Annotation:Old Yaller Hound: Difference between revisions
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''"Most any time when store goods wuz a-runnin' low Pap 'ud say: 'Newt, yew'n Lem go out to the granary'n'' | ''"Most any time when store goods wuz a-runnin' low Pap 'ud say: 'Newt, yew'n Lem go out to the granary'n'' | ||
''fotch in all the skins that air dry enough. We'uns air a-goin' over to Bald O'int'n do some tradin' atter dinner.' '' | ''fotch in all the skins that air dry enough. We'uns air a-goin' over to Bald O'int'n do some tradin' atter dinner.' '' | ||
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''Newt'n Lem 'ud git the skins bundled. Then Pap 'ud say: 'Maw, what d'ye'n Granny need frum the tradin' store?'' | |||
''Maw 'ud more'n likely say: 'Wal, yew mout fotch Grannyer er box uv snuff. 'N git me a new clay pipe. Be shore'' | |||
''to pick as long a stem as yew kin git. Guess that's 'bout all fer the house. Oh yes, git 'nother set o' knit-needles.'' | |||
''The yearn's all spun and we'uns'll go to knittin' sox'n mittens next week.' Then Pap 'ud say: 'All right. You'uns tie'' | |||
''the hounds up while I git the mule'n we'll ride'n hitch.' '' | |||
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''"Come to Bald P'int tradin' post Pap 'ud git th' ol' brown jug filled'n git two horns o' powder'n a pig o' lead'n do'' | |||
''tradin' fer Maw'n Granny. There'd most allers be some change left. Maybe a couple o' possum skins'n a weasle or two.'' | |||
''Newt'n Lem 'ud trade fer a plug o' flat chawin' terbackern'n we'uns 'ud ride'n hitch back up th' holler to hum.'' | |||
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''Maybe that night Old Drum 'ud bark treed, up th' holler. Pap 'ud git up'n go outside'n listed fer a spell. Then'' | |||
''it 'ud be: 'Fotch the ax, boys, we'll see purty soon. He's wo'th a half-a-dollah ef et's ol' zipp coon.'" '' | |||
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Revision as of 15:32, 20 December 2014
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OLD YALLER HOUN' . Old-Time, Breakdown. A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The first stain of this tune is shared, in a general way, with O'Neill's "Always Welcome" and Roche's "Darkey's Dream." While these tunes appear in Irish or Irish-American publications, it seems likely they were derived from American black-face minstrel sources. Ira Ford (1940) printed the following verse with the tune:
Old yaller houn's barkin' treed, up the holler,
It's old mister 'possum, I'll bet half a dollar.
Fetch on the ax, boys, we'll see pretty soon,
He's worth half a dollar if it's old zipp coon. .... (Ford)
...and printed this story to go with it:
The following sketch was taken down according to family recollection of an old Tennessee fiddler who played "Old Yaller Houn'" as it was handed down from his "grandpap."
"Back yander in the time of Davie Crockett'n Dan'el Boone, folks never seed much money. Furs'n pelts, beeswax'n taller wuz the legal tender uv the day in the settlement whur we'uns lived.
"Most any time when store goods wuz a-runnin' low Pap 'ud say: 'Newt, yew'n Lem go out to the granary'n fotch in all the skins that air dry enough. We'uns air a-goin' over to Bald O'int'n do some tradin' atter dinner.'
Newt'n Lem 'ud git the skins bundled. Then Pap 'ud say: 'Maw, what d'ye'n Granny need frum the tradin' store? Maw 'ud more'n likely say: 'Wal, yew mout fotch Grannyer er box uv snuff. 'N git me a new clay pipe. Be shore to pick as long a stem as yew kin git. Guess that's 'bout all fer the house. Oh yes, git 'nother set o' knit-needles. The yearn's all spun and we'uns'll go to knittin' sox'n mittens next week.' Then Pap 'ud say: 'All right. You'uns tie the hounds up while I git the mule'n we'll ride'n hitch.'
"Come to Bald P'int tradin' post Pap 'ud git th' ol' brown jug filled'n git two horns o' powder'n a pig o' lead'n do tradin' fer Maw'n Granny. There'd most allers be some change left. Maybe a couple o' possum skins'n a weasle or two. Newt'n Lem 'ud trade fer a plug o' flat chawin' terbackern'n we'uns 'ud ride'n hitch back up th' holler to hum.
Maybe that night Old Drum 'ud bark treed, up th' holler. Pap 'ud git up'n go outside'n listed fer a spell. Then it 'ud be: 'Fotch the ax, boys, we'll see purty soon. He's wo'th a half-a-dollah ef et's ol' zipp coon.'"Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Ford (Traditional Music in America), 1940; p. 61.
Recorded sources:
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