This version of this well known tune comes from the fiddling of Edden Hammons (1875-1955) of Webster County, West Virginia, who is considered by many to have been one of the finest traditional West Virginia fiddlers of all time.
Ben Kiser - Fiddle - FCGD (GDAE relative)
Rachel Dunaway - Banjo - fCFAC (gDGBD relative)
Edden Hammons was the youngest in a family of seven. His three brothers (Paris, Peter, and Cornelius), as well as his father, Jesse (b. 1861) played the fiddle. Edden took up the fiddle at an early age, playing on a fiddle made out of a gourd that his father made for him. His family was known for their excelling musicianship, they were also skilled woodsmen and hunters.
Edden progressed in his fiddle playing and soon obtained a store-bought fiddle. There are several different stories about this. In one, a friend of Edden's father asked Edden to play him a tune. Edden took out his gourd-fiddle and played for the man. Afterwards, the man was so impressed that he gave Edden his own fiddle. Another story refers to when a renowned fiddler named Bernard "Burn" Hamrick was playing for a local dance, and after the dance was over, Edden's father asked Burn if Edden could play a few tunes on his fiddle. Burn agreed to let Edden play his fiddle, and was so discouraged afterwards by Edden's superior ability that he let him keep the fiddle. Whatever the story may have really been, it is sure that Edden received a nicer fiddle than his original one, and started to become a well known fiddler in the region.
In his home, Edden was apparently spoiled and spared from chores and work. These qualities would follow him into his adult life. A popular example among the Hammons family of Edden's distaste of work is shortly after his first marriage in 1892. His wife asked Edden to stop playing the fiddle, get a job, and support a family. Edden was quoted as saying "I'll lay my fiddle down for no damn woman". The two separated and were legally divorced in 1897. 10 days after the divorce, Edden married his second wife, Elizabeth Shaffer (despite pleas from Elizabeth's family members for her to not marry Edden). The two raised seven children and remained married until Elizabeth's death in 1954.
Edden's family lived somewhat nomadically, moving from one place to another usually twice a year. Edden still rarely worked during these times. He supported his family through hunting, fishing, farming, moonshining and other odd jobs. His daughter, Emma Hammons, recalls that "he whittled axe handles, he played for dances, different things. He picked up money that way. Ginseng, he'd get money that way. It was against the law but he would kill squirrels, turkeys and sell them, or fish - he always had a couple dollars in his pocket somehow".
Edden continued his fiddle playing throughout his adult life. At this point he was regarded as one of the best fiddlers from West Virginia. He won many fiddle contests. People would visit at odd hours just to hear him play, and on some occasions, people would have him play music over the telephone while the whole neighborhood listened in. Other anecdotes appear from this era, such as how Edden would show up somewhere to play music, and would carry his fiddle in a flour sack (with the flour still inside it). His nephew, Currence, recalls when "Edden just walked over to the corner and picked up the flour poke and they all got to looking to what he was getting. He pulled that old fiddle out and flour all over it. He dusted it off, blowed it off, you know. Some of them went to laughing and hollering about that flour. 'Upon my honor,' Edden said, 'that's just as good as the best cases ever made,' he said, 'that flour makes her play good.'"
Hammons died of coronary thrombosis at Renick in Pocahontas County, West Virginia, 1955.
Here's a link to hear Edden Hammons play this tune
https://www.slippery-hill.com/content...
Rachel and I filmed this tune at Clifftop 2025
#fiddle
#oldtime
#westvirginia
#folklore
#appalachia
#mountains
Информация по комментариям в разработке