Annotation:Run Mountain: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 40: | Line 40: | ||
</font></p> | </font></p> | ||
<p><font face="Century Gothic" size="2"> | <p><font face="Century Gothic" size="2"> | ||
<font color=red>''Recorded sources'': </font> <font color=teal> - King 819, J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers. Folkways FA 2399, New Lost City Ramblers ' "vol. 4." </font> | <font color=red>''Recorded sources'': </font> <font color=teal> - Arhoolie Records CD 456, J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers – "Run Mountain" (1997). King 819, J.E. Mainer's Mountaineers. Folkways FA 2399, New Lost City Ramblers ' "vol. 4." </font> | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
<br> | <br> |
Revision as of 02:55, 21 May 2018
X:0 T: No Score C: The Traditional Tune Archive M: K: x
RUN MOUNTAIN. Old-Time, Breakdown and Song. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). Most versions stem from Joseph Emmett "J.E." Mainer (1889-1971), who first recorded it in 1949 (with subsequent later recordings). Mainer did not claim to have composed it but rather said it was an old song he had heard, however, it does not seem to predate him.
Went up on the mountain,
Give my horn a blow;
I thought I heard my true love say,
"That’s comin’ from my beau."
Chorus:
Run Mountain, take a little hill,
Run Mountain, take little hill;
Run Mountain, take a little hill,
There you’ll meet your fill.
Mainer himself said the last part was “check a little hill,” meaning to investigate a hill, but his brother Wade thought it may have been a mishearing of “there’s sugar in the hill,” referring to the preparation of moonshine, according to Lyle Lofgren. At other times Mainer seems to sing "Chuck a little hill," but the chorus seems to have been a bit of nonsense without a specific meaning.