Originally posted by Pvt Schnapps
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Still, dialect songs were uncomfortable to some. Researchers of Stephen Foster suspect he sold authorship of one of his early dialect songs "Old Folks at Home" to the stage Minstrel E.P. Christy in part to preserve his own name for his more refined songs. Not realizing how popular that song would become, Foster sold it for five bucks. He only later realized what a financial mistake he had made, especially since people in-the-know knew he had written it anyway. He penned a note to Christy asking that authorship of the music be returned to him, to no avail.
Lesson learned, still Foster would (as he explained to Christy) try to “reform” minstrelsy by writing more refined lyrics, not "trashy and really offensive words." That gave us ‘Nelly Was A Lady” and the like later on.
Dan Wykes
Fat Neck Mess
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