Title
Old Dan Tucker
Type
Song
Description
[Alternately: “Ole Dan Tucker,” "Dan Tucker"]
To listen to this song (and others) on the Artists Respond to Juba Site, Click Here and/or Here.
While Dan Emmett (1815-1904) of the Virginia Minstrels claimed to have written the song, this claim remains unverified. There are other published versions of the song in the Library of Congress collection which credit its composition to Philip Ernst (dates unknown), and James M. Deems (1818-1901). First published in 1843, the song became immensely popular, and along with “Mary Blane” and Lucy Long” was one of the most published minstrel songs during the period (Mahar 367). Of the versions surveyed, there is some variation in the lyrical settings, albeit the first verse consistently begins with some variation of the lines “I come to town the other night/I heard a noise and saw a fight,” while the rest of the lyrics vary to a much greater degree. Generally, the melody and song structure is consistent with the notable exception of Bruce Springsteen’s recent recording of the song which appends an instrumental interlude at the conclusion of each chorus.
Today, the song is frequently identified as belonging to a folk canon rather than to a/the canon of minstrel song. Likely due to its migration into the folk canon, the song continues to remain popular. During the past sixty years, recordings by Pete Seeger, and in turn, Bruce Springsteen have ensured that the song continues to retain a prominent position in folk canons and on the verge, if not fully a part of the canon of popular American song.
Select Recording History:Golden Gate Quartet with Josh White. Virginia & The Piedmont - Deep River of Song - The Alan Lomax Collection. Various Artists. Rounder, 2000.
Grimes, Anne. Ohio State Ballads. Smithsonian Folkways, 1957.
Seeger, Pete. American Favourite Ballads, Vol. 1. Smithsonian Folkways, 1957.
Springsteen, Bruce. We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions. Columbia, 2006.
Works Cited: Mahar, William J. Behind the Burnt Cork Mask: Early Blackface Minstrelsy and Antebellum American Popular Culture. Chicago: Illinois UP, 1999.
To listen to this song (and others) on the Artists Respond to Juba Site, Click Here and/or Here.
While Dan Emmett (1815-1904) of the Virginia Minstrels claimed to have written the song, this claim remains unverified. There are other published versions of the song in the Library of Congress collection which credit its composition to Philip Ernst (dates unknown), and James M. Deems (1818-1901). First published in 1843, the song became immensely popular, and along with “Mary Blane” and Lucy Long” was one of the most published minstrel songs during the period (Mahar 367). Of the versions surveyed, there is some variation in the lyrical settings, albeit the first verse consistently begins with some variation of the lines “I come to town the other night/I heard a noise and saw a fight,” while the rest of the lyrics vary to a much greater degree. Generally, the melody and song structure is consistent with the notable exception of Bruce Springsteen’s recent recording of the song which appends an instrumental interlude at the conclusion of each chorus.
Today, the song is frequently identified as belonging to a folk canon rather than to a/the canon of minstrel song. Likely due to its migration into the folk canon, the song continues to remain popular. During the past sixty years, recordings by Pete Seeger, and in turn, Bruce Springsteen have ensured that the song continues to retain a prominent position in folk canons and on the verge, if not fully a part of the canon of popular American song.
Select Recording History:
Works Cited:
Mark Turner
Image
Performance(s) listed of this act
Performer(s) | Troupe | Event and Venue |
---|---|---|
Fortescue | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Russell, Henry | Vocal Entertainment,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Russell, Henry | Vocal Entertainment,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Ethiopian Delineators (not Pelham's, 1847) | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Beyadere and Female Serenaders | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Russell, Henry | Vocal Entertainment,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Russell, Henry | Vocal Entertainment,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Ethiopian Harmonists (1846-47) | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Fortescue | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Roberts, B. | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Ethiopian Harmonists (1846-47) | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Roberts, B. | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Roberts, B. | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Ethiopian Harmonists (1846-47) | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Fortescue | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Roberts, B. | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Ethiopian Harmonists (1846-47) | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Fortescue | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Roberts, B. | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Variety,
-
Drury Lane Theatre, London (city-county) |
||
Virginia Minstrels, The (1844) | Minstrel Show,
-
Bower Saloon, Yorkshire: West Riding |
|
General Tom Thumb | Variety,
-
Vauxhall Gardens, London (city-county) |
|
Ethiopian Serenaders (1846-48) | Dramatic,
-
Theatre Royal, Bristol, Bristol (city-county) in Gloucestershire |
|
American Southern Minstrels | Circus,
-
Astley's Royal Amphitheatre, London (city-county) |
|
American Southern Minstrels | Circus,
-
Astley's Royal Amphitheatre, London (city-county) |
|
Female American Serenaders | Dramatic,
-
Queen's Theatre, Lancashire |
|
Rosa | Dramatic,
-
Queen's Theatre, Lancashire |
|
Female American Serenaders | Dramatic,
-
Queen's Theatre, Lancashire |
|
Rosa | Dramatic,
-
Queen's Theatre, Lancashire |
|
Ware | Dramatic,
-
Theatre Royal, Sheffield, Yorkshire: West Riding |
|
Ware | Dramatic,
-
Theatre Royal, Sheffield, Yorkshire: West Riding |
|
Negro Entertainment Troupe (Sheffield, 44) | Dramatic,
-
Theatre Royal, Sheffield, Yorkshire: West Riding |
|
Ware | Dramatic,
-
Theatre Royal, Sheffield, Yorkshire: West Riding |
|
Thumb, General Tom | Variety,
-
Vauxhall Gardens, London (city-county) |
|
White, W. | Dramatic,
-
Theatre Royal, Bristol, Bristol (city-county) in Gloucestershire |
|
Ethiopian Harmonists (1847-?) | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Fortescue | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Roberts, B. | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Ethiopian Harmonists (1847-?) | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Fortescue | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Roberts, B. | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Ethiopian Harmonists (1847-?) | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Fortescue | Minstrel Show,
-
Concert Hall, Lancashire |
|
Ethiopian Serenaders (1846-48) | Minstrel Show,
-
St. James Theatre, London (city-county) |
|
Ethiopian Serenaders (1846-48) | Minstrel Show,
-
Sussex Hall, London (city-county) |
|
White, W. | Minstrel Show,
-
Sussex Hall, London (city-county) |
|
Ethiopian Serenaders (1846-48) | Minstrel Show,
-
St. James Theatre, London (city-county) |
|
Minstrel Show,
-
St. James Theatre, London (city-county) |
||
Minstrel Show,
-
Crosby Hall, London (city-county) |
||
Minstrel Show,
-
Crosby Hall, London (city-county) |