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'''BACON RIND.''' AKA - "[[Sal's got a Meatskin]]," "[[Sal's got a Wooden Leg laid away]]." American, Reel (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The source for "Bacon Rind" is Everett Kays (1905-1996), a fiddler from Lawrenceburg, Anderson County, north-central Kentucky (between Louisville and Lexington). The tune is variously known as "Sal's got a Meatskin" or (in the Ozarks) "Sal's got a Wooden Leg laid away," from suggestive lyrics sung to the tune (some more blatant than others). The name "Bacon Rind" for the tune is an attempt to sanitize the title, and is not particular to Mr. Kays, and it was in common use in various parts of the country.  Alan Lomax quoted these lines<ref>Interview with Neal Morris, Timbo, Stone County, Arkansas, recorded 10.6.1959 [http://research.culturalequity.org/get-audio-detailed-recording.do?recordingId=6136]<ref>
'''BACON RIND.''' AKA - "[[Sal's got a Meatskin]]," "[[Sal's got a Wooden Leg laid away]]." American, Reel (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The source for "Bacon Rind" is Everett Kays (1905-1996), a fiddler from Lawrenceburg, Anderson County, north-central Kentucky (between Louisville and Lexington). The tune is variously known as "Sal's got a Meatskin" or (in the Ozarks) "Sal's got a Wooden Leg laid away," from suggestive lyrics sung to the tune (some more blatant than others). The name "Bacon Rind" may have been an attempt to sanitize the title, but it is hardly less suggestive, for 'bacon rind' was in slang usage in the late 19th/early 20th century to refer to the labia-majora and minora. The name for the tune is also not particular to Mr. Kays, and it was in common use in various parts of the country.  Alan Lomax quoted these lines<ref>Interview with Neal Morris, Timbo, Stone County, Arkansas, recorded 10.6.1959 [http://research.culturalequity.org/get-audio-detailed-recording.do?recordingId=6136]<ref>
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
''Sal's got a bacon rind laid away,''<br>
''Sal's got a bacon rind laid away,''<br>
''To grease Jim's middle leg so they say.''<br>
''To grease Jim's middle leg so they say.''<br>
</blockquote>
</blockquote>
A famous Native-American chief of the Osage tribe, Wah-she-hah (Star that Travels) was also known as Bacon Rind (ca. 1860–1932). He was probably originally from Kansas, but came to Oklahoma during the Osage removal from Kansas in the 1870s. He was an Osage tribal councilman, served as assistant chief in 1904–05, and was elected principal chief in 1912. However he was removed from his office by the Secretary of the Interior a year over a 1906 bribery incident involving an oil lease. Many Osage continued to recognize Bacon Rind as their leader despite his dismissal, and he remained an influential  and progressive political leader of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Bacon Rind was politically progressive and favored the allotment of the Osage Reservation and the development of its oil and natural gas resources. He remained a traditionalist in customs, however, and always wore native dress and an otter-skin cap. Bacon Rind was a gifted speaker of the Osage language. He spent the last quarter-century of his life representing the Osage on annual visits to Washington, D.C. It has been claimed that Bacon Rind was the most photographed of all American Indian leaders. He died at Pawhuska, Oklahoma, on March 28, 1932, and was buried on a hill northeast of that community. He was immortalized in a set of Acee glasses given away with a fill-up at Knox Oil Co. gas stations in Oklahoma during the 1950s.
The Prairie Ramblers recorded a tune called "Bacon Rind" in August, 1937, release on Conqueror 8830 (78 RPM), where it is credited to fiddler Shelby "Tex" Atchison.  
The Prairie Ramblers recorded a tune called "Bacon Rind" in August, 1937, release on Conqueror 8830 (78 RPM), where it is credited to fiddler Shelby "Tex" Atchison.  
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Revision as of 23:35, 7 August 2019

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X:1 T:Bacon Rind [1] N:From the playing of Everett Kays (1905-1996, Lawrenceburg, N:Anderson County, north-central Kentucky) M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel Q:"Quick" N:1973 and 1975 field recordings by Bruce Greene D:Rounder 0377, Everett Kays - Traditional Fiddle Music of Kentucky vol. 2 D:https://soundarchives.berea.edu/items/show/1224 F:https://soundarchives.berea.edu/items/show/1086 Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:G D2-|D2 G2 BA [G2B2]|[G3c3]c [G2c2]D2-|D2G2 BA B2|[D3A3]B [D2A2]D2-| D2 G2 BA [G2B2]|[G3c3][Gc] [G2c2]cd-|"$"dedB AFAF|(G[G2B2])[GB][G2B2]:|| ef|"*"gfge d2 B2|[E3c3][Ec] [E2c2]ef|"**"g2g2 d2B2|[D3A3]B [D2A2]ef| gfge d2BB|cBcc efee|dddd dcAF |G2[GB][GB][G2B2]:| P:Substitutions: "$"dedB cAFD||"*"[B2g2][B2g2] d2B2||"**"gfge dcB2||



BACON RIND. AKA - "Sal's got a Meatskin," "Sal's got a Wooden Leg laid away." American, Reel (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The source for "Bacon Rind" is Everett Kays (1905-1996), a fiddler from Lawrenceburg, Anderson County, north-central Kentucky (between Louisville and Lexington). The tune is variously known as "Sal's got a Meatskin" or (in the Ozarks) "Sal's got a Wooden Leg laid away," from suggestive lyrics sung to the tune (some more blatant than others). The name "Bacon Rind" may have been an attempt to sanitize the title, but it is hardly less suggestive, for 'bacon rind' was in slang usage in the late 19th/early 20th century to refer to the labia-majora and minora. The name for the tune is also not particular to Mr. Kays, and it was in common use in various parts of the country. Alan Lomax quoted these lines<ref>Interview with Neal Morris, Timbo, Stone County, Arkansas, recorded 10.6.1959 [1]<ref>

Sal's got a bacon rind laid away,
To grease Jim's middle leg so they say.

A famous Native-American chief of the Osage tribe, Wah-she-hah (Star that Travels) was also known as Bacon Rind (ca. 1860–1932). He was probably originally from Kansas, but came to Oklahoma during the Osage removal from Kansas in the 1870s. He was an Osage tribal councilman, served as assistant chief in 1904–05, and was elected principal chief in 1912. However he was removed from his office by the Secretary of the Interior a year over a 1906 bribery incident involving an oil lease. Many Osage continued to recognize Bacon Rind as their leader despite his dismissal, and he remained an influential and progressive political leader of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Bacon Rind was politically progressive and favored the allotment of the Osage Reservation and the development of its oil and natural gas resources. He remained a traditionalist in customs, however, and always wore native dress and an otter-skin cap. Bacon Rind was a gifted speaker of the Osage language. He spent the last quarter-century of his life representing the Osage on annual visits to Washington, D.C. It has been claimed that Bacon Rind was the most photographed of all American Indian leaders. He died at Pawhuska, Oklahoma, on March 28, 1932, and was buried on a hill northeast of that community. He was immortalized in a set of Acee glasses given away with a fill-up at Knox Oil Co. gas stations in Oklahoma during the 1950s. The Prairie Ramblers recorded a tune called "Bacon Rind" in August, 1937, release on Conqueror 8830 (78 RPM), where it is credited to fiddler Shelby "Tex" Atchison.

Additional notes

Source for notated version: -

Printed sources : - Clare Milliner & Walt Koken (Milliner-Koken Collection of American Fiddle Tunes), 2011; p. 19.

Recorded sources: -

See also listing at:
Hear Everett Kay's mid-1970's field recordings at Slippery Hill [2], the Digital Library of Appalachia [3] and Berea Sound Archives [4] [5]
See Pete Showman's standard notation version [6]
See Taterjoe.com standard notation version [7]
Hear/see Howard Rains play a version of "Bacon Rind" on youtube.com [8], and the Canote Brothers [9]



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