|
<<Back
to main Notes page
P.T. Bell
By Dan Foster
FRC410
Peter Tumlinson Bell was born. February 26, 1869, near Gallinas
Creek, Atascosa County, Texas. His grandfather, Jonathan Bell had
come to Texas from Mississippi in 1853 and settled 60 miles southeast
of San Antonio. Jonathon Bell was killed in a gunfight the following
year, leaving his young son Marion "Mace" Bell to be raised
on the frontier by an older brother Bill. Mace and his brothers
had many narrow escapes fighting Indians and struggling to survive
in the South Texas wilderness. They were the second generation of
frontiersmen, the leading edge of the Anglo migration as it moved
from the settled homelands of the southeast into a new, wild and
often hostile land west of the Sabine. Among the few comforts they
brought with them was the old time music that would remain a part
of the Bell family heritage and, incredibly, find its way to us.
I have been playing the fiddle all my life, or I
should say, since I was eight years old. I learned lots of tunes
that I know from my father who was an old time fiddle player. -P.T.
Bell
Recorded by William A. Owens in 1942 at the Bell home in Carrizo
Springs, the tunes played by Mr. Bell, taken together, represent
one of the very few recorded examples of southern dance music from
Texas played in the style that may have been current in the mid
to late 19th century. Although Eck Robertson was the first commercially
recorded Texas fiddler, he was born in 1887 in Arkansas, moved to
the city of San Antonio with his parents as a child and grew up
to lead the life of a professional entertainer. Hi style of playing
reflected the popular tastes of the early 20th century, innovative
and dynamic. Mr. Bell was really of an earlier generation, having
been raised in the wilderness of South Texas. He was himself deeply
conservative and dedicated to his family heritage and the old time
style of music he consciously preserved.
The commercial recordings of Capt. M. J . Bonner, who was born about
1847, and Uncle Jimmy Thompson 1848, in Smith County, Northern Tennessee,
are the other echoes of the lost sound of fiddling as it might have
been heard in Texas about the time of the Civil War or before. If
nothing else, this collection is at least more extensive, but it
can be argued that the repertoire, highly developed technique and
dissimilarity to the surviving record of his few contemporaries,
place these recordings in a distinct position with respect to any
assumptions about what dance music might have sounded like in Texas
at a very early date. The sound of cotillions, schottisches, old
time waltzes and breakdowns are distinctive and one cannot help
but wonder if they might have met with general approval at a dance
in the brief days of the Republic.
There used to be some might good musicians among
the old setters, but that is something like the old setters themselves,
they are but few left.
Unfortunately, the original aluminum disks which William Owens recorded
using a second-hand Vibromaster recorder in 1942, have been lost.
For years the only other known copy was the one I made with a hand-held
cassette recorder from a crumbling 1963 reel-to-reel found at the
Center for American History in Austin, Texas. Years of searching
for other copes proved fruitless, until the tireless John R. Wheat
, Co-ordinator of Sound Archives at UT Folklore Center Archives,
contacted me to say that he had located a set of lacquer coated
aluminum 78-rpm copies made by Extension Division of the University
of Texas sometime in the 1940s. These disks have a life expectancy
of about 40 years, so we were very lucky they too had not disintegrated.
Through the painstaking efforts of Dr. Karl Miller of Restoration
Audio, the sound of P.T. Bell's wonderful playing has been restored
and can now be heard again.
I'm an oldtime fiddle player and I will play any
man in Texas tune for tune, provided that he will not use sheet
or printed music; only a list of the tunes to be played, and if
I can't beat him I lose. – Peter Tumlinson Bell
Peter Bell passed away February 18, 1956, in Carrizo Springs,
Dimmit Co., TX. His was a life of singular accomplishment, having
helped forge the community of Carrizo Springs and then worked to
see it take its place as a thriving city. He was rightfully proud
of the role he played as a devout and steadfast member of his church,
community and family. He loved music and fostered a love of music
in his children. I am deeply indebted to his grandson, the late
Verner Lee Bell of Carrizo Springs. Without Verner's help we would
never have known about the life of Peter Tumlinson Bell and the
wonderful old time fiddle music that he played.
- John R. Wheat, The Center for American History, University
of Texas at Austin
- Dr. Karl Miller, Restoration
Audio
- Charles Shwartz, Cushing Library, Texas A&M University
How the P.T. Bell Recordings were Saved
By Dan Foster
I still have the original cassette recordings I made at the Barker
Center (now American History Center) at the Univ. of Texas back
in 1988. The copies I sent to Kerry Blech several years ago are
the ones now in circulation. As a result they have that additional
"generation" of tape-hiss added to the significant noise
in the original transcription from the source aluminum disks made
sometime in 1961.
The earliest link in the chain is the reel-to-reel tape at the
American History Center (AHC), but the Mylar was in very bad shape
back when I made the cassette copy in 1988. To get the tracks onto
cassette I had to splice the original tape several times during
transcription because it kept breaking! If I can find the time (just
started a new job here) I'll check again with the AHC. Maybe with
care the tracks could be captured direct from reel to digital. The
playback equipment used back then was not the best and the recording
to cassette was via microphone.
It was a great disappointment not to have been able to find the
original disks at the Cushing Collection. I followed the trail about
as well as I was able at the time but never located any first-generation
copies anywhere but the AHC.
The discovery of the P.T. Bell recordings came about when I was
working on a project at the AHC, going through a record collection
donated by the late (and great) Townsend Miller who had written
regular country music column for the Austin American Statesman for
many years. Keeping my eye out for fiddle references in the index
of uncataloged collections I found my way to reel tapes of the William
A. Owens collection and the P.T. Bell recordings. On first hearing
it was obvious that his playing was deeply connected to strains
of music long lost. Cotillions, marches, and even jigs – from
Texas! If it weren't for Mr. Bell's thick south Texas accent you
might have thought the fiddler was from up north!
Since he was obviously raised, if not born, in Texas, I figured
that the tapes might represent a unprecedented example of fiddle
styles actually current in the late 19th century Texas. Sure enough,
it turned out that Mr. Bell was born in 1869 in Carrizo Springs,
Texas. His father, John Bell had come to Texas from Mississippi
in 1853. That places him at an earlier point, both in time and fiddle
style, than Eck Roberson. His closer contemporary in recorded Texas
fiddling is Capt. M.J. Bonner, but their fiddle styles differ markedly,
and for good reason.
The fragile condition of the reel tapes led me to put the Townsend
Miller project on hold long enough to capture the PT Bell tracks.
I believe there were 30 in all. I need to go back and look at my
notes. After getting the tracks safely to cassette, I decided I
needed to find out more about Mr. Bell than the cursory notes in
Owens' book Tell Me a Story, Sing Me a Song. I was working at the
Texas Public Utilities Commission at the time, so I went to the
library there, got the Carrizo Springs residential phone-book, looked
up addresses for everyone named Bell, and sent out letters asking
about Peter Tumlinson Bell. A week or so later I got a phone call
from Verner Lee Bell, PT's grandson. Verner, who has sinced passed
on, was excited that I had called and we spoke several times. I
always wanted to go down and visit, but with twins in diapers and
wolves at the door never managed to make the trip.
Anyway, Verner sent me a copy of the book Memories of Peter Tumlinson
Bell and encouraged me to contact Texas A&M about the original
disks which were made on a device of William Owens' own invention.
The contraption recorded direct to aluminum disks and Verner said
that among his first memories was sitting on the floor while his
grandfather fiddled into the recorder as the little curls of aluminum
twisted away and fell under the table. Amazing!
<<Back to main Notes
page
|
|