Friday, April 08, 2011

Possum Up a Gum Stump

Possum Up a Gumstump
Uploaded by adams0424 on Feb 19, 2010 ... learned this tune from Jenni Wallace

Category:
Music

Tags:
chromatic mountain dulcimer old time fiddle tune randy adams




http://www.ibiblio.org/fiddlers/PORT_POY.htm

POSSUM UP A GUM STUMP(, COONIE IN THE HOLLOW) [1]. AKA and see "Off/Going to California [1]," "Whiskey You're the Devil," "Whiskey in the Jar [1]," "Lexington," "Old Towser," "Gypsy Hornpipe [4]," "Fireman's Reel," "Buttermilk and Cider." Old‑Time, Breakdown. USA; Alabama, north Georgia, Arkansas. D Major. Standard tuning. AABB. The tune was mentioned in chronicles before the year 1830 (Mark Wilson). It was cited as having been played in a 1914 Atlanta, Ga. fiddlers' contest, and listed in the Northwest Alabamian of August 29, 1929, as one of the tunes likely to be played at an upcoming fiddlers' convention. The title appears in a list of traditional Ozark Mountain fiddle tunes compiled by musicologist/folklorist Vance Randolph, published in 1954. See also related tune family under "Dubuque,” and the related “Green Back Dollar.”

***

Possum up a gum stump, coonie in the holler,

Little gal at our house, fat as she can waller.

Saddle up the old nag, martingale and collar,

Fetch her down to my house, I'll give you half a dollar. (Ford)

***

Charles Wolfe, in notes to Thomas Talley’s Negro Folk Rhymes (1991), says the first two stanzas of the song below were collected from both black and white sources, although the last two stanzas are rather rare:

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‘Possum up de gum stump,

Dat raccon in de holler;

Twis’ ‘im out, an’ git ‘im down,

An’ I’ll gin you a half a doller.

***

‘Possum up de gum stump,

Yes, cooney in de holler;

A pretty gal down my house

Jes as fat as she can waller.

***

‘Possum up de gum stump,

His jaws is black an’ dirty;

To come an’ kiss you, pretty gal,

I’d run lak a goobler tucky.

***

‘Possum up de gum stump,

A good man’s hard to fin’;

You’d better love me, pretty gal,

You’ll git de yudder kin’.

***

The tune/song appears in several collections, including Brown (3:207), White (236-38), Scarborough (173), Randolph (2:361) and Lomax and Lomax (American Ballads and Folk Songs), pg. 238. Source for notated version: Joe Hermann with the Critton Hollow String Band (West Virginia) [Phillips]. Ford (Traditional Music in America), 1940; pg. 29. Kuntz, Private Collection. Phillips (Traditional American Fiddle Tunes), vol. 1, 1994; pg. 187. Copper Creek CCCD-0196, Tom, Brad & Alice – “We’ll Die in the Pig Pen Fighting.” Document 8039, “The Hill Billies/Al Hopkins and His Buckle Busters: Compoete Recorded Works in Chronological Order, vol. 1” (reissue). Flying Fish FF 355, Critton Hollow String Band ‑ "By and By" (1985). Recorded Anthology of American Music, 1978 ‑ "Traditional Southern Instrumental Styles." Vocalion 5118, 1926 (78 RPM), The Hill Billies (east Tennessee).

X:1

T:Possum Up a Gum Stump

L:1/8

M:2/4

Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz

K:D

(A,|A,)/B,/D/E/ F/G/F/E/|D/E/F/A/ BA|B/A/B/c/ d/c/d/B/|A/F/D/F/ E/D/B,/G,/|

A,/B,/D/E/ F/G/F/E/|D/E/F/A/ BA|B/A/B/c/ d/c/d/B/|A/G/F/E/ D:|

|:ff|f/ a f/ aa/g/|f/e/d/f/ e/d/B/A/|f/ a a/ ba|f/e/d/f/ ee/e/|f/ a f/ aa/g/|

f/e/d/f/ e/d/B/A/|B/A/B/c/ d/c/d/B/|A/G/F/E/ D:|

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