Biography:Enos Canoy: Difference between revisions

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'''ENOS CANOY''' (1909-1970).  Canoy had a band called the Canoy Wildcats, the first string band to play on Mississippi radio.  Canoy and his family were also called the Enos Canoy Band.  In 1939 Herbert Halpert recorded him for the Library of Congress, accompanied on mandolin by Tim Canoy, and guitar by Lola Canoy.
'''ENOS CANOY''' (1909-1970).  Magee, Simpson County, central Mississippi fiddler Enos Canoy learned to play the fiddle at age 12, and made his first fiddle out of a pine box.  The fiddle he played at his 1939 Library of Congress field recording session, recorded by Herber Halpert, he had also decorated with hand-tooled and painted figures.  Enos played in a family band, formed around 1937, with his cousin, Tim (mandolin) and Tim's wife Lola (guitar), calling themselves The Canoy Wildcats, and they were the first string band to play on Mississippi radio.  Canoy and his family were also called the Enos Canoy Band.   
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Revision as of 16:21, 15 October 2021


Enos Canoy


     
 Given name:     Enos
 Middle name:     
 Family name:     Canoy
 Place of birth:     Magee, Simpson County, central Mississippi
 Place of death:     Magee, Simpson County, central Mississippi
 Year of birth:     1909
 Year of death:     1970
 Profile:     Musician
 Source of information:     
     

Biographical notes


ENOS CANOY (1909-1970). Magee, Simpson County, central Mississippi fiddler Enos Canoy learned to play the fiddle at age 12, and made his first fiddle out of a pine box. The fiddle he played at his 1939 Library of Congress field recording session, recorded by Herber Halpert, he had also decorated with hand-tooled and painted figures. Enos played in a family band, formed around 1937, with his cousin, Tim (mandolin) and Tim's wife Lola (guitar), calling themselves The Canoy Wildcats, and they were the first string band to play on Mississippi radio. Canoy and his family were also called the Enos Canoy Band.