Annotation:Brushy Fork of John's Creek (1): Difference between revisions
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'''BRUSHY FORK OF JOHN'S CREEK [1]'''. AKA - "[[Brushy Fork of Buckthorn]]," "[[Long Fork of Buckthorn (The)]]." Old-time, Breakdown. USA, eastern Kentucky. A Mixolydian. AEae tuning. AB (Titon/Stamper): AAB (Titon/Salyer): ABB'CC (Phillips). In the respective repertory of Kentucky fiddlers Hiram Stamper and John Sayler. See also the closely related tunes "[[Long Fork of Buckhorn]]" and "[[Old Christmas Morning]]." Versions of tune were in the repertoires of West Virginia fiddlers Burl Hammons and Ed Haley. Kentucky fiddler Hiram Stamper learned the tune from Shade Sloan, a Civil War veteran, and said that Alton Sizemore played it and called it "Brushy Fork of Buckhorn." Hiram's son, the late Art Stamper, recorded a version in standard tuning he called "The Long Fork of Buckhorn." Gerry Milnes suggests the title may relate to John's Creek in West Virginia's Big Sandy Valley, at the mouth of which one branch of the Hammonds family settled in 1791 (members of the family spell their last name differently). John Hartford (Fiddler) says older informants have told him the title commemorates a Civil War battle either on Brushy Fork of John's Creek in Pike County, Kentucky, or near Old Bedstead Mountain in southern Floyd County, Kentucky. The battle was supposedly one of the last of the war, according to the veteran Sloan. | '''BRUSHY FORK OF JOHN'S CREEK [1]'''. AKA - "[[Brushy Fork of Buckthorn]]," "[[Long Fork of Buckthorn (The)]]." Old-time, Breakdown. USA, eastern Kentucky. A Mixolydian. AEae tuning (fiddle). AB (Titon/Stamper): AAB (Titon/Salyer): ABB'CC (Phillips). In the respective repertory of Kentucky fiddlers Hiram Stamper and John Sayler. See also the closely related tunes "[[Long Fork of Buckhorn]]" and "[[Old Christmas Morning]]." Versions of tune were in the repertoires of West Virginia fiddlers Burl Hammons and Ed Haley. Kentucky fiddler Hiram Stamper learned the tune from Shade Sloan, a Civil War veteran, and said that Alton Sizemore played it and called it "Brushy Fork of Buckhorn." Hiram's son, the late Art Stamper, recorded a version in standard tuning he called "The Long Fork of Buckhorn." Gerry Milnes suggests the title may relate to John's Creek in West Virginia's Big Sandy Valley, at the mouth of which one branch of the Hammonds family settled in 1791 (members of the family spell their last name differently). John Hartford (Fiddler) says older informants have told him the title commemorates a Civil War battle either on Brushy Fork of John's Creek in Pike County, Kentucky, or near Old Bedstead Mountain in southern Floyd County, Kentucky. The battle was supposedly one of the last of the war, according to the veteran Sloan. | ||
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Revision as of 23:21, 21 December 2018
X:1
T:Brushy Fork of John's Creek [2]
N:From the playing of John Morgan Salyer (1882-1952, Salyersville, Magoffin County, eastern Ky.)
N:recorded at home 1941/42 by his sons on a disc player
M:C|
L:1/8
R:Reel
Q:"Quick"
N:AEae tuning (fiddle)
D:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/brushy-fork-johns-creek
D:https://soundarchives.berea.edu/items/show/4237
Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion
K:Amix
a3b a2ef|gaba g2e2|a2(ba) a2ef|gecB A2[A2e2]|
a2 ab agef|gab2 ag e2|a2 ab agef|e2 cB A2A2||
[e3e3]f edBA|[B2e2]A2[B2e2]A2|edef ed[Be]A |BAcB A2A2:||
BRUSHY FORK OF JOHN'S CREEK [1]. AKA - "Brushy Fork of Buckthorn," "Long Fork of Buckthorn (The)." Old-time, Breakdown. USA, eastern Kentucky. A Mixolydian. AEae tuning (fiddle). AB (Titon/Stamper): AAB (Titon/Salyer): ABB'CC (Phillips). In the respective repertory of Kentucky fiddlers Hiram Stamper and John Sayler. See also the closely related tunes "Long Fork of Buckhorn" and "Old Christmas Morning." Versions of tune were in the repertoires of West Virginia fiddlers Burl Hammons and Ed Haley. Kentucky fiddler Hiram Stamper learned the tune from Shade Sloan, a Civil War veteran, and said that Alton Sizemore played it and called it "Brushy Fork of Buckhorn." Hiram's son, the late Art Stamper, recorded a version in standard tuning he called "The Long Fork of Buckhorn." Gerry Milnes suggests the title may relate to John's Creek in West Virginia's Big Sandy Valley, at the mouth of which one branch of the Hammonds family settled in 1791 (members of the family spell their last name differently). John Hartford (Fiddler) says older informants have told him the title commemorates a Civil War battle either on Brushy Fork of John's Creek in Pike County, Kentucky, or near Old Bedstead Mountain in southern Floyd County, Kentucky. The battle was supposedly one of the last of the war, according to the veteran Sloan.