While we're on the subject of overplayed tunes in general, I thought it would be interesting add to something positive to the discussion, along with the negative. We can probably think of many tunes that are overplayed, but what about tunes that are underplayed? Certainly tunes that are documented to have been played or appear frequently in printed sources should be considered to be underplayed.
Some tunes that come to mind:
Rory O'More
The Campbells are Coming
Hail to the Chief
Flowers of Edinburgh
Who'll Be King but Charlie
Lannigan's Ball aka Tecumseh (mentioned by Walt Whitman to have been played at the Grand Review in 1865)
College Hornpipe
Cuckoo's Nest
My Love She is but a Lassie Yet
Carry Me Back to Virginny
Bonnie Doon
Charley Over the Water
Fifer's Delight
Guilderoy
Kinloch
Larry O'Gaff
Duke's Q.S. aka King William
Larry O'Brien
Rickett's Hornpipe
Beaux of Oak Hill
Soldier's Joy
Jefferson and Liberty
Arkansas Traveller
from Drum Taps in Dixie by Delevan Miller
But whin youse kids led us out on a p'rade to the
chune of 'Rory O'More' it was like goin' to a
Donnybrook fair so aisy was the marchin' behind
the drum corps of the Second Heavy
Many of the crack brass bands of the country
were there, but they were not in it with the old
martial band. Their music — mind the expression, "
music" — caught on with all the swell people of
the city who thronged the camp waiting for an opportunity
to hear them, and the veterans went
wild as they heard again the reveille and tattoo
and the old familiar strains of "Yankee Doodle," "
The Girl I Left Behind Me," "Rory O'More," "
The Campbells Are Coming," "Hail to the Chief,"
and many other reminders of the old days.
from Christian Memorials of the War
by Horatio Balch Hackett - United States - 1864 - 252 pages
"Our fifer immediately commenced straightening himself
upward until all the angles in his person had disappeared,
when he placed his fife to his mouth, and played the "
Flowers of Edinburgh," one of the most difficult tunes to
follow with the drum that could have been selected..."
from The Civil War on the Outer Banks By Fred M. Mallison
"After which headed by the old colored Fifer Dennis to the air or tune of "Who'll Be King but Charlie," we moved off."
Getting back to overplayed tunes:
Hell on the Wabash (first appears in B&E and no other printed source 1861-1865)
Jaybird
Fireman's Q.S. (not even documented to be a period tune)
Old 1812/Welcome Here Again
Minstrel Boy (when did this become a fife and drum tune anyway?)
Adam Bell's (modern drumbeat)
The Harriot (modern drumbeat)
Some Distance from Prussia (post-war)
Paddy on the Handcar (first appears in print 1870s)
Grandfather's Clock (1880s)
York Fusiliers (a great tune, but perhaps its popularity peaked during the early 1800s)
Paddy O'Toole (third strain postwar)
Balquhidder Lasses (postwar)
Some tunes that come to mind:
Rory O'More
The Campbells are Coming
Hail to the Chief
Flowers of Edinburgh
Who'll Be King but Charlie
Lannigan's Ball aka Tecumseh (mentioned by Walt Whitman to have been played at the Grand Review in 1865)
College Hornpipe
Cuckoo's Nest
My Love She is but a Lassie Yet
Carry Me Back to Virginny
Bonnie Doon
Charley Over the Water
Fifer's Delight
Guilderoy
Kinloch
Larry O'Gaff
Duke's Q.S. aka King William
Larry O'Brien
Rickett's Hornpipe
Beaux of Oak Hill
Soldier's Joy
Jefferson and Liberty
Arkansas Traveller
from Drum Taps in Dixie by Delevan Miller
But whin youse kids led us out on a p'rade to the
chune of 'Rory O'More' it was like goin' to a
Donnybrook fair so aisy was the marchin' behind
the drum corps of the Second Heavy
Many of the crack brass bands of the country
were there, but they were not in it with the old
martial band. Their music — mind the expression, "
music" — caught on with all the swell people of
the city who thronged the camp waiting for an opportunity
to hear them, and the veterans went
wild as they heard again the reveille and tattoo
and the old familiar strains of "Yankee Doodle," "
The Girl I Left Behind Me," "Rory O'More," "
The Campbells Are Coming," "Hail to the Chief,"
and many other reminders of the old days.
from Christian Memorials of the War
by Horatio Balch Hackett - United States - 1864 - 252 pages
"Our fifer immediately commenced straightening himself
upward until all the angles in his person had disappeared,
when he placed his fife to his mouth, and played the "
Flowers of Edinburgh," one of the most difficult tunes to
follow with the drum that could have been selected..."
from The Civil War on the Outer Banks By Fred M. Mallison
"After which headed by the old colored Fifer Dennis to the air or tune of "Who'll Be King but Charlie," we moved off."
Getting back to overplayed tunes:
Hell on the Wabash (first appears in B&E and no other printed source 1861-1865)
Jaybird
Fireman's Q.S. (not even documented to be a period tune)
Old 1812/Welcome Here Again
Minstrel Boy (when did this become a fife and drum tune anyway?)
Adam Bell's (modern drumbeat)
The Harriot (modern drumbeat)
Some Distance from Prussia (post-war)
Paddy on the Handcar (first appears in print 1870s)
Grandfather's Clock (1880s)
York Fusiliers (a great tune, but perhaps its popularity peaked during the early 1800s)
Paddy O'Toole (third strain postwar)
Balquhidder Lasses (postwar)
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