Annotation:Gold Rush: Difference between revisions
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|f_annotation='''GOLD RUSH'''. American, Reel. Composed by legendary bluegrass mandolin player Bill Monroe and his fiddler at the time, Byron Berline (The late Monroe had over 63 fiddlers in his group at various times), around 1967. It is only Monroe's name on the credits, however. After graduating college, Berline played with Monroe for about seven months before being drafted into the US army. "Gold Rush" was recorded by Mike Yates in 1980 from the playing of fiddler Pug Allen of Stuarts Draft, Augusta County, Va. At the time Allen was adamant that he knew the tune years before Monroe's recording was issued. Dave Barton relays that Missouri fiddler Fred Stoneking maintains the tune was modeled after a local tune called "[[Burt County Breakdown]]," and suspects that Berline (who is from Oklahoma) may have reworked an older tune he heard. The "Burt County" title and tune was sourced to Burt County, Nebraska, fiddler Bob Walters (by Howard Marshall), however, and the breadth of its dissemination is unknown. | |f_annotation='''GOLD RUSH'''. American, Reel (whole time). A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB'. Composed by legendary bluegrass mandolin player [[wikipedia:Bill Monroe]] and his band's fiddler at the time, Byron Berline (The late Monroe had over 63 fiddlers in his group at various times), around 1967. It is only Monroe's name on the credits, however. After graduating college, Berline played with Monroe for about seven months before being drafted into the US army. "Gold Rush" was recorded by Mike Yates in 1980 from the playing of fiddler Pug Allen of Stuarts Draft, Augusta County, Va. At the time Allen was adamant that he knew the tune years before Monroe's recording was issued. Dave Barton relays that Missouri fiddler Fred Stoneking maintains the tune was modeled after a local tune called "[[Burt County Breakdown]]," and suspects that Berline (who is from Oklahoma) may have reworked an older tune he heard. The "Burt County" title and tune was sourced to Burt County, Nebraska, fiddler Bob Walters (by Howard Marshall), however, and the breadth of its dissemination is unknown. | ||
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Latest revision as of 15:36, 29 August 2023
X:1 T:Gold Rush T:From the playing of Stafford Harris via Tricia Spencer and Howard Rains C:Byrone Berline and Bill Monroe D:Tricia Spencer and Howard Rains - The Old Texas Fiddle Volume 3 N:Chord arrangement from Howard Rains M:4/4 L:1/8 R:Reel Z:Jan Howard 2023 K:A AB|:"A"c2 e2 efed|"A" c2 e4 c (e|"A" e)afe cBAG|"Bm" F6 EF| "D" A2 AB cBAB|"Bm" cBAE F4 |"E" EFAB cBAF |1"A" A2 AB A2 AB:| |2"A" A2 AB A2 cB|:"A"ABAF E2 FE|"D" D2 E2 "A" C2- E(E|"A" E2) EE F2 A2|"F#m" BccB c2cB| "A" ABAF E2 FE|"D" D2 E2 C2- E(E|"E"E)FAB cBAF |1"A"A2 AB A2 cB:|2"A"A2 AB A4||
GOLD RUSH. American, Reel (whole time). A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB'. Composed by legendary bluegrass mandolin player wikipedia:Bill Monroe and his band's fiddler at the time, Byron Berline (The late Monroe had over 63 fiddlers in his group at various times), around 1967. It is only Monroe's name on the credits, however. After graduating college, Berline played with Monroe for about seven months before being drafted into the US army. "Gold Rush" was recorded by Mike Yates in 1980 from the playing of fiddler Pug Allen of Stuarts Draft, Augusta County, Va. At the time Allen was adamant that he knew the tune years before Monroe's recording was issued. Dave Barton relays that Missouri fiddler Fred Stoneking maintains the tune was modeled after a local tune called "Burt County Breakdown," and suspects that Berline (who is from Oklahoma) may have reworked an older tune he heard. The "Burt County" title and tune was sourced to Burt County, Nebraska, fiddler Bob Walters (by Howard Marshall), however, and the breadth of its dissemination is unknown.