Annotation:White River
X:1 T:White River S:Howe Teague (Mo.) M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel D:Howe Teague - Now that's a Good Tune F:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/white-river-0 Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:A +slide+[e3e3][ee][e2e2][e2e2]| [ee][ee][ef]e ce3| efec e2ef|ecBA FA3| +slide+[e3e3][ee][e2e2][e2e2]| [ee][ee][ef]e ce3| efec e2ef|ecBA FA3|| +slide+c6c2|BcAE FA2c|{A}[B3e3][Be][B2e2][A2e2]|BcBA FA3| +slide+c3c c2A2|cBAA FA2c|{A}[B3e3][Be][B2e2][B2e2]|BcBA F2A2|| [A,2E2]"+"[c2e2]"+"A2"+"[c2e2]|"+"A2"+"[c2e2] AGAF| E2"+"[c2e2]"+"A2"+"[ce]F|EEEE FEAF| E2"+"[c2e2]"+"A2"+"[c2e2]|"+"A2"+"[c2e2] EEAF|E2"+"[c2e2]"+"A2"+"[ce]F|EEEE FEAF| E2"+"[c2e2]"+"A2"+"[c2e2]|EEEE FA3 |A4||
WHITE RIVER. AKA and see "Texas Starvation." American, Reel (cut time). USA, Missouri. A Major. AEac# tuning (fiddle). AABBC. The tune was recorded for the Library of Congress by musicologist/folklorist Vance Randolph, from the playing of Ozarks Mountains fiddlers in the early 1940's. The White River flows through southern Missouri and northern Arkansas and into the Mississippi River at Scrubgrass Bend, above Rosedale, Mississippi, and is one of drainage systmes of the Ozarks Mountains. The tune was “a special tune” played in the Goforth family repertoire for generations, according to the liner notes of Gene Goforth’s album, however, John Hartford (2001) says it is “one of those ancient Ozark tunes that nobody seems to know its origin.” Howe Teague learned it when he was young, and said he thought he had learned it from influential fiddler Roy Wooliver; he also cited another local fiddler, Buck Sullivan, as another he remembered playing it (Beisswenger & McCann, 2008). Drew Beisswenger (2008) notes similarities with other Ozarks tunes “Old Charlie Deckard,” “Bear Creek Sally Goodin',” and “Broken-Legged Chicken,” all of whom he says resemble parts of the well-known “Old Dan Tucker.” Arkansas fiddler biography:Os Scholes' (1891-1984) reel "Texas Starvation" is a cognate melody.