Annotation:Logger's Breakdown: Difference between revisions
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''Recorded sources'': <font color=teal>Folkways 8826, Per's Four--"Jigs and Reels." Front Hall FHR-021, John McCutcheon - "Barefoot Boy with Boots On" (1981. Learned from North Tonawanda, N.Y., dulcimer player Paul Van Arsdale who had it from a radio broadcast of a Canadian fiddler during the 1950's). RCA Victor LCP 1001, Ned Landry and his New Brunswick Lumberjacks - "Bowing the Strings with Ned Landry."</font> | ''Recorded sources'': <font color=teal>Apex AL 1611, Don Messer & His Islanders "4". Folkways 8826, Per's Four--"Jigs and Reels." Front Hall FHR-021, John McCutcheon - "Barefoot Boy with Boots On" (1981. Learned from North Tonawanda, N.Y., dulcimer player Paul Van Arsdale who had it from a radio broadcast of a Canadian fiddler during the 1950's). RCA Victor LCP 1001, Ned Landry and his New Brunswick Lumberjacks - "Bowing the Strings with Ned Landry."</font> | ||
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Revision as of 21:13, 1 December 2012
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LOGGER'S BREAKDOWN. AKA - "Logger Breakdown," "Loggerman's Breakdown." AKA and see "Corn on the Cob." New England, Canadian; Reel. B Flat Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB (Phillips): AA'BB' (Miskoe & Paul).
Source for notated version: Vivian Williams (Seattle) [Phillips]; transplanted French-Canadian fiddler Omer Marcoux (Concord, N.H.) who actually learned the tune in a lumber-camp in Maine from a man from Waterville, Me. [Miskoe & Paul].
Printed sources: Miskoe & Paul (Fiddle Tunes of Omer Marcoux), 1994; p. 28. Phillips (Traditional American Fiddle Tunes), vol. 1, 1994; p. 146.
Recorded sources: Apex AL 1611, Don Messer & His Islanders "4". Folkways 8826, Per's Four--"Jigs and Reels." Front Hall FHR-021, John McCutcheon - "Barefoot Boy with Boots On" (1981. Learned from North Tonawanda, N.Y., dulcimer player Paul Van Arsdale who had it from a radio broadcast of a Canadian fiddler during the 1950's). RCA Victor LCP 1001, Ned Landry and his New Brunswick Lumberjacks - "Bowing the Strings with Ned Landry."
See also listing at:
Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [1]
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