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CROSS-TUNING WORKSHOP Part Thirty-Two: ADAE
Soldier's Joy According to Fulton Myers
by Jody Stecher (Fiddler's Magazine)
FRC107
This installment of Cross-Tuning Workshop pairs a well-known fiddle
tune with a little-known but fascinating fiddler. "Soldier's
Joy" is a contender for the world's most played fiddle tune.
If you wonder why, you've heard only the bad versions. This is a
great tune for dancing, always fun to play (on any instrument),
and it carries a huge amount of energy which it will release to
almost any willing fiddler. It has also been much discussed in print
and on the internet. To the debate I will add only that I agree
with the faction that posits a Scandinavian provenance to the tune
and that it seems to me that two of the alternate titles, "Payday
In The Army" and "The King's Head" are paraphrasing
the concept of a soldier's joy. Historically, a king's head was
depicted on a coin, and a soldier was rarely paid on time. Hey,
I actually got paid this time!
Printed versions of "Soldier's Joy" are found as early
as the mid eighteenth century and it seems the tune is older than
that. The most intriguing version I have heard was played by Fulton
Myers, a modest man from Five Forks, Virginia, a little place not
far from Galax and Hillsville.
Everyone who has written about him says the same thing, that he
lived simply and had no electricity. I would have hoped to know
more, he's a unique fiddler and worthy of discussion and attention.
All the recordings of Fulton Myers and all the descriptions of his
music pair him with his brother Sidna (pronounced Sidney), who is
one of the most creative old-time banjo players I have heard. Recently
the Field Recorders Collective has issued a CD of the Myers Brothers
which was recorded in the 1960s. For those who are familiar with
what has become known (for better or worse) as the Round Peak repertoire,
hearing it will be a real revelation as this music is so similar
yet so very different.
Fulton Myers' ornamentation of the second part of the tune would
be commonplace anywhere between Bulgaria and Rajastan but I've never
heard another Appalachian fiddler play this kind of grace note nor
integrate bowing and ornamentation in quite this way. Sidna's banjo
playing occasionally had an exotic tinge as well. Could these brothers
have been Gypsies? Did they indulge in listening binges to Radio
Ankara on a short wave radio? Were they aliens from a parallel universe?
You will not find the answers to these questions at http://www.fieldrecorder.com/
but by all means visit the website of this remarkable group of people.
The Field Recorders' Collective has been doing everything right.
They are making privately held recordings of fantastic traditional
musicians available to the public, packaging them nicely, paying
the musicians' families money and paying them respect as well; and
instead of printing detailed liner notes in microscopic letters,
they are posting such details on the website.
I'm guessing at some of the bowing in the transcription. The banjo
and fiddle are pretty well intertwangogrified on this recording
and it's hard to tell what's what in places. This rendition of "Soldier's
Joy" is one of those cases where cross-tuning is used to affect
timbre but does not affect fingering. The bass string is tuned to
A but is never actually bowed. By all means bow it if you want.

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