Annotation:Whistling Rufus: Difference between revisions
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See various versions on youtube.com: bluegrass [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MVbAfONlZI0]; ragtime [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A8X0gZDFlN4]; march/polka [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UO7QJ0ZkNJM]<br> | See various versions on youtube.com: bluegrass [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MVbAfONlZI0]; ragtime [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A8X0gZDFlN4]; march/polka [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UO7QJ0ZkNJM]<br> | ||
Hear Fiddlin' Arthur Smith's version at Slippery Hill [https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/whistling-rufus] and at youtube.com [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8X9Vzw55vB8]<br> | Hear Fiddlin' Arthur Smith's version at Slippery Hill [https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/whistling-rufus] and at youtube.com [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8X9Vzw55vB8]<br> | ||
Hear Effie Pierson's (Owsley County, Ky.) 1979 field recording at Berea Sound Archives [https://soundarchives.berea.edu/items/show/3996]<br> | |||
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Latest revision as of 19:41, 1 November 2019
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T:Whistling Rufus
R:Cakewalk
C:Kerry Mills (1899)
Z:added by Alf warnock alf0@rogers.com - www.alfwarnock.info/alfs
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No cakewalk given in the Black Belt district of Alabama was considered worth while attending unless “Whistling Rufus” was engaged to furnish the music. Unlike other musicians, Rufus always performed alone, playing an accompaniment to his whistling on an old guitar, and it was with great pride that he called himself the “one-man band.”
Joyce Cauthen (1990) calls it a minstrel composition that passed into fiddling tradition, perhaps referring to Mill's "coon-song"[1] period cakewalk. Arizona fiddler Kenner C. Kartchner identified it as a "good two-step from around 1900" (Shumway). It was played by Rock Ridge, Alabama, fiddlers around 1920 and it appears in a list of traditional Ozarks Mountains fiddle tunes compiled by musicologist/folklorist Vance Randolph, published in 1954. It is also played as a fast breakdown by bluegrass musicians, taking a cue from Tennessee fiddler Arthur Smith's breakdown version. Kirk McGee, who recorded the song in 1927 with his brother Sam, said that they learned the song from a a man named Will Graves (Franklin, Tenn.) whose family had a singing quartet that did gospel and other songs. "We used to play that with Arthur (Smith) too, and he'd make a whistling sound by playing with the bow real close to the bridge [2] Mills' song was recorded on a cylinder record in 1899 by Vess L. Ossman, the pre-eminent banjo player of the 1890’s, nicknamed “The Banjo King.” Early 78 RPM recordings include Gid Tanner & Riley Puckett (1924), Ernest Thompson (1924), McLaughlin’s Old Time Melody Makers (1928), the Kessinger Brothers (1929) and Arkie the Arkansas Woodchopper (1941) [see Guthrie Meade, Country Music Sources, 2002], and the tune was in the repertoire of West Virginia fiddler Edden Hammons. See also related melodies “Old Parnell Reel” and “North Carolina Breakdown.”
“Whistling Rufus” was popularized in Scotland and Ireland by Scottish accordion player and dance-band leader Jimmy Shand, who recorded it in the 1950’s.
- ↑ Some of items in the Traditional Tune Archive may contain offensive language or negative stereotypes. Such materials should be seen in the context of the time period and as a reflection of the attitudes of the time. The items are part of the historical record, and do not represent the views of the administrators of this site.
- ↑ liner notes to Folkways 31007, The McGee Brothers and Arthur Smith - "Milk 'Em in the Evening Blues", 1968.