Annotation:Mouth of the Tobique (The)
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|author=https://www.tunearch.org/wiki/User:Andrew
|published_time=2024-10-06
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During my Nat'l Endowment for the Arts research project in 1977 into fiddling styles, New Brunswick fiddler Clarence Langen told me that Mouth of The Tobique (named after the Tobique river in New Brunswick) is better known as Grumbling Old Woman Growling Old Man. Clarence's aunt was the music teacher of the composer, an Indian fiddler named Francis Sowish. The famed Canadian radio fiddler Don Messer in his tunebook mistakenly switched the name of two Sowish compositions and published Sowish's tune "French Mary" under the name "Mouth of the Tobique". I don't know whether or not Francis Sowish "published" his tunes or merely composed them whence they passed into oral tradition. Don Messer got hold of them somehow.
Roland guessed that the reel was composed between 1910 and 1930. Peter Corfield (2024) further remarks that the tune was played at a Sportsman's show in Boston by Claude Paget's father, at which time Canadian radio and TV fiddler Don Messer picked it up. Corfield notes the piece "was common in the Perth-Andover (N.B.) area and had been composed by a local named Francis Sowish. Corfield (2024) prints a different first strain than the one usually played, and identifies it as the strain played by Sowish and Paget; the strain usually played nowadays in its place is actually a variation strain played by Don Messer.
See "Mouth of the Potomac" for a 6/8 setting of this tune.
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