Annotation:Old Time Eighth of January: Difference between revisions
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'''OLD TIME EIGHTH OF JANUARY'''. Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, Ozarks region. The tune is similar to Bob Holt's "[[Ninth of January]]." | '''OLD TIME EIGHTH OF JANUARY'''. Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, Ozarks region. The tune is similar to Bob Holt's "[[Ninth of January]]." | ||
The appellation "Old" or "Old-Time" to a fiddle tune was sometimes simply a means of denoting familiarity and longstanding presence in the local musical community, although at other times it could be applied to quite different tunes that the fiddler thought were either ancestral or an older tune with the same name (thus using "Old-Time" as a way of differentiating it from a more recent tune). | The appellation "Old" or "Old-Time" to a fiddle tune was sometimes simply a means of denoting familiarity and longstanding presence in the local musical community, although at other times it could be applied to quite different tunes that the fiddler thought were either ancestral or an older tune with the same name (thus using "Old-Time" as a way of differentiating it from a more recent tune). | ||
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''Source for notated version'': | ''Source for notated version'': | ||
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''Recorded sources'': <font color=teal>Rounder 0437, Alton Jones - "Traditional Fiddle Music of the Ozarks, vol. 3: Down in the Border Counties" (appears under the title "Lost Indian"). </font> | ''Recorded sources'': <font color=teal>Rounder 0437, Alton Jones - "Traditional Fiddle Music of the Ozarks, vol. 3: Down in the Border Counties" (appears under the title "Lost Indian"). </font> | ||
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Latest revision as of 14:31, 6 May 2019
Back to Old Time Eighth of January
OLD TIME EIGHTH OF JANUARY. Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, Ozarks region. The tune is similar to Bob Holt's "Ninth of January."
The appellation "Old" or "Old-Time" to a fiddle tune was sometimes simply a means of denoting familiarity and longstanding presence in the local musical community, although at other times it could be applied to quite different tunes that the fiddler thought were either ancestral or an older tune with the same name (thus using "Old-Time" as a way of differentiating it from a more recent tune).
Source for notated version:
Printed sources:
Recorded sources: Rounder 0437, Alton Jones - "Traditional Fiddle Music of the Ozarks, vol. 3: Down in the Border Counties" (appears under the title "Lost Indian").