An Introduction to America’s Music

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

138 PART 1 | FROM COLONIZATION THROUGH THE CIVIL WAR


timing section text comments
0:00 instrumental
introduction

After the fi ddle plays a conventional 2-bar
introduction, called “potatoes,” the banjo
and fi ddle play a complete chorus and
verse, with rhythmic accompaniment from
tambourine and bones.
0:25 chorus High row, de boatmen row,
Floatin’ down de ribber, de Ohio!
High row, de boatmen row,
Floatin’ down de ribber, de Ohio!

The ensemble sings in informal harmony.

0:32 verse 1 De boatmen dance, de boatmen
sing,
De boatmen up to eb’rything.
And when de boatmen gets on
shore,
He spends his cash and he work for
more.
Den dance, de boatmen dance!
O dance, de boatmen dance.
Dance all night till broad daylight
An go home wid de gals in de
morning.

A soloist sings the fi rst quatrain of the
verse alone, then the other voices join in
unison for the second quatrain.

0:48 chorus High row, de boatmen row... The chorus returns in vocal harmony.
0:55 verse 2 I went on board de odder day
To see what de boatmen had to say;
An dar I let my passion loose
An’ dey cram me in de calaboose.
Den dance, de boatmen dance!...
1:10 instrumental
interlude

An instrumental rendition of the chorus
and verse, as in the introduction.

date: 1843
performers: Vincent Tufo, fi ddle; Percy
Danforth, bones; Matthew Heumann,
tambourine; Robert Winans, banjo; David
Van Veersbilck, Peter DiSante, Brian Mark,
Roger Smith, singers
genre: minstrel song
meter: duple
form: verse and chorus

Listening Guide 6.1 “De Boatmen’s Dance” DAN EMMETT

WHAT TO LISTEN FOR


  • driving rhythm

  • heterogeneous sound of minstrel band

  • alternation of solo and unison voices on
    verse and harmonizing voices on chorus

  • lyrics in imitation of Negro dialect


CD 1.17

172028_06_132-161_r3_ko.indd 138 23/01/13 8:19 PM

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