Bill Brown: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 13:31, 9 April 2012
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BILL BROWN. Old-Time, Breakdown. USA; Magoffin County, Ky. A Major. AEac# tuning (fiddle). AABB. An irregular tune (the 'A' part has eight repeated measures, the 'B' part four repeated measures) in repertoire of Kentucky fiddler John Salyer (Salyersville, Magoffin County). It was named for the fiddler who played the tune, perhaps because the real name was forgotten or unlearned, according to Bruce Molsky. Jeff Titon (2001) suggests it might have been named after William H. "Bill" Brown, who was executed by hanging for the murder of Irish peddler Morris Hagerty in Morgan County, Ky., in 1855. Bruce Greene likened the tune to "Sugar in the Gourd" according to Bruce Molsky.
Source for notated version: a home recording of John Salyer, 1941 or 1942, by his sons, Grover and Glen [Titon].
Printed source: Titon (Old-Time Kentucky Fiddle Tunes), 2001; No. 8, p. 39.
Recorded source: Berea College Appalachian Center AC003, "John Salyer: Home Recordings 1941-1942" (1993). Rounder 0361, Bruce Molsky - "Lost Boy" (1996).
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