Annotation:Waterbound
X:1 T:Waterbound L:1/8 M:2/4 B:Kuntz – Ragged but Right K:A c/c/B AA/B/|c/d/c/B/ AA|BB/B/ Bc/B/|A/B/A/F/ E>(E|E)F/F/ AA/B/|c/B/c/d/ e2| fe/e/ cc/B/|A2A2|c/c/B AA/B/|c/d/c/B/ AA|BB/B/ Bc/B/|A/B/A/F/ E>(E| E)F/F/ AA/B/|c/B/c/d/ e2|fe/e/ cc/B/|A2A2||:aa/a/ aa/a/|f/e/c e(B| c)c/B/ c/B/A|f/e/c/d/ ee|aa/a/ aa/a/|f/e/c ee|fe cB/c/|A2A2:|]
WATERBOUND. AKA and see “Stay All Night,” "Way Down in North Carolina." American, Song/ piece. USA, Virginia. A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Silberberg): AABB (Kuntz). "Waterbound" was originally recorded in March, 1929, by the Grayson/Carroll County, southwestern Virginia, band Fields Ward's (1911-1987) Buck Mountain Band consisting of Fields Ward (gtr., vocals), Ernest V. Stoneman (harmonica, vocals, using his Justin Winfield pseudonym), Eck Dunford (fiddle), and Fields' brother Samson Ward (banjo). A later iteration of the group called the Ballard Branch Bogtrotters (Wade and Crockett Ward, nephew Fields Ward, autoharpist Doc Davis and fiddler Eck Dunford) was recorded in 1937 for the Library of Congress by folklorist John A. Lomax playing "Waterbound" (later released in 1962 on Folkways FA 2363, "Roscoe Holcomb and Wade Ward").
Chickens crowin' in the old plowed field, (x3)
Down in North Carolina.
Refrain (Verses 1, 3)
Waterbound and I can't go home, (x3)
I have to stay till morning.
Bill and Charlie lets go home, (x3)
Before the water rises.
The water's up and I can't get across, (x3)
I'll ride the old white horse.
The old man's mad but I don't care, (x3)
Just so I get his daughter.
If he don't give her up I'm a gonna run away, (x3)
Down in North Carolina.
Waterbound and I can't go home, (x3)
Down in North Carolina.
Singer and banjo player Roscoe Holcomb (1912-1981), of Daisy, Kentucky, recorded a song called "Boat's up the River" that contains the line:
The boat's up the river and it won't come down
Then I believe to my soul Lord that I'm waterbound.
The lines, if not the song itself, were in oral tradition in the early 20th century. A 1915 version[1] sung on Tennessee River boats also contained the same line:
The boat's up the river and she won't come down, I believe to my soul she must be water bound.
but it is a musically different piece. Dirk Powell's "Waterbound" is a different song.
- ↑ Printed in Newman I. White, American Negro Folk Songs.