Annotation:Forks of Sandy (1)
X:1 T:Forks of Sandy [1] S:Charlie Poole and the North Carolina Ramblers M:C| L:1/8 D:Columbia 15106-D (78 RPM), 1926. F:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/forks-sandy Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:G Bc|d2 ge g2gg|d2 gg e2d2|dfaf afaf|g2bg agee| d2 ge gage|degg e2dA|BAGB AGED|EG2G G2:| |:([GB]c)BG ([GB]c)BG|B2 gge2d2|BAGB AGEG|+slide+B2+slide+B2- BAGE| DEGG DEGG|BAB2 e2d2|BAGB AGED|EG2G G2:|]
FORKS OF SANDY [1]. AKA and see "Roll 'em up Sandy," "Three Forks of Sandy," "Three Forks of Big Sandy," "Warfield (1)." American, Reel (whole, 2/4 or cut time). USA; western North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Silberberg): AABB (Brody, Phillips). The title refers to the Big Sandy River on the West Virginia/Kentucky border, the (3) forks being the Big Sandy River, Levisa Fork and Tug Fork; the river feeds into the Ohio river at Catlettsburg. Eastern Kentucky-based fiddler Ed Haley used to play the tune in three parts, one for each fork. Oscar Wright maintained the song was popularized in his area of West Virginia (Mercer County) by North Carolina banjo player and band leader Charlie Poole and his fiddler (and brother-in-law) Posey Rorrer when they played the area in 1916, 17 or 18. He claimed to have learned it directly from Rorer. West Virginia fiddler Clark Kessinger (1896–1975), who, it has been suggested, learned the tune as a boy in the Kanawha Valley, recorded the melody in 1930 for Brunswick Records (as "Three Forks of Sandy") {Wolfe, Mountains of Music, John Lilly ed. 1999}. The reel was also recorded by Dad Blackard's Moonshiners for Victor Records.
As told by researcher Kinny Rorrer [1], the tune was originally called "Sandy River Belle," however, when the North Carolina Ramblers went into the studio Columbia's A&R man, Frank Walker, said that a Columbia recording by that name (by Franklin County, Virginia, fiddler Charlie La Prade and his group The Blue Ridge Highballers) had been released a several months earlier. Rorrer made some musical changes to the tune, and with a title change it became "Forks of Sandy." The signature melodic fragment of "Sandy River Belle" with the interval leap can still be heard in the second measure of each line of the second strain. See also the similar "Sandy River Belle (3)" by the New North Carolina Ramblers, with Posey Rorrer's kinsman, Kinney Rorrer, on banjo.
- ↑ Kinney Rorrer, Rambling Blues, the Life and Songs of Charlie Poole, 1992, p. 35.