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Music Used on the Series


Some notes on the music.

Season 1, Episode 2: Fiddle tunes starting at 2:37: First tune: "Devil's Dream," known as early as 1805 but I recently read of someone finding it in a handwritten book dated 1795. This is taking place shortly before the Revolutionary War so around 1775. Second tune: "Turkey in the Straw," published around 1834. Israel grabs a turkey leg during this song. Then the first tune, "Devil's Dream" again. Third tune, at 9:40, sounds like "Sally Gooden" or "Sally Goodin." Best I can find is "Traditional fiddle tune said to have been renamed 'Sally Goodin' during the Civil War. First recording and first release by A.C. (Eck) Robertson (1922/1923)." 13:45: "Johnny Has Gone for a Soldier," very popular during the Revolutionary War and dates back to the 1688 Irish Rebellion against England. Here is a song with a very similar tune to the one Daniel is singing around 24:05: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fnW1uDhmSaY&list=OLAK5uy_nVpkj3ot2J2CAKFnpCJGh4EqxlfZB6X_8&index=4 which I don't remember hearing anywhere else. Here is another version by a famous folk singer. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9_h9LVKj0-E Very old. History: http://bluegrassmessengers.com/kemo-kimo--version-25-sing-song-kitty--doc-watson.aspx 39:46: interesting variation on "I Bought Me a Cat," one of many folk songs brought from the British Isles to North America. Great musical talent all around!

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Season 5, episode 1: Starting about :43: "Lift the Tankard High": I can't find any information on this song, written to sound traditional but may not be. 14:50: "That's not the life for me, that ain't the life for me," sounds traditional but smacks of being written for this episode. 18:10: Cincinnatus is singing but I can't make out any words. 30:33: "Man Was Born to be Free as the Wind/A Man Ain't a Man Lest He's Free"; 49:23: "It's the Single Life for Me." Both written in the folk style to sound traditional but were probably written for this episode.

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Season 5, episode 4: 3:31: Parody of "Frere Jacques," estimated to have been written between 1775 and 1785. We might "give" them this one as they have again skipped in time from the American Revolution (1775-1781) to the French Revolution (1789-1799) so the song may have been around long enough for Mason Pruitt to have heard it. 5:13: Mason makes up a little song about New Orleans. 8:51: Mason makes up a little song for the ladies in distress. 49:09: Mason sings more about New Orleans.

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Season 5, episode 5: 0:00: "Jimmy Crack Corn/Blue Tail Fly," which dates from the 1840s. This is the most popular of several forms of the song, which was admired by Abraham Lincoln. 19:02: part of a German song. Bonus points to anyone who can identify it.

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Season 5, episode 6: 26:27-27:19 and 27:45-29:31 and 29:42-30:06 and 30:33-30:37 all "Sally Goodin" on fiddle. 32:04-32:55: "Devil's Dream."

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Season 5, episode 8: 0:00-0:33: "Skip to My Lou," from the 1840s, written around 1844.

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Here is one I skipped earlier as I didn't really know what to say about it. Season 4, episode 1: 0:00: Mingo sings a song about trapping and their catch. This is written very much in the style of an old ballad but seems to have been written for this episode. A traditional tune may have been used but if so I don't recognize it.

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Season 5, episode 9: 32:33: "Do You Remember, Millie?" written for this episode.

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Season 5, episode 11: 2:51: "Blow Ye Winds in the Morning," a whaling song. Whaling was already going on by the 1700s but the earliest known date of publication of this song is 1859.

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