Annotation:Old Voile: Difference between revisions
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'''OLD VOILE.''' AKA - "Old Viole," "[[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. Field researcher John Harrod collected "Old Voile" from the playing of fiddler Jarvie Hall (accompanied by L.C. Martin and Clarence Skirvin) in Gallatin County, Kentucky, in June, 1978. The tune was collected in Anderson County, Kentucky, under the title "Constitution Hornpipe," and a close variant was similarly collected in Mississippi as "Farewell Mary Ann." In modern time Miller's name seems to have evolved into "J.B." instead of 'Frank', and the tune has been called "[[J.B. Miller's | '''OLD VOILE.''' AKA - "Old Viole," "[[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. Field researcher John Harrod collected "Old Voile" from the playing of fiddler Jarvie Hall (accompanied by L.C. Martin and Clarence Skirvin) in Gallatin County, Kentucky, in June, 1978. The tune was collected in Anderson County, Kentucky, under the title "Constitution Hornpipe," and a close variant was similarly collected in Mississippi as "Farewell Mary Ann." In modern time Miller's name seems to have evolved into "J.B." instead of 'Frank', and the tune has been called "[[J.B. Miller's Hornpipe]]," with the hornpipe characteristics of the tune emphasized. | ||
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Revision as of 23:39, 11 December 2018
X:1 T:Old Voile S:Blue Ridge Entertainers (1929) M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel D:Gennett Blue Ridge Entertainers (1929) F:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/old-voile Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:D FG|ABAG FDFA|BABc dcdB|ABcB AFED|A,2C2EEFG| ABAG FDFA|BABc dcdB|Acef gecA|dfec d2:| |:A2-|ABdA BcdB|ABde fedd|efgf edcd|edcB AGFG| ABdA BcdB|ABde fedd|efgf edcd|edfe d2:|]
OLD VOILE. AKA - "Old Viole," "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. Field researcher John Harrod collected "Old Voile" from the playing of fiddler Jarvie Hall (accompanied by L.C. Martin and Clarence Skirvin) in Gallatin County, Kentucky, in June, 1978. The tune was collected in Anderson County, Kentucky, under the title "Constitution Hornpipe," and a close variant was similarly collected in Mississippi as "Farewell Mary Ann." In modern time Miller's name seems to have evolved into "J.B." instead of 'Frank', and the tune has been called "J.B. Miller's Hornpipe," with the hornpipe characteristics of the tune emphasized.