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Edden Hammons - Queen of the Earth and Child of the Skies 

AlvisaMinidoruv
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This has been posted, but in truncated version. Both the sound and the title of this tune seem to suggest something mystical, as well as a kind of stunned gawping at nature's beauty and indifference. It suggested images of forests and spirits, death and celebration, etc. But apparently what I actually end up unconsciously thinking for the slideshow was: "Trees. Lots and lots of trees. You can never go wrong with trees." Hmm. Hopefully it turned out all right anyway. Even if haphazardly ordered and poorly chosen chromatically, the images are still purty as hell and you might enjoy them.
They are: James Ward's "Gordale Scar"; an 1895 photo from Leonard Missone, Theodor Severin Kittelsen's "Echo"; William Miller's "Faeries on the Seashore"; Leonora Carrington's "Crookhey Hall"; Benes Knupfer's "Embrace"; Everardus Benedictus Gregorious Mirani's "In the Woods"; Pieter Brueghel the Elder's "Storm at Sea" from 1568; Lucien Clerque's "Bestiare de Plage, Camargue"; Dmitry Kuklin's "The Old Pond, Katya"; John Atkinson Grimshaw's "A Woman on a Path by a Cottage"; Edward Frederick Brew's "Three Ravens"; a Kay Nielsen illustration; William Degouve de Nuncques's "Swamp"; Sydney Long's "Fantasy"; Edden Hammon's frightening stare.
I have no idea what Edden says at the conclusion of the tune. And I hope his sudden appearance at the end startles you. :)
I found more information from someone less ignerrunt, the purveyor of the Old Time Party blog. They say:
"'Queen of the Earth and Child of the Skies' is one of the few slower, crosstuned and slightly 'crooked' pieces of the 51 that Hammons recorded for Chappell, over three recording sessions. Alan Jabbour (in his 1984 notes to the Edden Hammons Collection, vol. 1) identifies the melody as a piece called "The Blackbird," one of the most famous and enduring airs in the British Isles. Several versions were collected in south-western Pennsylvania, but with the generally agreed upon function was that the tune was a "dead march," i.e. one to be played at funerals.
The Irish versions of the "Blackbird" are Jacobite in nature whose lyrics indicate loyalty to the cause of the Stewarts, and Bayard says the song, referencing Bonnie Prince Charlie, was still being sung in south-western Pennsylvania in the early 1930's. Although most Pennsylvania fiddlers seemed to know the melody by the "Blackbird" title, other titles existed: Bayard himself heard it called the "Lady's Lamentation" by an Indiana County (Pa.) fifer in 1951-the title of the original broadside printed in London in 1651.
How it came to be known by Hammons, and how it acquired the title he knew it by, is a mystery. The line "Queen of the Earth and Child of the Skies," however, is known to be from American shape-note singing (popularized so recently in the film "Cold Mountain"). It is similar to a line from a shape-note hymn called "Star of Columbia" (also called simply "Columbia"), found in the Social Harp (1855) and other hymnodies, which begins:
Columbia! Columbia! to glory arise,
The queen of the world and the child of the skies;
Thy genius commands thee with raptures behold,
While ages on ages thy splendors unfold:
Thy reign is the last and the noblest of time,
Most fruitful thy soil, most inviting thy clime;
Let crimes of the east ne're encrimson they name,
Be freedom and science and virtue thy fame."
The rest of this entry is here: oldtimeparty.wo...

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13 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 25   
@dwightdiller
@dwightdiller 7 лет назад
"Edn" [not Edden] Hammons was born 1876 in the Yew Pine Mountains of Pocahontas County, West Virginia. At that time it was hundreds and hundreds of thousands of virgin forest covering this impenetrable wilderness which was settled from west to east. The "Yew Pines" were what the old people called what official important people in the know call "red spruce" which grows at 4000' in elevation. Edn was the youngest of Jesse Hammons children. His two oldest children were born in eastern Kentucky in the late '50s. Jesse told his granddaughter, Maggie b '99, [son Paris's b'50s daughter] "After that civil war, it was 13 years before a stranger ever darkened my door." Most of the tunes which are now referred to as "Hammons tunes" came from Paris' children: Sherman b '03, Burl b '05, Maggie b '99. The early Hammons were in the Kentucky "Frontier" [Whitley Co] from the mid-1700s, when Boone, Kenton, Callaway were there, onward before coming first to Webster County and on into the wilderness of Pocahontas County. They were not the West Virginia 'mountain people' of the 1800s. They carried with them the Frontier of the 18th century, through the 19th century, and on into the 1970s/80s of the 20th century. It was 'a Way'. Edn spent his life correcting people who tried to correct his "ignorance" by calling him "Edwin", "Edmond", etc! These 'educated people who tried to help this ignorant hillbilly' had/have never heard of EDINburgh, Scotland?
@matthammons5182
@matthammons5182 4 года назад
You sir are 100% correct! Edn is my great Grandpa. And yep he sure was stubborn! But he was set in his ways! He was a bit lazy and didnt like manual labor, he was spoiled and used his musical talents and would trap and dig ginseng to support the family instead of working! Im just honored to have this family history to look back on and be proud of. My father evertt hammons ( the son of smith, grandson of edn) and i are excited to go to charleston this november to the ceremony where LEE AND MAGGIE AND SOME OF THE OTHER FAMILY MEMBERS ARE GETTING INDUCTED INTO THE WEST VIRGINIA MUSIC HALL OF FAME! GOD BLESS YOU ALL FOR KEEPING MY FAMILYS PASSION FOR MUSIC AND THERE MEMORIES AND STORIES ALIVE! ---MATT HAMMONS
@johnnielson7676
@johnnielson7676 2 года назад
My mother was born in SC and named Johnsie. Originally from Fines Creek, NC, her uncle traveled back during the Great Depression to rescue my grandmother and her kids from an abusive marriage and dire poverty to move them to Idaho. When my dad was stationed in Connecticut, well meaning Northerners attempted to correct Mom’s pronunciation of her own name, as well as “Appalachian “ and other words. Regarding the pronunciation of the name of her adopted state of Idaho, one prim upper crust lady told her “We pronounce that “Iowa” around here, young lady.” I imagine Edden probably had people telling him how to pronounce his own name too.
@eytonshalomsandiego
@eytonshalomsandiego День назад
besides the absolutely stunning playinng, thank you so much for this great explication of the music! it does have a bit of the shape note sound to it..
@AnnihilatingAngel
@AnnihilatingAngel 11 лет назад
I believe he says "Ain't that nice?" Yes, Eddon, it is.....;o)
@dbadagna
@dbadagna 7 лет назад
Thank you for uploading this most interesting specimen of our nation's traditional music, as well as for your fine explanation thereof. I think what Hammons says at the end is "Ain't that nice??!" It really does have a Medieval and/or Norwegian flavor, perhaps harking back to Scandinavian influences on the British Isles dating back over 1000 years.
@macbailes9953
@macbailes9953 3 года назад
Edden's comment at the end is plain to me, "Ain't that nice."
@burrelsk
@burrelsk 2 месяца назад
Amazing that this post is from 11 years now. The art work is beautiful. I also heard the tune was played at funerals and Edn was often used a cross-tuned fiddle. Would it have been cross-tuned to DADD also known as dead-man’s tuning for this tune?
@cherylrogers8263
@cherylrogers8263 2 года назад
Edden Hammons was my 2nd great uncle.
@BenSHammonds
@BenSHammonds 5 лет назад
yes indeed, makes me think of the rivers and hollows, old Greenbrier County
@taylormartin4618
@taylormartin4618 6 лет назад
I've heard this song since 1998 a friend dave green in northern vermont gave me some library of congress tapes . he shortly became one of my favorites.....worked on this tune to get it a long time . nothing like jakes got the bellyaches......captures the beauty of a beloved woman out of your reach and all of nature even knows...
@AlvisaMinidoruv
@AlvisaMinidoruv 11 лет назад
Indeed, I found that out in the information I posted with the song. However, I do reserve the right of interpretation. :)
@joseph2832
@joseph2832 3 года назад
legend
@toniogden2576
@toniogden2576 10 лет назад
did the hammons's encounter Scandinavians when the they got off the boat and stayed for a-while in a far northern city?
@abramracin
@abramracin 10 лет назад
right?
@AretaicGames
@AretaicGames 11 лет назад
This a version of a Jacobite tune from the British Isles called "The Blackbird", as played by West Virgina fiddler Edden Hammonds. This title comes from a shape-note hymn called "Star of Columbia", and refers to "Columbia" herself . . .so, more of nationalism than of mysticism in it.
@chamboyette853
@chamboyette853 6 лет назад
I listened to the blackbird (an Irish tune) and it sounded nothing like this.
@joanfrankel7666
@joanfrankel7666 5 лет назад
The shape-note/Sacred Harp song from which the title is thought to come is "Murillo's Lesson", which ends its 1st verse: "Columbia, Columbia to glory arise, the queen of the earth and the child of the skies". But this tune is nothing like "Murillo's Lesson". I put it up there with "O'Carolan's Farewell to Music" as played by Triona ni Domnhail, various versions of "Ban du Glen" (Dark Woman of the Glen) & the wilder versions of "Paddy's Rambles Through the Park". (Paddy is playing tunes taught to him by the inhabitants of "the park", which is a graveyard. They know some real old tunes.) A uniquely amazing piece of music. In other words.
@babababad
@babababad 4 года назад
The title phrase predates shape-note notation, being an exceprt from an 18th-century poem by Timothy Dwight, which has been set to many tunes. In shapenote publications, there are a few tunes to which that poetry has been set: "Star of Columbia" in the Southern Harmony and Social Harp, "Murrillo's Lesson" in the Sacred Harp, "Loudon" in the Sacred Melodeon, "Columbia" in the Shenandoah Harmony, etc. This recording is of none of those tunes ("Star of Columbia" and "Columbia" are minor, even). But this melody follows the same meter (11s) as the poetry and was likely used as a setting for it.
@joanfrankel7666
@joanfrankel7666 4 года назад
Turns out "Star of Columbia" in Southern Harmony *is* Edn Hammons' tune. Which being a 3-part shape-note song, people are supposed to *sing*.
@joanfrankel7666
@joanfrankel7666 5 лет назад
By the way; may be sacrilege to say this but tune has marked similarity to that used for "Charlie Is My Darlin' (the brave chevalier)".
@billhicks3228
@billhicks3228 9 лет назад
This is a far piece from The Blackbird. Compare to either the O'Neill written version, or to Tommy Potts. I think this'un deserves it's own name.
@chamboyette853
@chamboyette853 6 лет назад
Shawn Craver - Do you have a recording of that ballad? Cause I listened to the blackbird on youtube (probably a more modern version) and it sounded nothing like that.
@dtstewart64
@dtstewart64 5 лет назад
That's one helluva snotty thing to say.
@MrMusicguyma
@MrMusicguyma 5 лет назад
I think you are right. There are at least 3 separate traditional Scottish/Irish "Blackbird" tunes I have heard (not counting Sir Paul McCartney's) and not a one of them sounds like this.
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