Annotation:Wild Horse in the Cane Break

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X:1 T:Wild Horse in the Cane Break T:Horses in the Canebrake S:Jake Phelps (1885-1977, Pea Ridge, Todd County, Ky.) M:C| L:1/8 F:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/wild-horse-cane-break Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:G G,2-||[M:2/4]G,ABd|[M:C|] +slide+[e2e2]([e2e2]e)dBd| gdBd ae2z| +slide+[e2e2]+slide+[e2e2]d2 |BGA2 G(AB)c| +slide+[e2e2]+slide+([e3e3]e)dBd| gdBd ae2z|+slide+[e2e2]+slide+[e2e2]d2| BGA2 G2[G,2G2]-|| [G,2G2] ga gedg|eaab a2b2|aged edBd|aegd e2G,2-| G,2 ga gedg|eaab a2b2|aged edBd|aegd e2G,-||



WILD HORSE IN THE CANE BREAK. AKA - "Wild Horse in the Canebrake." AKA and see "Horses in the Canebrake." American, Reel (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. The tune was in the repertoire of Pea Ridge, Todd County, Kentucky, fiddler William Lee "Jake" Phelps (1885-1977), who was recorded in the field in 1973 by musician and collector Bruce Greene, and, earlier in 1965 by folklorists D.K. Wilgus and Yvonne Gregory. A version of Phelps's tune was recorded by banjoist Bob Carlin and fiddler James Bryan ("Banging and Sawing", 1996) under the title "Horses in the Canebrake."

Additional notes

Source for notated version: -

Printed sources : -

Recorded sources: -

See also listing at:
Hear Bruce Greene's field recording of Jake Phelps playing the tune at Slippery Hill [1] and at the Digital Library of Appalachia [2]



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