Annotation:None Greater than Lincoln: Difference between revisions

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'''NONE GREATER THAN LINCOLN.''' Old-Time, Air (3/4 time). USA, Alabama. A distanced version of "[[Drunken Hiccups]]" in the repertory of west Alabama fiddler D. Dix Hollis (1861-1927), also the town physician of Sulligent, who considered it one of "the good old tunes of long ago" (as quoted in the '''Opelika Daily News''' of April 17, 1926" {Joyce Cauthen, 1990}). [See also Joyce Cauthen's article "D. Dix Hollis--Early Paramount Recording Artist and Fiddler Who Challenged the World," '''JEMF Quarterly''', Volume 1985]. Hollis recorded the tune in New York in 1924 at his only recording session, for Paramound Records, but the side was unissued (it can be heard on Document-8032).
'''NONE GREATER THAN LINCOLN.''' Old-Time, Air (3/4 time). USA, Alabama. A distanced version of "[[Drunken Hiccups (1)]]" in the repertory of west Alabama fiddler D. Dix Hollis (1861-1927), also the town physician of Sulligent, who considered it one of "the good old tunes of long ago" (as quoted in the '''Opelika Daily News''' of April 17, 1926" {Joyce Cauthen, 1990}). [See also Joyce Cauthen's article "D. Dix Hollis--Early Paramount Recording Artist and Fiddler Who Challenged the World," '''JEMF Quarterly''', Volume 1985]. Hollis recorded the tune in New York in 1924 at his only recording session, for Paramound Records, but the side was unissued (it can be heard on Document-8032).
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Revision as of 03:55, 31 July 2014

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NONE GREATER THAN LINCOLN. Old-Time, Air (3/4 time). USA, Alabama. A distanced version of "Drunken Hiccups (1)" in the repertory of west Alabama fiddler D. Dix Hollis (1861-1927), also the town physician of Sulligent, who considered it one of "the good old tunes of long ago" (as quoted in the Opelika Daily News of April 17, 1926" {Joyce Cauthen, 1990}). [See also Joyce Cauthen's article "D. Dix Hollis--Early Paramount Recording Artist and Fiddler Who Challenged the World," JEMF Quarterly, Volume 1985]. Hollis recorded the tune in New York in 1924 at his only recording session, for Paramound Records, but the side was unissued (it can be heard on Document-8032).

Source for notated version:

Printed sources:

Recorded sources: Document DOCD-8032, "Alabama String bands 1924-1937."

See also listing at:
Hear the 1924 recording of D. Dix Hollis playing the tune at the Internet Archive [1]




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