Annotation:Davy Davy

Find traditional instrumental music
Revision as of 09:31, 1 April 2012 by *>Move page script (moved Talk:Davy Davy to Annotation:Davy Davy)

Tune properties and standard notation


DAVY, DAVY. AKA and see "Going Down the River," "Sailing Down the River," "Paddy Won't You Drink Some Cider," "Paddy Won't You Drink Some Good Old Cider." Old-Time, Song and Breakdown. A version of "Goin' Down the River," by Tennessee's Perry County based Weems String Band, one of whose (brother) members played the cello. It was one of only two sides they commercially recorded. Richard Nevins (in R. Crumb's Heroes of Blues, Jazz and Country, 2006) remarks on the juxtaposition of the back-country band's primitive, archaic sound and the sophisticated techniques of position playing by the fiddlers on the record (one fiddle plays in 3rd, and one in 5th position), a contrast that he finds at the heart of the band's appeal. Unfortunately, the lyrics are a product of the blatantly racist culture prevalent in areas of the United States at the time, and inappropriate for performance today:

A nought is a nought and a one is a finger,
Why can't a white man dance like a ____?
He can't do the quickstep, he tends for to ____,
That's why he can't dance like a ____.

Source for notated version:

Printed sources:

Recorded sources: Columbia 15300 (78 RPM), Weems String Band (backed with "Greenback Dollar"). County Records - "Echoes of the Ozarks, vol. 3." County Records, "Weems String Band." County Records 3511, Weems String Band et al. - "Rural String Bands of Tennessee 1927-1930." Rounder Records 0132, Bob Carlin - "Fiddle Tunes for Clawhammer Banjo" (1980. Learned from Ithica, N.Y., revival musicians Judy Hyman and Jeff Claus).




Tune properties and standard notation