the music to a T. Maclagan. In another volume ('''Reed 'Em and Weep''', 1927, p. 63) Spaeth refers to a play called '''Captain Jinks''' in which Ethel Barrymore made her debut as a star in 1901. | |||
'''CAPTAIN JINKS/JINX'''. AKA and see | |||
<blockquote> | Musicologist Sam Bayard (1991) traces the tune "ultimately (and indirectly)" back to a piece called "[[Mill Oh (The)|The Mill Mill O]]," a commonly printed and played duple time march from the 18th and early 19th centuries, and to the jig "[[Merrily Danced the Quaker|Merrily Danced the Quaker('s Wife)]]," one of which was derived from the other. Another researcher cited by Bayard traces the melodic material in these tunes all the way back to 14th century plain-chant, although Bayard himself does not confirm or deny that line of thinking. He does believe that the mid-19th century tune known as "Captain Jinks" (and also the melody "Hundred Pipers") is an offshoot of the first part of the Mill air, via "The Quaker's Wife." It was listed as having been commonly played in the Orange County, N.Y. area for dances in the 1930's (Lettie Osborn, '''New York Folklore Quarterly''', pp. 211-215), about the same time Bayard collected the melody from western Pennsylvania sources, and Norman Cazden collected it from Catskill Mountian, N.Y. dances of the era. See also Québec fiddler Joseph Allard's derivative version, "[[Gigue du Violoneux]]," and J.O. LaMadeleine's "[[Quadrille de Matane Figure 5]]," which is relatively faithful to the original albeit slightly "crooked" (irregular metre) in the first strain. The original words to the song begin: | ||
<blockquote>[[File:jinks.jpg|300px|thumb|right|]] | |||
''I'm Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines,''<br> | ''I'm Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines,''<br> | ||
''I feed my horse on corn and beans,''<br> | ''I feed my horse on corn and beans,''<br> | ||
Line 18: | Line 19: | ||
Bruce E. Baker communicates that he finds reference to the tune in WPA-collected narratives from 1937 with former slaves in South Carolina (reprinted in Edmund L. Drago's '''Hurrah For Hampton: Black Red Shirts in South Carolina During Reconstruction''', Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 1998, pg.100). One interviewee, Charley Barber, born near Winnsboro, Fairfield County, South Carolina, remembered the piece from his slavery days. He recalled "Captain Jenks" (sic) thus: | Bruce E. Baker communicates that he finds reference to the tune in WPA-collected narratives from 1937 with former slaves in South Carolina (reprinted in Edmund L. Drago's '''Hurrah For Hampton: Black Red Shirts in South Carolina During Reconstruction''', Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 1998, pg.100). One interviewee, Charley Barber, born near Winnsboro, Fairfield County, South Carolina, remembered the piece from his slavery days. He recalled "Captain Jenks" (sic) thus: | ||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
''A tune was much sung by de white folks on de place and took wid de | ''A tune was much sung by de white folks on de place and took wid de n.....s. It went lak dis:''<br> | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
'' 'I'm Captain Jenks of de Horse Marines''<br> | '' 'I'm Captain Jenks of de Horse Marines''<br> | ||
''I feed my horse on corn and beans.''<br> | ''I feed my horse on corn and beans.''<br> | ||
''Oh! I'm Captain Jenks of de Horse Marines''<br> | ''Oh! I'm Captain Jenks of de Horse Marines''<br> | ||
''And captain in de army!' | ''And captain in de army!' ''<br> | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
Vance Randolph ('''Ozark Folksongs, vol. 3''', 1946) prints play-party instructions and a song text for "Captain Jinks," collected in 1930 from an informant in Pineville, Missouri. He also cites several publications from the first half of the 20th century that contain American play-party versions of the song and tune. | |||
|f_source_for_notated_version=Floyd Woodhull, 1976 (New York State) [Bronner]; Archie Miller (Lewisburg, Pa.) [Guntharp]; Walter Neal (Armstrong County, Pa., 1952) [Bayard]; Don Woodcock [Phillips]; caller George Van Kleek (Woodland Valley, Catskill Mtns., New York) [Cazden]; fiddler Dawson Girdwood (Perth, Ottawa Valley, Ontario) [Bégin]. | |||
|f_printed_sources=Adam ('''Old Time Fiddlers' Favorite Barn Dance Tunes'''), 1928; No. 11, p. 6. Bayard ('''Dance to the Fiddle'''), 1981; No. 596, p. 523-524. Bégin ('''Fiddle Music in the Ottawa Valley: Dawson Girdwood'''), 1985; No. 69, p. 79. Bronner ('''Old Time Music Makers of New York State'''), 1987; No. 17, p. 80. Cazden ('''Dances from Woodland'''), 1945; p. 16. Cazden ('''Dances from Woodland'''), 1955; p. 15. Ford ('''Traditional Music in America'''), 1940; p. 120. Guntharp ('''Learning the Fiddler's Ways'''), 1980; p. 77. S. Johnson ('''Kitchen Musician No. 6: Jigs'''), 1982 (revised 1989, 2001); p. 3. Jarman and Hansen ('''Old Time Dance Tunes'''), 1951; p. 65. Phillips ('''Traditional American Fiddle Tunes, vol. 2'''), 1995; p. 361. Roche ('''Collection of Traditional Irish Music, vol. 2'''), 1927; No. 249, p. 23. Shaw ('''Cowboy Dances'''), 1943; p. 379. Sweet ('''Fifer's Delight'''), 1964/1981; p. 19. | |||
'' | |f_recorded_sources=Victor 36401A (78 RPM), Woodhull's Old Tyme Masters, 1941. | ||
|f_see_also_listing=Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [http://ibiblio.unc.edu/keefer/c02.htm#Capji1] | |||
}} | |||
'' | |||
Latest revision as of 23:16, 9 May 2023
X:1 T:Captain Jinks M:6/8 L:1/8 R:Air and Jig B:E.F. Adam - Old Time Fiddlers Favorite Barn Dance Tunes (St. Louis, B:1928, No. 10, p. 6) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:D e|f2-.A AFA|B2-.A d2-.f|efg (B2.c)|(d2.e) (f2.e)| (f2.A) AFA|(B2.A) (d2.f)|efg (B2.c)|d3 [F2d2]:| |:f|[B2g2]-[B.g] [Bg]fe|[A2f2]-[A.f] [Af]ed|[A2e2]-[A.e] [Ae][Af][Ae]|def (a2.f)| [B2g2]-[B.g] [Bg]fe|[A2f2]-[A.f] [Af]ed|efe ABc|d3 [F2d2]:|
CAPTAIN JINKS/JINX. AKA and see - Captain Jinx, Down the Ohio, Gigue du Violoneux, Quadrille de Matane Figure 5, Reel du violoneux (Le). American (originally), Canadian; Single Jig and Air. USA; Pa., New York State: Canada, Ottawa Valley. G Major (Bronner, Ford, Guntharp, S. Johnson, Roche, Shaw): D Major (Bayard, Begin, Phillips, Sweet). Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Begin, Shaw, Sweet): AAB (Guntharp, Phillips): ABB (Bayard): AABA (S. Johnson): AABB (Bronner, Ford, Roche). The title is taken from a popular song of the 19th century, "Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines," which Sigmund Spaeth (A History of Popular Music in America) states was composed by an English music hall singer named William Horace Lingard who had emigrated to America. Lingard was the manager of Wood's Theatre in New York City..."a protean man who was an accomplished female impersonator, the lyricist for 'Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines', and, in 1867, the much acclaimed renderer of Lingard's Great Statue Song, a quick-change routine in which, with only a few seconds' pause between metamorphoses, he transformed himself from Mayor John T. Hoffman to Governor Horatio Seymour to Horace Greeley to Benjamin F. Butler to Ulysses S. Grant to President Andrew Johnson." (E. J. Khan, The Merry Partners: the Age and Stage of Harrigan & Hart, 1955, p. 152). Confirming that Lingard wrote the lyrics, Denes Agay (Best Loved Songs of the American People, pp. 156-157) however, credits the music to a T. Maclagan. In another volume (Reed 'Em and Weep, 1927, p. 63) Spaeth refers to a play called Captain Jinks in which Ethel Barrymore made her debut as a star in 1901.
Musicologist Sam Bayard (1991) traces the tune "ultimately (and indirectly)" back to a piece called "The Mill Mill O," a commonly printed and played duple time march from the 18th and early 19th centuries, and to the jig "Merrily Danced the Quaker('s Wife)," one of which was derived from the other. Another researcher cited by Bayard traces the melodic material in these tunes all the way back to 14th century plain-chant, although Bayard himself does not confirm or deny that line of thinking. He does believe that the mid-19th century tune known as "Captain Jinks" (and also the melody "Hundred Pipers") is an offshoot of the first part of the Mill air, via "The Quaker's Wife." It was listed as having been commonly played in the Orange County, N.Y. area for dances in the 1930's (Lettie Osborn, New York Folklore Quarterly, pp. 211-215), about the same time Bayard collected the melody from western Pennsylvania sources, and Norman Cazden collected it from Catskill Mountian, N.Y. dances of the era. See also Québec fiddler Joseph Allard's derivative version, "Gigue du Violoneux," and J.O. LaMadeleine's "Quadrille de Matane Figure 5," which is relatively faithful to the original albeit slightly "crooked" (irregular metre) in the first strain. The original words to the song begin:
I'm Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines,
I feed my horse on corn and beans,
And often live beyond my means,
Tho a captain in the army.
Bronner (1987) notes that the lyrics reinforce the tune's connection to dancing:
I teach young ladies how to dance,
How to dance, how to dance,
I teach young ladies how to dance,
For I'm the pet of the army.
Bruce E. Baker communicates that he finds reference to the tune in WPA-collected narratives from 1937 with former slaves in South Carolina (reprinted in Edmund L. Drago's Hurrah For Hampton: Black Red Shirts in South Carolina During Reconstruction, Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 1998, pg.100). One interviewee, Charley Barber, born near Winnsboro, Fairfield County, South Carolina, remembered the piece from his slavery days. He recalled "Captain Jenks" (sic) thus:
A tune was much sung by de white folks on de place and took wid de n.....s. It went lak dis:
'I'm Captain Jenks of de Horse Marines
I feed my horse on corn and beans.
Oh! I'm Captain Jenks of de Horse Marines
And captain in de army!'
Vance Randolph (Ozark Folksongs, vol. 3, 1946) prints play-party instructions and a song text for "Captain Jinks," collected in 1930 from an informant in Pineville, Missouri. He also cites several publications from the first half of the 20th century that contain American play-party versions of the song and tune.