Annotation:Gettin' Up in the Cool: Difference between revisions

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'''GETTIN' UP IN THE COOL'''. AKA - "Get Up in the Cool." Old-Time, Breakdown. The tune was mentioned in the Atlanta Journal as being "one of the best selections" of the group the Mud Creek Symphony, who broadcast in 1924 on WSB, the Atlanta station. The group, from Pea Ridge, Habersham County, Georgia, consisted of two pair of brothers, the older two uncles of the younger set. New and Ed Tench, both fiddlers, were in their sixties at the time and claimed to have been fiddling for forty-five years or more. The Journal wrote they had played so long that "harmony between the two is merely a matter of second nature" [see Wayne Daniel, '''Pickin' on Peachtree''', 1990, p. 54). A version of the tune was recorded by Texas fiddler Eck Robertson.  
'''GETTIN' UP IN THE COOL'''. AKA - "Get Up in the Cool." Old-Time, Breakdown. The tune was mentioned in the Atlanta Journal as being "one of the best selections" of the group the Mud Creek Symphony, who broadcast in 1924 on WSB, the Atlanta station. The group, from Pea Ridge, Habersham County, Georgia, consisted of two pair of brothers, the older two uncles of the younger set. New and Ed Tench, both fiddlers, were in their sixties at the time and claimed to have been fiddling for forty-five years or more. The Journal wrote they had played so long that "harmony between the two is merely a matter of second nature" [see Wayne Daniel, '''Pickin' on Peachtree''', 1990, p. 54). A version of the tune was recorded by Texas fiddler Eck Robertson (b. 1887).  


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Revision as of 11:57, 12 July 2011

Tune properties and standard notation


GETTIN' UP IN THE COOL. AKA - "Get Up in the Cool." Old-Time, Breakdown. The tune was mentioned in the Atlanta Journal as being "one of the best selections" of the group the Mud Creek Symphony, who broadcast in 1924 on WSB, the Atlanta station. The group, from Pea Ridge, Habersham County, Georgia, consisted of two pair of brothers, the older two uncles of the younger set. New and Ed Tench, both fiddlers, were in their sixties at the time and claimed to have been fiddling for forty-five years or more. The Journal wrote they had played so long that "harmony between the two is merely a matter of second nature" [see Wayne Daniel, Pickin' on Peachtree, 1990, p. 54). A version of the tune was recorded by Texas fiddler Eck Robertson (b. 1887).

Source for notated version:

Printed sources:

Recorded sources: Black Rose Productions, The Mando Mafia - "Get Up in the Cool." County 202, "Eck Robertson: Famous Cowboy Fiddler" (1963)




Tune properties and standard notation