Annotation:Old Voile: Difference between revisions
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'''OLD VIOLE.''' AKA and see "[[Constitution Hornpipe (3)]]," "[[Farewell Mary Ann]]." Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, Kentucky. The tune comes from Grant County, Kentucky, and was recorded by fiddler Frank Miller with the north-central Kentucky group the Blue Ridge Mountaineers in 1929 for Gennett Records. It was named after a man whose name was Viole Franks, a mail carrier in Grant County who played the tune but had no name for it. The tune was colleted in Anderson County, Kentucky, under the title "Constitution Hornpipe," and a close variant appeared in Mississippi as "Farewell Mary Ann." | '''OLD VIOLE.''' AKA - "[[Old Voyle]]." AKA and see "[[Constitution Hornpipe (3)]]," "[[Farewell Mary Ann]]," "[[J.B. Miller's Reel]]" Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, Kentucky. The tune comes from Grant County, Kentucky, and was recorded by fiddler Frank Miller with the north-central Kentucky group the Blue Ridge Mountaineers in 1929 for Gennett Records. It was named after a man whose name was Viole Franks, a mail carrier in Grant County who played the tune but had no name for it. The tune was colleted in Anderson County, Kentucky, under the title "Constitution Hornpipe," and a close variant appeared in Mississippi as "Farewell Mary Ann." | ||
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Revision as of 23:48, 11 December 2018
Back to Old Voile
OLD VIOLE. AKA - "Old Voyle." AKA and see "Constitution Hornpipe (3)," "Farewell Mary Ann," "J.B. Miller's Reel" Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, Kentucky. The tune comes from Grant County, Kentucky, and was recorded by fiddler Frank Miller with the north-central Kentucky group the Blue Ridge Mountaineers in 1929 for Gennett Records. It was named after a man whose name was Viole Franks, a mail carrier in Grant County who played the tune but had no name for it. The tune was colleted in Anderson County, Kentucky, under the title "Constitution Hornpipe," and a close variant appeared in Mississippi as "Farewell Mary Ann."
Source for notated version:
Printed sources:
Recorded sources: Gennett 6870 (78 RPM), Blue Ridge Mountaineers (1929). Morning Star 45005, Blue Ridge Mountaineers - "Way Down South in Dixie."