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'''PARKERSBURG LANDING.''' AKA and see  “[[California Dance]],” “[[California Hornpipe]],” "[[Limber Neck Blues]],"  “[[Mamie Pott's Schottische]],” "[[Mason-Dixon Schottische]]," "[[Nightingale Clog (2)]]," “[[Rustic Dance—Scottische (3)]],” “[[Rustic Hornpipe]].” Old-Time, Schottische. USA, Ky. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). A favorite tune of blind eastern Kentucky fiddler Ed Haley (1885-1951), who knew the melody by the above title, which may possibly reflect the locale in which Haley learned the tune (i.e. around Parkersburg, West Virginia). Haley lived in the Catlettsburg-Ashland area of Boyd County, KY, from at least 1920 until his death in 1951 [Brandon Kirk]. Mississippi musicians Narmour and Smith recorded the tune as "[[Limber Neck Blues]]" and a variant was recorded by Mount Vernon, Ohio, fiddler John Baltzell as “[[Kenion Clog]].”  
'''PARKERSBURG LANDING.''' AKA and see  “[[California Dance]],” “[[California Hornpipe]],” "[[Limber Neck Blues]],"  “[[Mamie Pott's Schottische]],” "[[Mason-Dixon Schottische]]," "[[Nightingale (2) (The)]]," “[[Rustic Dance—Scottische (3)]],” “[[Rustic Hornpipe]].” Old-Time, Schottische. USA, Ky. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). A favorite tune of blind eastern Kentucky fiddler Ed Haley (1885-1951), who knew the melody by the above title, which may possibly reflect the locale in which Haley learned the tune (i.e. around Parkersburg, West Virginia). Haley lived in the Catlettsburg-Ashland area of Boyd County, KY, from at least 1920 until his death in 1951 [Brandon Kirk]. Mississippi musicians Narmour and Smith recorded the tune as "[[Limber Neck Blues]]" and a variant was recorded by Mount Vernon, Ohio, fiddler John Baltzell as “[[Kenion Clog]].”  
[[File:haley.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Ed Haley]]
[[File:haley.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Ed Haley]]
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Revision as of 15:34, 6 September 2015

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PARKERSBURG LANDING. AKA and see “California Dance,” “California Hornpipe,” "Limber Neck Blues," “Mamie Pott's Schottische,” "Mason-Dixon Schottische," "Nightingale (2) (The)," “Rustic Dance—Scottische (3),” “Rustic Hornpipe.” Old-Time, Schottische. USA, Ky. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). A favorite tune of blind eastern Kentucky fiddler Ed Haley (1885-1951), who knew the melody by the above title, which may possibly reflect the locale in which Haley learned the tune (i.e. around Parkersburg, West Virginia). Haley lived in the Catlettsburg-Ashland area of Boyd County, KY, from at least 1920 until his death in 1951 [Brandon Kirk]. Mississippi musicians Narmour and Smith recorded the tune as "Limber Neck Blues" and a variant was recorded by Mount Vernon, Ohio, fiddler John Baltzell as “Kenion Clog.”

Ed Haley



Source for notated version:

Printed sources:

Recorded sources: Rounder 1010, Ed Hayley - "Parkersburg Landing" (1976).

See also listing at:
Hear Ed Haley's 1946 performance on youtube.com [1]




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