| Fife And Drum Blues |
Article Index for Fife |
Limousines in Fife |
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Information AboutFife And Drum Blues |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT FIFE AND DRUM BLUES | |
| blues | |
| blues music genres | |
| american music | |
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Fife and drum blues is a rural derivation of traditional Country Blues . It is performed typically with one lead Fife player often also the Band leader and Vocalist , and a troop of Drum mers. The drum troop is loosely structured unlike Drum Corps and may have any number of Snare , Tom , and Bass Drum players. Fife and drum performances were Family affairs often held at Reunions and big Picnic s. It is suggested by most texts that it has roots not in the American Revolutionary War , but actually in Africa ; the use of fife is merely a replacement for Instruments the Slave s had used in Africa. Fifes were carved from Cane that grew locally. Drums were often hand-made, and equally often just Percussive objects. The vocals seem to derive from two main styles: # Traditional Call And Response of Black Spirituals # Short, repetitive Lyrics The genre originates in very Rural areas of the Farming South and today persists in a stretch of sparely populated Southern States stretching from northwest Georgia to an area south of Memphis . Notable performers are Napoleon Strickland , Dan Emmett , Othar Turner , and Jessie Mae Hemphill . Performers play blues songs as well as religious songs such as "When the Saints Go Marching In" and "When I Lay My Burden Down." SEE ALSO
FURTHER VIEWING
FURTHER READING # David Evans, "Black Fife and Drum Music in Mississippi" # Howard W. Odum, "Religious Folk-Songs of the Southern Negro" # Eileen Southern "The Music of Black Americans: A History" # http://www.folkstreams.net/context,86 |
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