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John Summers
By Joel Shimberg
See John Summers (FRC310)
Mr. Summers' old friend, Judge Dan White, had gone on vacation to a dude ranch
in Colorado. He met a young couple from Los Angeles, Dan and Lorna O'Leary, who
admired his fiddling. He told them that they should hear his friend, Dick Summers,
and sent them these recordings. ('Dick' was a childhood nickname.) The tapes were
given to a member of the New Lost City Ramblers (John Cohen), who gave them to
Art Rosenbaum, who lived in Indianapolis, Indiana. Art later visited Mr. Summers
and did extensive recording.
John Wesley Summers was born in 1887, in Howard Co., Indiana. His father, Simon,
started teaching him to play when he was four years old. Both Simon Summers and
his brother, Isaac Summers, were strong influences on Dick's fiddling. The other
major influence was a fiddler from Kentucky, Tom Riley, who had come to Marion,
Indiana, and operated a boarding house. He was a fine fiddler, and Dick visited
him regularly, fiddling through the night. Dick was a farmer, as his father had
been.
Dick learned many tunes from Ryan's 1050 Tunes, which were read to him by a friend,
Matt Simons, a violinmaker who helped Dick get started making instruments after
retiring from the farm. Dick had a player piano, and he learned a number of rag-time
pieces from piano rolls. He also taught himself to read music in later life (when
he was 70 or so) with the piano's help. John W. Summers died in 1976.
Kathy and I took five fiddles that Dick had made, the deal was
that we'd sell four at the price he asked and keep one as commission.
We had already bought one of his fiddles, and Kathy kept that when
we split, while I kept the "commission fiddle". Mike Seeger
and Alice Gerrard each bought one, and I don't recall who got the
other two. At any rate, after Dick died we had to get the money
to John K. and offer him our sympathy and respects, so we went to
Anderson and met with him. In chatting, I told him that his father
had become almost like a grandfather to us. He said something to
the effect that things were different when he was a boy. He had
a strong, clear memory of an incident. Dick had always kept a bunch
of fiddles, and his kids were forbidden to touch them. One day,
John K. had a friend from school visit, and they had talked about
Dick's fiddles. John K. snuck a case out from under the bed and
had opened it to show a fiddle to his friend. He said that they
were afraid to touch it and just looked at it in the case. When
Dick came home that night he could tell that his case had been opened.
He flew into a towering rage, and took one or two of his fiddles
and smashed them and threw them into the stove.
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