Annotation:Banks of the Arkansas: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
</font></p> | </font></p> | ||
<p><font face="sans-serif" size="3"> | <p><font face="sans-serif" size="3"> | ||
<font color=red>''Recorded sources'': </font> <font color=teal> - One Man Clapping, Bruce Greene - "Five Miles of Ellum Wood" (1996). | <font color=red>''Recorded sources'': </font> <font color=teal> - One Man Clapping, Bruce Greene - "Five Miles of Ellum Wood" (1996). Dave Bragger & Susan Platz - "King's Lament: Old-Time Fiddle Duets" (). </font> | ||
{{break|2}} | {{break|2}} | ||
</font></p> | </font></p> |
Revision as of 02:34, 4 November 2019
X:1 T:Banks of the Arkansas N:From the playing of Bruce Greene M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel N:GDgd tuning (fiddle) Q:"Moderately quick" D:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/banks-arkansas Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:G B-d3 d4| de=fd e2 dB|[G,3G3]A B2d2-|d2ded2B2|A2GG E-DEG| [G,6D6][D2A2]| Bd- d2 d4 |de=fd e2 d2 |+slide+B3c (B/c/B/c/) AA |GABd A2GG|| [G,4E4]{B}cBAA|GGBG A2GG|[G,2E2][E2c2]{B}([Ec]B)AF|G2 BG D2E2| G3 A- BGAF|G2 BG BGAG|[G,2E2][E2c2]{B}([Ec]B)AF|GGBG D2E2| G3 A- BGAF|G2 BGA2G2|[G,2E2][E2c2]{B}([Ec]B)AF|G2 BG D2E2|G4 ([G3B3]A)||
BANKS OF THE ARKANSAS. American, Air or Listening Tune. G Major. GDgd tuning (fiddle). One part. The source for the tune is Shade Sloane, an older fiddler from whom Hiram Stamper (1893-1992, Hindman, Knott County, Kentucky) learned the tune. Jeff Todd Titon (2001) finds the tune related to the Kentucky fiddle tune “Indian Squaw,” and transcribes Stamper's tune under that title (his "Indian Squaw 69C, p. 99). Stamper sang this couplet to the beginning of the tune:
Way down yonder on the Arkansas,
Two old Indians and one old sqaw,
Sittin on the banks of the Arkansas.
Then whistled afterwards, in lieu of words. The title also belongs to a humorous traditional folk-song[1], beginning:
Prettiest little girl I ever saw,
Lived on the banks of the Arkansas.
- ↑ Lomax and Lomax, Our Singing Country, 1941, 68-69. Collected from the singing of Mrs. Minta Morgan of Bells, Texas. According to Jeff Todd Titon, the melody "is the same as Clyde Davenport's for "Cornstalk Fiddle and a Shoestring Bow."