Annotation:Georgia Belle: Difference between revisions

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'''GEORGIA BELLE(S)'''. Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, Western North Carolina. G Mixolydian [Krassen]: G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABA'CCA'C'. Source for notated version: Manco Sneed [http://www.fieldrecorder.com/docs/notes/sneed_owen.htm] (Graham County, North Carolina) [Krassen]. Sneed learned the tune from J.D. Harris or Mac Hensley around 1897-1903 (Krassen). In the repertoire of fiddler Osey Helton, from the same region as Sneed. J. Dedrick Harris was a legendary Tennessee fiddler who played with Bob Taylor while the latter was running for governor of the sate in the late 1800's. He moved to Western N.C. in the 1920's and influence a generation of fiddlers there: Osey Helton, Manco Sneed, Bill Hensley, Marcus Martin. The colony of Georgia was named in honor of King George II, in 1732.  
'''GEORGIA BELLE(S)'''. Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, Western North Carolina. G Mixolydian [Krassen]: G Major. ADae or standard tuning (fiddle). ABA'CCA'C'. The tune was in the repertory of a group of early 20th century North Carolina fiddlers, who influenced one another. Bill Hensley recorded the "Georgia Belle" in in 1946. Hensley was born in Happy Valley, near Johnson City, Tennessee, in 1868, and later moved to Madison County, North Carolina, and then to Buncombe County, North Carolina. The reel was also played by fiddler Manco Sneed (1885-1975, born in Jackson County, North Carolina, who later moved to Graham County where he encountered J. Dedrick Harris. Harris was a legendary Tennessee fiddler who played with Bob Taylor while the latter was running for governor of the sate in the late 1800's. He moved to western North Carolina in the 1920's and influenced a generation of fiddlers there: Osey Helton, Manco Sneed, Bill Hensley, and Marcus Martin. Manco Sneed learned the tune from J.D. Harris or Mac Hensley around 1897-1903, according to Miles Krassen. "George Belle" was also the repertoire of fiddler Osey Helton, from the same region as Sneed.  
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''Source for notated version'': Bill Hensley (North Carolina) [Milliner & Koken].  
''Source for notated version'': Bill Hensley (North Carolina) [Milliner & Koken]. Manco Sneed [http://www.fieldrecorder.com/docs/notes/sneed_owen.htm] (Graham County, North Carolina) [Krassen].  
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Revision as of 21:04, 5 January 2017

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GEORGIA BELLE(S). Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, Western North Carolina. G Mixolydian [Krassen]: G Major. ADae or standard tuning (fiddle). ABA'CCA'C'. The tune was in the repertory of a group of early 20th century North Carolina fiddlers, who influenced one another. Bill Hensley recorded the "Georgia Belle" in in 1946. Hensley was born in Happy Valley, near Johnson City, Tennessee, in 1868, and later moved to Madison County, North Carolina, and then to Buncombe County, North Carolina. The reel was also played by fiddler Manco Sneed (1885-1975, born in Jackson County, North Carolina, who later moved to Graham County where he encountered J. Dedrick Harris. Harris was a legendary Tennessee fiddler who played with Bob Taylor while the latter was running for governor of the sate in the late 1800's. He moved to western North Carolina in the 1920's and influenced a generation of fiddlers there: Osey Helton, Manco Sneed, Bill Hensley, and Marcus Martin. Manco Sneed learned the tune from J.D. Harris or Mac Hensley around 1897-1903, according to Miles Krassen. "George Belle" was also the repertoire of fiddler Osey Helton, from the same region as Sneed.

Source for notated version: Bill Hensley (North Carolina) [Milliner & Koken]. Manco Sneed [1] (Graham County, North Carolina) [Krassen].

Printed sources: Krassen (Masters of Old-Time Fiddling), 1983; pp. 126-127. Milliner & Koken (Milliner-Koken Collection of American Fiddle Tunes), 2011; p. 230.

Recorded sources: Compass 7 4432 2, Bruce Molsky - "Soon Be Time" (2006). Field Recorders Collective FRC 505, "Manco Sneed and the Indians."




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