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|f_tune_annotation_title=  https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Route_(The) >
|f_tune_annotation_title=  https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Route_(The) >
|f_annotation='''ROUTE, THE.''' AKA and see "[[Colonel Crocket (1)]]," "[[Jenny on the Railroad]]," "[[Little Peg n' Awl]]." American, Reel (2/4 time). USA; southwest Virginia, West Virginia. A Mixolydian (Hammons). Standard or ADae tuning (fiddle). AAB. Charles Wolfe (1997) remarks that this tune was collected as early as 1839 as the song “Col. Crocket’s Reel” by none other than the American frontiersman Davy Crockett, who was a skilled fiddler and buck dancer (it is said he entertained the defenders of the Alamo with his fiddle during lulls in the action). A tune called “Colonel Crocket: A Virginia Reel” in Baltimore publisher George P. Knauff’s 1839 collection '''Virginia Reels'''. Alan Jabbour remarks that the tune does not seem to have Northern or British Isles antecedents, however, Paul Gifford finds an Irish variant as “[[Katy Jones]]” recorded in the 78 RPM era by New York based fiddler Frank Quinn. Jabbour remarks that variants of "The Route" melody does sometimes appear outside of the western Virginia and West Virginia region, where migrants from those regions are known to have settled. For example, a version of the melody was recorded on 78 RPM as “[[Jenny on the Railroad]]” by the Mississippi group Carter Brothers and Son (Vocalation 5297). Morris (1927) has a version (2nd and 3rd strains only) called "Missippi [sic] Sawyer" (No. 23) but that title is strongly associated with another tune. Alan Jabbour finds a manuscript version in Hamblen’s '''A Collection of Violin Tunes Popular''' under the title  "[[Jolly Blacksmith (2)]]" (she wouldn't come at all), and notes that there are obscene verses associated with the tune.  
|f_annotation='''ROUTE, THE.''' AKA and see "[[Colonel Crocket (1)]]," "[[Gal on the Log (2)]]," "[[Jenny on the Railroad]]," "[[Little Peg n' Awl]]." American, Reel (2/4 time). USA; southwest Virginia, West Virginia. A Mixolydian (Hammons). Standard or ADae tuning (fiddle). AAB. Charles Wolfe (1997) remarks that this tune was collected as early as 1839 as the song “Col. Crocket’s Reel” by none other than the American frontiersman Davy Crockett, who was a skilled fiddler and buck dancer (it is said he entertained the defenders of the Alamo with his fiddle during lulls in the action). A tune called “Colonel Crocket: A Virginia Reel” in Baltimore publisher George P. Knauff’s 1839 collection '''Virginia Reels'''. Alan Jabbour remarks that the tune does not seem to have Northern or British Isles antecedents, however, Paul Gifford finds an Irish variant as “[[Katy Jones]]” recorded in the 78 RPM era by New York based fiddler Frank Quinn. Jabbour remarks that variants of "The Route" melody does sometimes appear outside of the western Virginia and West Virginia region, where migrants from those regions are known to have settled. For example, a version of the melody was recorded on 78 RPM as “[[Jenny on the Railroad]]” by the Mississippi group Carter Brothers and Son (Vocalation 5297), and Ft. Worth, Texas, fiddler Capt. M.J. Bonner recorded a version in 1925 he called "[[Gal on the Log (2)]]." Morris (1927) has a version (2nd and 3rd strains only) called "Missippi [sic] Sawyer" (No. 23) but that title is strongly associated with another tune. Alan Jabbour finds a manuscript version in Hamblen’s '''A Collection of Violin Tunes Popular''' under the title  "[[Jolly Blacksmith (2)]]" (she wouldn't come at all), and notes that there are obscene verses associated with the tune.  
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Latest revision as of 04:57, 12 March 2023



Back to Route (The)


X:1 T:Route, The L:1/8 M:4/4 S:From a transcription of Henry Reed’s playing by Alan Jabbour K:Ador [AA]|[A/c/][A/A/][A/B/][A/A/] [A/c/][A/A/][A/A/][A/A/] c/A/E/=F/ GG|\ [G/B/]G/[G/A/]G/ [G/B/]G/[A/G/]G/ E/(G/A) [AA][AA]| [AA]|[A/c/][A/A/][A/B/][A/A/] [A/c/][A/A/][A/A/][A/A/] c/A/E/=F/ GG|\ [G/B/]G/[G/A/]G/ [G/B/]G/[A/G/]G/ E/(G/A) [AA][AA]| A/B/c/d/ eg e/d/B/c/ df|(d/f/)(e/d/) B(A/G/) E/(G/A) [AA]A| (A/B/)(c/d/) eg [A/e/](d/B/c/) d(e/f/)|g/a/b/a/ g/d/e/d/|B/(G/A) [AA]||



ROUTE, THE. AKA and see "Colonel Crocket (1)," "Gal on the Log (2)," "Jenny on the Railroad," "Little Peg n' Awl." American, Reel (2/4 time). USA; southwest Virginia, West Virginia. A Mixolydian (Hammons). Standard or ADae tuning (fiddle). AAB. Charles Wolfe (1997) remarks that this tune was collected as early as 1839 as the song “Col. Crocket’s Reel” by none other than the American frontiersman Davy Crockett, who was a skilled fiddler and buck dancer (it is said he entertained the defenders of the Alamo with his fiddle during lulls in the action). A tune called “Colonel Crocket: A Virginia Reel” in Baltimore publisher George P. Knauff’s 1839 collection Virginia Reels. Alan Jabbour remarks that the tune does not seem to have Northern or British Isles antecedents, however, Paul Gifford finds an Irish variant as “Katy Jones” recorded in the 78 RPM era by New York based fiddler Frank Quinn. Jabbour remarks that variants of "The Route" melody does sometimes appear outside of the western Virginia and West Virginia region, where migrants from those regions are known to have settled. For example, a version of the melody was recorded on 78 RPM as “Jenny on the Railroad” by the Mississippi group Carter Brothers and Son (Vocalation 5297), and Ft. Worth, Texas, fiddler Capt. M.J. Bonner recorded a version in 1925 he called "Gal on the Log (2)." Morris (1927) has a version (2nd and 3rd strains only) called "Missippi [sic] Sawyer" (No. 23) but that title is strongly associated with another tune. Alan Jabbour finds a manuscript version in Hamblen’s A Collection of Violin Tunes Popular under the title "Jolly Blacksmith (2)" (she wouldn't come at all), and notes that there are obscene verses associated with the tune.

Burl Hammons, Pocahontas County, West Virginia, played "The Route," and Braxton County, West Virginia, fiddler Melvin Wine's (1909-2003) "Little Peg n' Awl" ("Peggin' Awl") is a version of Henry Reed's "The Route." See also the related Kentucky tune “Hickory Jack.”


Additional notes
Source for notated version : - Alan Jabbour and The Hollow Rock String Band learned the tune from the playing of Henry Reed (1884-1968) of Glen Lyn, Virginia, who himself had it from an 'old man' in Monroe County, West Virginia.

Printed sources : - Brody (Fiddler’s Fakebook), 1983; p. 236.

Recorded sources : - Library of Congress AFS AFS-L65 & L66, "The Hammons Family: A Study of a West Virginia Family's Traditions" (1973). Rounder 0024, "Hollow Rock String Band" (1974).

See also listing at :
Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [1]
Hear Henry Reed's 1966 field recording AFS 13033B30 at the LOC site [2], with Alan Jabbour's notes.
See Alan Jabbour's transcription of Reed's tune [3]
Hear Burl Hammons recording at the Internet Archive [4]



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