Annotation:Little Boy Working on the Road (1)
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LITTLE BOY WORKING ON THE ROAD [1]. Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, East Kentucky. A Mixolydian. Standard or AEae tuning (fiddle). AAB. Source J.W. Day recorded the tune in New York in 1928. Day recorded for Victor in the 1920's and for the Library of Congress and the Ohio Historical Society in the 1930's. He was aided in his career by Jean Thomas, a woman who had an interest in promoting folklore and customs of the Appalachians, and who had Day assume the persona of 'Jilson Setters' (Day's father's name was Jilson Day), having him dress and act the part of a rustic, and in fact his playing style was archaic (learned from his father, with roots in the Civil War era). Most accounts suggest Day was not entirely blind and had some limited sight, although he was impaired enough to meet criteria for legal blindness.
Source for notated version: James William Day {'stage name', Jilson Setters, 1861-1942, Rowan County, Tenn} [Krassen, Titon].
Printed sources: Krassen (Masters of Old Time Fiddling), 1983; p. 23. Titon (Old-Time Kentucky Fiddle Tunes), 2001; No. 93A, p. 122.
Recorded sources: Victor 40025 (78 RPM), Blind Bill Day (1928). Christian Wig & Mark Ward - "Come Back Boys and Feed the Horses: Fiddling on the Frontier".