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'''AIN'T GONNA GET NO SUPPER HERE TONIGHT.''' American, Reel. Sourced to Texas fiddler John Wills (Bob Wills' father) via the late California mandolinist Kenny Hall and Vermont fiddler Pete Sutherland. The original key was A Major, although Sutherland plays it in 'G'. A tune called "[[Not Gonna Get No Supper Here Tonight]]," also played in G Major, was recorded for the Library of Congress in 1939 by Tishomingo County, Mississippi fiddler John Brown.
'''AIN'T GONNA GET NO SUPPER HERE TONIGHT.''' American, Reel. Sourced to Texas fiddler John Wills (Bob Wills' father) via the late California mandolinist Kenny Hall and Vermont fiddler Pete Sutherland. The original key was A Major, although Sutherland plays it in 'G'. A tune called "[[Not Gonna Get No Supper Here Tonight]]," also played in G Major, was recorded for the Library of Congress in 1939 by Tishomingo County, Mississippi fiddler John Brown. The title comes from a lyric, parts of which was a "floater" (i.e. usually a couplet or rhyme employed in a variety of different fiddle-songs), as sung, for example, by Tennessee banjo player and entertainer Uncle Dave Macon in a song recorded as "Sourwood Mountain Medley." It begins:
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''I asked that girl to be my wife,''<br>
''What'd you reckon she said,''<br>
''She would not have the poor boy,''<br> 
''If everyone else was dead.''<br>
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Chorus:<br>
''Ain't gonna get no supper here tonight,''<br> 
''Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight.''<br>
''Oh, my don't tell, Oh my ring the bell,''<br>
''Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight,''<br> 
''Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight.''<br>
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Revision as of 00:13, 5 July 2014

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AIN'T GONNA GET NO SUPPER HERE TONIGHT. American, Reel. Sourced to Texas fiddler John Wills (Bob Wills' father) via the late California mandolinist Kenny Hall and Vermont fiddler Pete Sutherland. The original key was A Major, although Sutherland plays it in 'G'. A tune called "Not Gonna Get No Supper Here Tonight," also played in G Major, was recorded for the Library of Congress in 1939 by Tishomingo County, Mississippi fiddler John Brown. The title comes from a lyric, parts of which was a "floater" (i.e. usually a couplet or rhyme employed in a variety of different fiddle-songs), as sung, for example, by Tennessee banjo player and entertainer Uncle Dave Macon in a song recorded as "Sourwood Mountain Medley." It begins:

I asked that girl to be my wife,
What'd you reckon she said,
She would not have the poor boy,
If everyone else was dead.

Chorus:
Ain't gonna get no supper here tonight,
Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight.
Oh, my don't tell, Oh my ring the bell,
Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight,
Ain't gwine get no supper here tonight.


Source for notated version:

Printed sources:

Recorded sources: Rounder 0132, Bob Carlin - "Fiddle Tunes for Clawhammer Banjo" (1980).




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