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(Traditional)
This traditional dance tune often played in various
rhythmic styles, including a Schottische and 2/4 time, is a very popular piece
of music performed in many North American eastern and mid-western states.
It has been recorded by several artists and was
released on single by the mandolinist/guitarist
Paul Buskirk.
Over the years it has appeared under the guise of many
different names and some of these include:
“Billy
Wilson’s Clog”
This version has been said to be a clog dance of
Canadian origin with four versions recorded in Michigan
where they were known as “Wilson’s
Clog”. It has also been
described as an American hornpipe.
In 1937 a performance of it was recorded in Montreal
by old-time fiddler Don Messer and his New Brunswick Lumberjacks and issued
by the Compo Company on several of their labels. Messer later published it under the
name “Clog in C Major” The same song has been
performed and recording in the Shetland Islands in Scotland
by the Scottish country dance band Da Fustra.
“California Dance”
“California Hornpipe”
A hornpipe using this name has been credited to the
composer and fiddler James Hill from Newcastle,
England who died in
the mid-1800s. It has been
suggested that his influence was the 1849 Gold Rush in California. This version appeared in the 1883 Ryan’s Mammoth Collection and
the 1880’s Edinburgh
publication Kohler’s Violin
Repository. It has been
recorded by the Scottish group Wallochmor Ceilidh Band on their Looking for a Partner.
“Evening
Pleasures Schottiche”
A version using this name is known to have been
performed by John Summers who was a fiddler from Indiana. It was also performed by and
attributed to the fiddler Tony Gilmore from Jefferson
City.
“Kenion Clog”
This is a clog dance from Ohio
which has been said to be a version of “Parkersburg
Landing”. This version
was given its title by John Baltzell who came
from Mount Vernon, Ohio
and became acquainted with a local minstrel called Dan Emmett who taught
him to play the fiddle sometime during the 1890s. It is thought he named the tune
after Gambier, Ohio’s Kenyon
College. Baltzell
recorded the tune in 1928.
“The Mason-Dixon Line”
This is an American Schottische from Southwest
Pennsylvania with versions notated by local musicians in 1948,
1952 and 1961.
“Nightingale
(Clog)”
This American Clog dance has been thought to have been
named after the American clipper ship Nightingale. An adapted version of it called
“Acrobat’s Clog” was used by P.T. Barnum in his circus
and appears on a tune list for Scottish fiddlers. This has been recorded by numerous
artists and groups.
“O Dear
Mother My Toes Are Sore”
This one is described as a march or jig and has been
ascribed to Michigan and Pennsylvania
but it has been thought by the Pennsylvanian folklorist and musicologist
Samuel Preston Bayard that it may originally have come from Great
Britain although not tracing its actual
roots. Another possibility that
was reported is that the same melody is “Sandy Floor” which
comes from North Michigan.
“Parkersburg Landing”
Described as a Schottische and Old-Time this tune was
often played by Ed Haley who was a blind fiddler that hailed from eastern Kentucky. He learned to perform it when he was
living in West Virginia in
the vicinity of Parkersburg but
spent the last three decades of his life from around 1920 living back in Kentucky. It was later recorded in Mississippi
under the name “Limber Neck Blues” and “Kenion Clog” is also a version.
“Peacock
Rag”
This one has been described as a Bluegrass,
Country Blues, Old-Time and Rag and has been suggested by Dr. Charles Wolfe
and Barry Poss that it may have been an early 20th
century ragtime composition. It
was brought to people’s attention and made popular by the Tennessee
fiddler Fiddlin’ Arthur Smith, who
recording it in the 1930s/40s.
The story is that he learned it from his cousin, Clay Smith, who had
heard it played on KMOX in St. Louis, Missouri,
by the fiddler Wade Ray. It was
performed by Narmour & Smith from Mississippi
as “Limber Neck Blues” and Ed Haley from Kentucky
as “Parkersburg Landing”
“Starlight
Clog”
This American clog tune is known to have been published
in the 1896 White’s Unique
Collection followed by the 1907 White’s
Excelsior Collection.
“Wilson’s Clog”
This tune is also known as “Billy Wilson’s
Clog”
Paul Buskirk recordings
Rustic Dance Scottische (traditional)
Stoneway Records No. 1131-2
(LH-13690)
Sources:
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/RP_RZ.htm#RUSTIC_HORNPIPE
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/BILL_BINS.htm#BILLY_WILSON'S_CLOG
- http://calfolk.ca/tunes1/billy-wilsons-clog.pdf
- http://fiddlesessions.com/?p=50
- http://www.allcelticmusic.com/music/687cecb0-f86e-102a-8020-000f1f67beb1/Strikes_Again.html
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/CAIT_CAMER.htm#CALIFORNIA_DANCE
- http://www.mally.com/details.asp?id=840
- http://www.traditionalmusic.co.uk/american-mandolin-tab/california_hornpipe.htm
- http://www.nigelgatherer.com/perf/bands/wall.html
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/EV_EY.htm#EVENING_PLEASURES_SCHOTTISCHE
- http://www.stacyphillips.com/toc-listening.html
- http://www.baysidepress.com/songlist.asp?productid=95078&contpage=&category=&Heading=&author=
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/KEN_KEY.htm#KENION_CLOG
- http://muse.jhu.edu/search/results?search_id=1018301544&action=reload
- http://musiktiteldb.de/Label/EdisonEdiDD11.html
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/MART_MATI.htm#MASON-DIXON_SCHOTTISCHE
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/NI.htm#NIGHTINGALE_(CLOG)_[2]
- http://www.thesession.org/tunes/display/3459
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Preston_Bayard
- http://www.sfscottishfiddlers.org/howard_tune_index/Howard%20Booster's%20Tune%20Catalogue.pdf
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/OH.htm#O_DEAR_MOTHER_MY_TOES_ARE_SORE_[1]
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/PAR_PAY.htm#PARKERSBURG_LANDING
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/PEA_PER.htm#PEACOCK_RAG
- http://www.countysales.com/php-bin/ecomm4/products.php?category_id=&product_id=2975&prev_id=&next_id=5190
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/STA.htm#STARLIGHT_CLOG
- http://reocities.com/heartland/6402/Folk7.txt
- http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/WIA_WIM.htm#WILSON'S_CLOG_[2]
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