Annotation:Green Sleeve

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X:1 T:Green Sleeve N:From the playing of Gary Harrison & The Mule Team M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel Q:"Fast" D:http://www.pickaway.press/doi/clips/rpd/sleeve.mp3 D:Gary Harrison & The Mule Team - Red Prairie Dawn (2000) Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:Emin +slide+"Emin"[e3e3][ee]-[e3e3]d-|B2G2 E3E|E2G2 EDEF|GBAG FDDD| "Emin"EFGD E2 EE|EFGA BE[GB][GB]|E2G2 E-DE-F|GBAG FDDD:| |:+slide+"G"[e3e3][ee]-[e3e3]d|Bded Bd[d2e2]|+slide+g2 fa g2dd|gded BB[B2e2]| +slide+"G"[e3e3]f-[e3e3]d|Bded Bd[d2e2]|+slide+g2 ba g2dd|gded BB[B2e2]:|



GREEN SLEEVE. American, Reel (cut time). E Minor ('A' part) & G Major ('B' part). Standard or EDae tuning (fiddle). AABB. The tune was collected from the playing of Henry Hall (1880-1965) of Cave-in-Rock, Hardin County, southern tip of Illinois, recorded in the field in 1956 by Millie Angleton. Cave-in-Rock was named after a cavern on a high bluff on the northern bank of the lower Ohio River, a picturesque spot that was the lair of river thieves and robbers, a scourge to river navigation until rooted out in the 1830's.


Additional notes





Recorded sources : - Gary Harrison & The Mule Team - "Folk Songs of Illinois #2". Gary Harrison & The Mule Team - "Red Prairie Dawn" (2000).

See also listing at :
See Otto A. Rothert's book The Outlaws of Cave-in-Rock, Arthur H. Clark Company, Cleveland, 1924 [1]



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