Subject: RE: Let's talk about humpenscrumps From: mg Date: 01 Dec 18 - 06:56 PM sounds like an Amish delicacy |
Subject: RE: Let's talk about humpenscrumps From: Mick Pearce (MCP) Date: 01 Dec 18 - 02:03 PM Here's a description from the Sapperton play, (Glos. - 1914): Father Scrump carries the humpenscrump made with a tin with wires across and bridge and a stick with notches for a bow and also a sheep-bell on his rump. Mick |
Subject: RE: Let's talk about humpenscrumps From: GUEST,Ron Dhuttleworth Date: 01 Dec 18 - 01:02 PM It's a bit late but I've just come across this post. I've got too much stuff on humpenscrumps/humstrums to put here, but if anyone wants a list, e-mail me. Ron Shuttleworth, 41 Morningside, Coventry, CV5 6PD. tel 024 7667 6721. Keeper of the Morris Ring Folk-Play Archive. 2500-plus itams, available to anyone. https://folkplayarchive.co.uk/ |
Subject: RE: Let's talk about humpenscrumps From: JHW Date: 02 Feb 18 - 05:20 AM Cider with Rosie? |
Subject: RE: Let's talk about humpenscrumps From: Tradsinger Date: 02 Feb 18 - 04:48 AM I think I have found another reference. In the Sherborne (Gloucestershire) mummer's play, the Jack Finney character says: Last night me mother and I fell out And that you can plainly see She gied I this old tin cannister To make a hurdie gurdie. He is then asked to play a tune and plays Greensleeves. |
Subject: RE: Let's talk about humpenscrumps From: Iains Date: 30 Jan 18 - 05:55 AM Tradsinger. I was wrong. Another series of explanations for chine/chime below: Coopering Another explanation for chime is the bevelled edge of the staves at the top of a barrel. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrel#/media/File:Oak-wine-barrel-parts-description-toasting-toneleria-nacional-chile.jpg I am still confused. |
Subject: RE: Let's talk about humpenscrumps From: Tradsinger Date: 30 Jan 18 - 03:58 AM Further googling suggests that the word is chime rather than chine. The chime of a barrel is the ring that holds the top on. Apart from that, I find it interesting that there are several references to its use for mummers and morris. I feel that the collectors used the word just to mean a home-made fiddle type instrument rather than anything similar to a gurdy. Any other mentions that people know of? |
Subject: RE: Let's talk about humpenscrumps From: Iains Date: 29 Jan 18 - 05:05 PM As far as I can make out the chine of a barrel is the (max. Diameter) midpoint of the staves forming the barrel. If rolling the barrel, it would be rolled on it's chine. The only definition I found does not really go much further: humpenscrump "a musical instrument of rude construction." Alongside others like humstrum, celestinette and wind-broach, it was originally another name for the hurdy-gurdy. |
Subject: Let's talk about humpenscrumps From: Tradsinger Date: 27 Jan 18 - 05:21 PM I have been browsing through the James Madison Carpenter collection recently put up on line and had a look at Gloucestershire Mummers plays. In the Didbrook play (Didbrook is a hamlet near where I live), the performer sings a song and Carpenter has written: "Has humpscump - chine of a barrel with three pieces of string and a bow like a fiddle, made of horse hair". Another Gloucester Mummers play, this time from Sapperton, has this "Father Scrump carries the humpenscrump made with a tin with wires across and bridge and a stick with notches for a bow." The Morris researcher Cawte mentions a humpscrump being used to accompany Border Morris (but I can't find the reference). Thomas Lanchbury (1865-1934), a traditional Gloucestershire folk singer, remembered the home-made fiddle that supplied the music for Morris dancing. He said that it was made with two tins fixed at either end of a stick of wood with a piece of whipchord [sic] stretched across from one tin to the other. A bow was used but he couldn't remember how the notes were made. He said ?there wasn?t much of a tune about it, it just kept the dancers going. It probably served to mark the rhythm.? The song collector remarked that this was probably a humpenscrump. Google has it that a humpenscrump is "A crude musical instrument like a hurdy-gurdy." Does anyone else have any information on this curious instrument and its use? Also, what part of the barrel is the "chine"? Tradsinger |
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