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'''RABBIT HASH'''. American, Reel. USA, Texas. A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCCDDEEFF'.  
'''RABBIT HASH'''. American, Reel. USA, Texas. A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCCDDEEFF'.  
[[File:Rabbit Hash.pdf|500px|thumb|left|]]
[[File:Rabbit Hash.pdf|500px|thumb|left|]]
<br>
The YouTube link for Rabbit Hash shows Tricia Spencer, Howard Rains, Adam Hurt and others playing Rabbit Hash, with the fiddles
in Cross A tuning AEae. The Spencer and Rains video had attributed Rabbit Hash to Duck Wootan of Junction, TX, so I
looked on the Traditional Tune Archive for a transcription, but there was nothing there. I learned it by ear from the Spencer and Rains video, and wrote it out in standard notation.  You can also view a larger, clearer, printable version of my transcription of Rabbit Hash here on my web link, along with my attempt at writing down the Spencer and Rains fiddle harmony as well. The harmony part can be played as it is and an octave above (it’s a bit more tricky then though). [https://www.janihoward.org/rabbit-hash-article]
Howard Rains
explained
to me by email
that he had learned most of Du
ck Wootan’s tunes from
Duck’s grandson Tim Wooten who has been Howard’s mentor. I was keen to know some more about
Duck Wootan and was able to get in touch with Tim Wooten.
It turns out that the tune
Rabbit Hash
had been recorded in 1958, played by
Thoma
s Jefferson ‘Duck
Wootan near Junction, Texas and his grandson Tim
Wooten
had
passed a copy of the
old
recording to Bruce Molsky who shared
it with other fiddler
s and it appeared on the Fiddle
Hangout website
.
http://www.fiddlehangout.com/forum/
It also appears on
Larry Warren
s
Slippery Hill web site, another very useful
resource.
Duck Wootan was a very prolific player judging from the recordings
of him available on Slippery Hill.
https://www.slippery
-
hill.com/recording/rabbit
-
hash
Duck certainly has a great strong and rhythmic style of playing, especially considering he was well into his 70s when recording this.  Here is Tim Wooten giving some interesting background about his grandfather and the tune: -
<blockquote>
''Thomas Jefferson (Duck) Wootan was born in 1882 and died in 1964. Some of my earliest memories are of him playing his'' ''fiddle (which I play now). My last name is spelled differently because the US army got my father's name wrong in WWII and'' ''it was too much trouble to change it back. My father had the foresight to record a few of Duck’s tunes and later gave the'' ''recording to me.  I'm so glad I gave that recording to Bruce and he shared it. I have been playing those tunes a lot lately'' ''and really enjoying them."
T
here is
no connection between the tu
ne ‘Rabbit Hash’
and Rabbit Hash, Kentucky. I always
thought that the name referred to food.
My grandfather (we called him ‘Papa Wootan’
) was a
subsistence farmer, and while my father told me they always had enough to eat, I'm sure they
weren't too proud t
o eat jackrabbits when they could catch or shoot them. No one really knows,
though, who he got that tune from or why it was named that. That information is probably lost. Papa
Wootan got his tunes from other local fiddlers. He played at dances where he and
other fiddlers
took turns playing. If he heard a tune he liked he would have to remember it the next day and try to
play it the best he could
.
I believe that in those days (say before 1940) there were almost as many
versions of each tune as there were fiddlers who played it, because they had no recording devices
and most of them played by ear (only a few could read music). Rural fiddlers were al
so widely
separated geographically in many instances
(
I can relate to that
Jan
)
. I'm sure many tunes and
regional variants were lost (or alm
ost lost). Luckily ‘Rabbit Hash’
is in the second category.
“As to how m
y grandfather got his nickname;
when he
was a small child his family raised ducks. They
threw bread and other scraps to the ducks and he competed with them to eat the scraps! So they
called him ‘Duck’.”
Papa Wootan's tunes that we play in AE
ae
, were played by him quite a bit
lower. I often play
them
in GDgd
, which is below where he played them
but sounds very nice. Try G#D#g#f
# for a closer
approximation of his tuning. He didn't use any sort of tuner, pitch pipe, tuning fork or other guide.
There were no other musical instrumen
ts around. He just
tuned by ear.”
Another
factor
for recordings of this vintage sounding off
-
pitch could be that the electricity supply
when recording may have been
slightly different to
when it was played back.
Advantage
s
of Cross A tuning include that it allows you to play some tunes an octave above or below
using the same fingering (see Sandy Boys later
)
and also enables you to use drones
; Tim Wooten
maintains that “it's very important to keep a drone going at all times!
That's one of the great things
about a cross tuning
-
you can stay always on two strings
”.
As well as
using the
drone stri
ngs to give a grooving
pulse with your bowing
,
the structure of Rabbit
Hash
also
helps
g
ive
it its me
s
merising, groove
quality when y
ou’re playing it. Many Old Time tunes
have 32 bars with 8
bars
in the A part which is
played twice, and 8 in the B part,
also
played twice,
but Duck’s version of Rabbit Hash
has 6 parts of 4 bars
each
,
and
each
part is
played twice, making it
a 48 bar tune
. It
might be good to play for a
country dance such as ‘T
he
Virginia Reel
,
Sir Roger de
Coverley
, or
‘The Bridge of Athlone’
here in the UK, maybe?
C
o
untry
d
ances lik
e these might be
referred to as
Contra Dances in the US.
A quick look at
the Kieran Towers
-
inspired barnyard analogy for tunes, Horse
-
Donkey
-
Horse
-
Cow
etc.
,
suggests that
my interpretation of Rabbit Hash would be:
-
Rabbit
-
Fox
-
Dog, Duck
-
Fox
-
Fox
-
Dog, Donkey
-
Goat
-
Fox
-
Dog, Pig
-
Dog, Lamb
-
Goat
-
Fox
-
Dog, Squirrel
-
Goose
-
Turkey....
I can imagine you saying
“T
hat’s
quite
enough of that
thank you
”!
For accompanying player
s such as bass and guitars, the tune Rabbit Hash may have a number of
chord sequences
, or maybe just one chord
; T
im Wooten recommends they stay o
n an A major chord
throughout the tune
, though the pattern could also be
something like
A
-
A/A
-
D/A
-
D/E
-
A/
for so
me of
the parts.
Howard Ra
ins refers to the D chord as a f
our chord
(because they sometimes play the tune
in G
and
even F
so
instead
of saying C or Bb they say the fourth chord from the root
)
and says
I should
mention that Tricia and I added the four chord in there for two reasons, 1) Tricia is from the mid
-
west where the
four chord is king (or queen, in Tricia's case) and 2) there was a note in the melody
that implied a four chord. When I learned this tune from Tim, we always played it over the one
chord, which sounds great! We love it both ways!”
Here in the UK we might w
rite the chords as
being I, IV, and V instead of One, Four and Five
or root, fourth and fifth
.
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>

Revision as of 04:24, 28 May 2017

Back to Rabbit Hash


RABBIT HASH. American, Reel. USA, Texas. A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCCDDEEFF'.


The YouTube link for Rabbit Hash shows Tricia Spencer, Howard Rains, Adam Hurt and others playing Rabbit Hash, with the fiddles in Cross A tuning AEae. The Spencer and Rains video had attributed Rabbit Hash to Duck Wootan of Junction, TX, so I looked on the Traditional Tune Archive for a transcription, but there was nothing there. I learned it by ear from the Spencer and Rains video, and wrote it out in standard notation. You can also view a larger, clearer, printable version of my transcription of Rabbit Hash here on my web link, along with my attempt at writing down the Spencer and Rains fiddle harmony as well. The harmony part can be played as it is and an octave above (it’s a bit more tricky then though). [1] Howard Rains explained to me by email that he had learned most of Du ck Wootan’s tunes from Duck’s grandson Tim Wooten who has been Howard’s mentor. I was keen to know some more about Duck Wootan and was able to get in touch with Tim Wooten. It turns out that the tune Rabbit Hash had been recorded in 1958, played by Thoma s Jefferson ‘Duck ’ Wootan near Junction, Texas and his grandson Tim Wooten had passed a copy of the old recording to Bruce Molsky who shared it with other fiddler s and it appeared on the Fiddle Hangout website . http://www.fiddlehangout.com/forum/ It also appears on Larry Warren ’ s Slippery Hill web site, another very useful resource. Duck Wootan was a very prolific player judging from the recordings of him available on Slippery Hill. https://www.slippery - hill.com/recording/rabbit - hash Duck certainly has a great strong and rhythmic style of playing, especially considering he was well into his 70s when recording this. Here is Tim Wooten giving some interesting background about his grandfather and the tune: -

Thomas Jefferson (Duck) Wootan was born in 1882 and died in 1964. Some of my earliest memories are of him playing his fiddle (which I play now). My last name is spelled differently because the US army got my father's name wrong in WWII and it was too much trouble to change it back. My father had the foresight to record a few of Duck’s tunes and later gave the recording to me. I'm so glad I gave that recording to Bruce and he shared it. I have been playing those tunes a lot lately and really enjoying them." “ T here is no connection between the tu ne ‘Rabbit Hash’ and Rabbit Hash, Kentucky. I always thought that the name referred to food. My grandfather (we called him ‘Papa Wootan’ ) was a subsistence farmer, and while my father told me they always had enough to eat, I'm sure they weren't too proud t o eat jackrabbits when they could catch or shoot them. No one really knows, though, who he got that tune from or why it was named that. That information is probably lost. Papa Wootan got his tunes from other local fiddlers. He played at dances where he and other fiddlers took turns playing. If he heard a tune he liked he would have to remember it the next day and try to play it the best he could . I believe that in those days (say before 1940) there were almost as many versions of each tune as there were fiddlers who played it, because they had no recording devices and most of them played by ear (only a few could read music). Rural fiddlers were al so widely separated geographically in many instances ( I can relate to that – Jan ) . I'm sure many tunes and regional variants were lost (or alm ost lost). Luckily ‘Rabbit Hash’ is in the second category. ” “As to how m y grandfather got his nickname; when he was a small child his family raised ducks. They threw bread and other scraps to the ducks and he competed with them to eat the scraps! So they called him ‘Duck’.” “ Papa Wootan's tunes that we play in AE ae , were played by him quite a bit lower. I often play them in GDgd , which is below where he played them but sounds very nice. Try G#D#g#f

  1. for a closer

approximation of his tuning. He didn't use any sort of tuner, pitch pipe, tuning fork or other guide. There were no other musical instrumen ts around. He just tuned by ear.” Another factor for recordings of this vintage sounding off - pitch could be that the electricity supply when recording may have been slightly different to when it was played back. Advantage s of Cross A tuning include that it allows you to play some tunes an octave above or below using the same fingering (see Sandy Boys later ) and also enables you to use drones

Tim Wooten

maintains that “it's very important to keep a drone going at all times! That's one of the great things about a cross tuning - you can stay always on two strings ”. As well as using the drone stri ngs to give a grooving pulse with your bowing , the structure of Rabbit Hash also helps g ive it its me s merising, groove quality when y ou’re playing it. Many Old Time tunes have 32 bars with 8 bars in the A part which is played twice, and 8 in the B part, also played twice, but Duck’s version of Rabbit Hash has 6 parts of 4 bars each , and each part is played twice, making it a 48 bar tune . It might be good to play for a country dance such as ‘T he Virginia Reel ’ , ‘ Sir Roger de Coverley ’ , or ‘The Bridge of Athlone’ here in the UK, maybe? C o untry d ances lik e these might be referred to as Contra Dances in the US. A quick look at the Kieran Towers - inspired barnyard analogy for tunes, Horse - Donkey - Horse - Cow etc. , suggests that my interpretation of Rabbit Hash would be: - Rabbit - Fox - Dog, Duck - Fox - Fox - Dog, Donkey - Goat - Fox - Dog, Pig - Dog, Lamb - Goat - Fox - Dog, Squirrel - Goose - Turkey.... I can imagine you saying “T hat’s quite enough of that thank you ”! For accompanying player s such as bass and guitars, the tune Rabbit Hash may have a number of chord sequences , or maybe just one chord

T

im Wooten recommends they stay o n an A major chord throughout the tune , though the pattern could also be something like A - A/A - D/A - D/E - A/ for so me of the parts. Howard Ra ins refers to the D chord as a f our chord (because they sometimes play the tune in G and even F so instead of saying C or Bb they say the fourth chord from the root ) and says “ I should mention that Tricia and I added the four chord in there for two reasons, 1) Tricia is from the mid - west where the four chord is king (or queen, in Tricia's case) and 2) there was a note in the melody that implied a four chord. When I learned this tune from Tim, we always played it over the one chord, which sounds great! We love it both ways!” Here in the UK we might w rite the chords as being I, IV, and V instead of One, Four and Five or root, fourth and fifth .

Source for notated version:

Printed sources:

Recorded sources:




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