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Revision as of 03:01, 12 July 2010
BRUSHY RUN. Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, West Virginia. G Major. Standard (Art Stamper) or DGdg (Harvey Sampson) tunings (fiddle). AB. Clay County, West Virginia, fiddler Wilson Douglas identifies the locale of this tune as "over beyond Widen. It was just a big holler, with so much underbrush--some old fiddler was bacheloring there and he just composed this and he called it the 'Brushy Run.' Just a bushy ravine, so to speak. (French) Carpenter could really play that. Where these young fiddlers get lost is in the bowing over the high part. You do it with the bow. You don't do it with the notes at all!" (interview with Nancy McClellan). According to Kerry Blech, Ward Jarvis learned the tune from eastern Kentucky fiddler Ed Haley, and that Jarvis played it in standard tuning.
Source for notated version: Danny Gardella [Phillips].
Recorded sources: Phillips (Traditional American Fiddle Tunes), vol. 1, 1994; p. 39.
Recorded sources: Augusta Heritage Recordings AHR-004C, Harvey Sampson and the Big Possum String Band - "Flat Foot in the Ashes" (1986/1994. Learned by Calhoun County, W.Va., fiddler Harvey Sampson from his father). Cassette C-7625, Wilson Douglas - "Back Porch Symphony." County CO-CD-2729, Art Stamper - "Goodbye Girls I'm Going to Boston" (2000). Rounder 0047, Wilson Douglas - "The Right Hand Fork of Rush's Creek" (1975).
X:1 T:Brushy Run M:C| L:1/8 K:G (G|:G)ABc d2d2|edef g2g2|BABc d2
© 1996-2010 Andrew Kuntz. All Rights Reserved.
Engraver Valerio M. Pelliccioni