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'''WOODCHOPPER’S REEL, THE.''' AKA and see "[[Pea Soup]]" (or “[[Soupe aux pois (La)]],” the French Canadian title), "The Woodchopper," “Woodchopper’s Breakdown (2),", "Woodchopper's Hornpipe.” Canadian (originally), American; Reel. USA, New England, Missouri. Canada; Maritimes, Prince Edward Island. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Composition of the tune has been credited to the popular mid-20th century New Brunswick fiddler Ned Landry (e.g. by Perlman), born in St. John in Feb., 1921, who also composed "[[Little Burnt Potato]]," "[[Hillbilly Calypso]]," "[[Ontario Swing]]" and "[[Bowin' the Strings]]."  Landry appeared on Don Messer's radio show '''Backwoods Breakdown''' in 1934 as a harmonica player, and soon formed his own group, the New Brunswick Lumberjacks, whose recordings begin in 1955. French-Canadian titles for the tune include “[[Reel de la soupe aux pois]]” ([[Pea Soup]]), the title in Montréal, and “[[Reel des bucherons]]” (Lumberjack’s Reel) or "[[Petit Bucheux (Le)]]" (Little Woodchopper).  The melody has become popular in the American Mid West, probably picked up from Canadian radio broadcasts. It was, for example, in the repertoire of Nebraska fiddler Bob Walters and his protege Cyril Stinnett (1912 1986), who epitomized the "North Missouri Hornpipe Style" of fiddling (see abc below. Stinnet has the parts reversed from the original).  “We’re very suspicious that this tune may be French-Canadian,” wrote John Hartford in 2001. The melody is sometimes attributed to Maritime fiddling great Don Messer (as, for example, on his MCA album “The Very Best of…”), however, this seems to have been an attempt by the record company to establish a copyright claim.   
'''WOODCHOPPER’S REEL, THE.''' AKA and see "[[Pea Soup]]" (or “[[Soupe aux pois (La)]],” the French Canadian title), "The Woodchopper," “Woodchopper’s Breakdown (2),", "Woodchopper's Hornpipe.” Canadian (originally), American; Reel. USA, New England, Missouri. Canada; Maritimes, Prince Edward Island. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Composition of the tune has been credited to the popular mid-20th century New Brunswick fiddler Ned Landry (e.g. by Perlman), born in St. John in Feb., 1921, who also composed "[[Little Burnt Potato]]," "[[Hillbilly Calypso]]," "[[Ontario Swing]]" and "[[Bowin' the Strings]]."  Landry appeared on Don Messer's radio show '''Backwoods Breakdown''' in 1934 as a harmonica player, and soon formed his own group, the New Brunswick Lumberjacks, whose recordings begin in 1955. French-Canadian titles for the tune include “[[Reel de la soupe aux pois]]” ([[Pea Soup]]), the title in Montréal, and “[[Reel des bucherons]]” (Lumberjack’s Reel) or "[[Petit Bucheux (Le)]]" (Little Woodchopper).  Messer recorded the tune on 78 RPM in 1952 (Apex 26322) under the the title "Pea Soup", although it does not appear in any of Messer's collections published in the 1940's or 1950's, according to researcher Jean Duval. Messer's recording was predated by fiddler Isidore Soucy's July, 1951, recording, where it is called "[[Reel de la soup aux pots]]," and it may be that Messer learned it from the playing of the Soucy Family rather than from Landy.
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The reel has become popular in the American Mid-West, probably picked up from Canadian radio broadcasts. It was, for example, in the repertoire of Nebraska fiddler Bob Walters and his protege Cyril Stinnett (1912 1986), who epitomized the "North Missouri Hornpipe Style" of fiddling (see abc below. Stinnet has the parts reversed from the original).  “We’re very suspicious that this tune may be French-Canadian,” wrote John Hartford in 2001. The melody is sometimes attributed to Maritime fiddling great Don Messer (as, for example, on his MCA album “The Very Best of…”), however, this seems to have been an attempt by the record company to establish a copyright claim.   
[[File:messerlandry.jpg|600px|thumb|right|Don Messer & Ned Landry, fiddles.]]
[[File:messerlandry.jpg|600px|thumb|right|Don Messer & Ned Landry, fiddles.]]
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Revision as of 23:23, 24 August 2018


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WOODCHOPPER’S REEL, THE. AKA and see "Pea Soup" (or “Soupe aux pois (La),” the French Canadian title), "The Woodchopper," “Woodchopper’s Breakdown (2),", "Woodchopper's Hornpipe.” Canadian (originally), American; Reel. USA, New England, Missouri. Canada; Maritimes, Prince Edward Island. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Composition of the tune has been credited to the popular mid-20th century New Brunswick fiddler Ned Landry (e.g. by Perlman), born in St. John in Feb., 1921, who also composed "Little Burnt Potato," "Hillbilly Calypso," "Ontario Swing" and "Bowin' the Strings." Landry appeared on Don Messer's radio show Backwoods Breakdown in 1934 as a harmonica player, and soon formed his own group, the New Brunswick Lumberjacks, whose recordings begin in 1955. French-Canadian titles for the tune include “Reel de la soupe aux pois” (Pea Soup), the title in Montréal, and “Reel des bucherons” (Lumberjack’s Reel) or "Petit Bucheux (Le)" (Little Woodchopper). Messer recorded the tune on 78 RPM in 1952 (Apex 26322) under the the title "Pea Soup", although it does not appear in any of Messer's collections published in the 1940's or 1950's, according to researcher Jean Duval. Messer's recording was predated by fiddler Isidore Soucy's July, 1951, recording, where it is called "Reel de la soup aux pots," and it may be that Messer learned it from the playing of the Soucy Family rather than from Landy.

The reel has become popular in the American Mid-West, probably picked up from Canadian radio broadcasts. It was, for example, in the repertoire of Nebraska fiddler Bob Walters and his protege Cyril Stinnett (1912 1986), who epitomized the "North Missouri Hornpipe Style" of fiddling (see abc below. Stinnet has the parts reversed from the original). “We’re very suspicious that this tune may be French-Canadian,” wrote John Hartford in 2001. The melody is sometimes attributed to Maritime fiddling great Don Messer (as, for example, on his MCA album “The Very Best of…”), however, this seems to have been an attempt by the record company to establish a copyright claim.

Don Messer & Ned Landry, fiddles.


Additional notes

Source for notated version: - Joe Pancerzewski (north Mid West USA) [Brody, Phillips]; Bob Walters (Burt County, Nebraska) [Christeson]; Reuben Smith (b. 1931, Blooming Point, Queens County, Prince Edward Island) [Perlman].

Printed sources : - Brody ('Fiddler’s Fakebook), 1983; p. 294. R.P. Christeson (Old Time Fiddlers Repertory, vol. 1), 1973; p. 55. Hinds/Hebert (Grumbling Old Woman), 1981; p. 7. Messer (Way Down East), 1948 (Gordon Thompson, pub. Out of print). Messer (Anthology of Favorite Fiddle Tunes), 1980; No. 35, p. 29. Miller & Perron (New England Fiddlers Repertoire), 1983; No. 149. Perlman (The Fiddle Music of Prince Edward Island), 1996; p. 72. Phillips (Traditional American Fiddle Tunes), vol. 1), 1994; p. 261. Sannella, Balance and Swing (CDSS).

Recorded sources: - Apex A: 1611, "The Best of Don Messer and His Islanders--P.E.I. Series Vol. 4" (1960). Fiddler FLRP 001, Tom Doucet - "Dow East Star" (1975, as part of "Don Messer Medley"). Fretless FR200, Yankee Ingenuity "Kitchen Junket" (1977). Front Hall 010, Fennigs All Stars "The Hammered Dulcimer Strikes Again." Green Linnet GLCD 3127, Sharon Shannon – “The Best of Sharon Shannon: Spellbound” (1999). MCA Records MCAD 4037, “The Very Best of Don Messer” (1994. Thomas Young writes to say that MCA made mistakes in the order of the tracks. “Woodchopper’s” is actually cut #14). Philo 2000, "Louis Beaudoin" (1973). Rounder 0442, John Hartford – “Hamilton Breakdown” (2001). Voyager 306 S, Joe Pancerzewski "The Fiddling Engineer."

See also listing at:
Alan Snyder's Cape Breton Fiddle Recordings Index [1]
Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [2]
Hear Don Messer and His Islanders' recording on youtube.com [3]
See a clip of Don Messer and Cecil MacEachern play the tune on youtube.com [4] (as "Pea Soup").



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