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[[File:hollis.jpg|200px|thumb|left|A page from Joyce Cauthen's "With Fiddle and Well-Rosined Bow: Old Time Fiddling in Alabama" (1989)]] | |||
''Source for notated version'': D. Dix Hollis (1861-1927, Alabama) [Phillips]. Hollis was descended from a family of West Alabama planters with large slave holdings. At the age of 10 Hollis learned to fiddle from a family servant and from older fiddlers around Sulligent, Alabama. While studying medicine in Baltimore for 5 months in 1884, he also took lessons from a classical violinist, and after completing his studies he returned to become the town physician of Sulligent. In 1924 he travelled to New York and recorded 12 tunes for Paramount Records. | ''Source for notated version'': D. Dix Hollis (1861-1927, Alabama) [Phillips]. Hollis was descended from a family of West Alabama planters with large slave holdings. At the age of 10 Hollis learned to fiddle from a family servant and from older fiddlers around Sulligent, Alabama. While studying medicine in Baltimore for 5 months in 1884, he also took lessons from a classical violinist, and after completing his studies he returned to become the town physician of Sulligent. In 1924 he travelled to New York and recorded 12 tunes for Paramount Records. | ||
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Revision as of 20:43, 30 April 2015
Back to Walking in the Parlor (3)
WALKING IN THE PARLOR [3]. Old-Time, Breakdown. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB'. Similar to version #1, albeit a ‘crooked’ (irregular metre) version.
Source for notated version: D. Dix Hollis (1861-1927, Alabama) [Phillips]. Hollis was descended from a family of West Alabama planters with large slave holdings. At the age of 10 Hollis learned to fiddle from a family servant and from older fiddlers around Sulligent, Alabama. While studying medicine in Baltimore for 5 months in 1884, he also took lessons from a classical violinist, and after completing his studies he returned to become the town physician of Sulligent. In 1924 he travelled to New York and recorded 12 tunes for Paramount Records.
Printed sources: Phillips (Traditional American Fiddle Tunes, vol. 1), 1994; p. 252.
Recorded sources: Document DOCD 8032, D. Dix Hollis (et al) – “Alabama Stringbands.”
See also listing at:
See Austin Rogers' transcription from D. Dix Hollis playing [1] [2]