BOWLING GREEN
American, Reel and Song Tune USA, Southwestern Pa. Traditional tune- lyrics Cousin Emmy;
ARTIST: Cousin Emmy;
Listen: Cousin Emmy with New Lost City Ramblers- Bowling Green
CATEGORY: Fiddle and Instrumental Tunes DATE: Tune early 1900’s, lyrics mid 1900’s;
RECORDING INFO: Cousin Emmy (Cynthia May Carver). New Lost City Ramblers with Cousin Emmy, Folkways FTS 31015, LP (1968), cut# 9; Kossoy Sisters. Bowling Green and Other Folksongs from the Southern Mountains, Tradition TLP 1018, LP (196?), cut# 1; Kossoy Sisters. Banjo Music of the Southern Appalachians, Olympic OL-6173, LP (196?), cut#A.02; Seeger, Mike; and Alice Gerrard. Mike Seeger and Alice Gerrard, Greenhays GR 704, LP (1980), cut# 1; Weaver’s (Good Old Bowling Green) Reunion Concert at Carnegie Hall; The Walker Family: Bowling Green Legends of Old Time Music, Vestapol video- Stephan Grossman. Davenport, Clyde. Puncheon Camps, Appalachian Center Ser. AC002, Cas (1992), cut# 15
OTHER NAMES: “Good Old Bowling Green”; Related to “Lost John (lyrics);” “Bluegrass Express (lyrics);
SOURCES: Kossoy Sisters. Grass Roots Harmony, Oak, Sof (1968), p.34; Silber-FSWB, p. 43, "Bowling Green" (1 text) Seeger, Pete. How to Play the Five String Banjo, Seeger, sof (1962), P21; Kuntz, Fiddler's Companion, http://www.ceolas.org/tunes/fc; Bowling Green .......... v.13#1 ... p.19 Sing Out); Weaver’s Sanga Music 1958;
NOTES: This version is from Cynthia May "Cousin Emmy" Carver with The New Lost City Ramblers. Bowling Green was originally a fiddle tune when floating lyrics and a chorus were added by Cousin Emmy. Whether she wrote the lyrics or heard the version is unclear but she seems to be the source.
Uncle Earl's version is a cover of Cousin Emmy's song with the extra verse missing in the version she does with the New Lost City Ramblers (see Version 3). J.E. Mainer's chorus is different but the lyrics are similar- suggesting a different source.
Notes Kuntz: "D Major. Standard. AB. A fife tune from southwestern Pa., well known and regarded by local fifers. Sources for notated versions: Hiram Horner (elderly fiddler from Fayette County, Pa., 1960), Marion Yoders (Greene County, Pa., 1960). Bayard (Dance to the Fiddle), 1981; No. 232, pg. 191." (Kuntz, Fiddler's Companion, http://www.ceolas.org/tunes/fc).
Cousin Emmy appears to have been one of the first to wed the “Bowling Green” lyrics with the fife/fiddle tune (See: Clyde Davenport Puncheon Camps, Appalachian Center Ser. AC002, Cas (1992), cut# 15); Bowling Green, Kentucky is a popular lyric. “Lost John Dean from Bowling Green” has the Bowling Green lryic. “She'll cross the river at Newport town/ Louisville, Lexington, she's southbound/ Richmond, Winchester, Bowling Green/ Prettiest places I've ever seen” From the song, “Bluegrass Express.”
BOWLING GREEN- Cousin Emmy
Listen: Cousin Emmy with New Lost City Ramblers- Bowling Green
[banjo]
Wish I was in Bowling Green sittin' in a chair
One arm round my pretty little miss
'Totherun 'round my dear
'Totherun 'round my dear,
Chorus: Bowling Green.....
Oh.... good ol' Bowling Green.
If you see that man of mine, tell him once for me
If he loves another girl,
I will set him free
Yes I'll set him free,
Bowling Green.......
Oh..... good ol' Bowling Green.
[banjo]
I'm goin' through this whole wide world, I'm goin' through alone;
I'm goin' through this whole wide world,
I ain't got no home,
I ain't got no home.
Bowling Green.......
Oh..... good ol', Bowling Green.
[banjo]
Bowling Green.......
Oh..... good ol' Bowling Green.
[additional verse she sings:]
Wish I was a bumblebee, sailing through the air
Sail right down to my true love's side,
Touch him if you dare,
Touch him if you dare.
Bowling Green.......
Oh..... good ol' Bowling Green.
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