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''Recorded sources'': <font color=teal>Rounder CD 0381, Fred Stoneking - "Saddle Old Spike" (1996). Rounder 0436, Earl Ball - "Traditional Fiddle Music of the Ozarks, vol. 2: On the Springfield Plain" (Ball is a resident of Humansville and learned the tune from his grandfather Bishop). </font>
''Recorded sources'': <font color=teal>Rounder CD 0381, Fred Stoneking - "Saddle Old Spike" (1996). Rounder 0436, Earl Ball - "Traditional Fiddle Music of the Ozarks, vol. 2: On the Springfield Plain" (Ball is a resident of Humansville and learned the tune from his grandfather Bishop). </font>
See also listing at:<br>
Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [http://www.ibiblio.org/keefer/p01.htm#Pad]<br>
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Revision as of 05:04, 26 November 2011

Tune properties and standard notation


HUMANSVILLE. Old-time, Breakdown. USA, Missouri. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB'. The title refers to a place-name from the Ozarks, the town of Humansville, Polk County, Missouri. Similarities to the Kentucky "Fun's All Over," and "Hold Old Baldy While I Dance with Josie," and Nebraska fiddler Bob Walters' "Padgett."

Source for notated version: Fred Stoneking (b. 1933, Missouri), learned from Dean Johnston, who may have learned it from Shorty Pruitt, a resident of Humansville [Beisswenger & McCann].

Printed sources: Beisswenger & McCann (Ozarks Fiddle Tunes), 2008; p. 138.

Recorded sources: Rounder CD 0381, Fred Stoneking - "Saddle Old Spike" (1996). Rounder 0436, Earl Ball - "Traditional Fiddle Music of the Ozarks, vol. 2: On the Springfield Plain" (Ball is a resident of Humansville and learned the tune from his grandfather Bishop). See also listing at:
Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [1]




Tune properties and standard notation