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13 Jul 97 - 09:57 PM (#8592) Subject: Help, I'm Looking for a Song From: Jim Dedman : jdedman@juno.com I am looking for two items: 1. "Dreary Black Hills" - does anybody have an idea when this was written? 2. In "How The West Was Won" there is a song called "NO GOODBYE." It sounds very romantic and I have the lyrics which seem period (19th Century). Does any one know when this was witten? [19th Century or for the movie?] Thanks, Jim Dedman |
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13 Jul 97 - 10:42 PM (#8596) Subject: RE: Help, I'm Looking for a Song From: Barry Finn Lomax has it as first appearing in a printed broadside in San Francisco & attributed to an enterainer named Dick Brown around the time of Cheyenne's gold boom (1874 or there after).From The Folk Songs Of North America-Lomax for more see Cowboy Songs-Lomax, Belden or Flanders or Laws. Barry |
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14 Jul 97 - 03:17 AM (#8615) Subject: RE: Help, I'm Looking for a Song From: soncydog@aol.com Jim Dedman If you haven't already been told this ... you might try looking for "Dreary Black Hills" in Carl Sanburg's Songbag, or Carl Songbird's Sandbag, as I call it. I haven't got a copy here, but I'm reasonably certain you'll find it there. |
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14 Jul 97 - 10:06 PM (#8674) Subject: RE: Help, I'm Looking for a Song From: Barry Finn Yes , it's in Carl's sandbag, not much back up info though. Barry |
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21 Jul 97 - 07:47 PM (#9187) Subject: RE: Help, I'm Looking for a Song From: J. Dedman Thanks Barry. |
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21 Jul 97 - 09:52 PM (#9200) Subject: RE: Help, I'm Looking for a Song From: rich r The song along with some historical notes about the Balck Hills goldrush of 1874 can also be found in Songs of the Great American West by Irwin Silber. Silber credits the text to a broadside sheet (around 1876) found in the collection of the Society of California Pioneers. The sheet carried the inscription "as sung by Dick Brown" (see BArry's post) and "published and sold wholesale and retail by Bell & Co. San Fancisco" The Black Hills gold rush was mostly a con game. there was just enough gold to make it work. Gen. George Custer led an expedition into the Black Hills and his report that there was gold there was spread very quickly especially by the entrepreneurs who wanted to start a gold rush. The business panic of 1873 provided the perfect set-up. The real money was made by the people "who transported miners, sold them supplies, fed them, sold them liquor, gambled them for their dust, banked their wealth, entertained them and bedded them down for a night or a trick." Cheyenne became the jumping off place for the railroads. Cattlemen began to drive their herds to Cheyenne ("Goodbye Old Paint I'm leaving Cheyenne" "..git along little dogies, you know that Wyoming will be your new home") to support the boomtown and ship beef to Washington and Oregon. In a couple years the Souix lost their sacred land Custer lost his all ("General Custer told me, we're going for a ride, way down by the Bighorn River where the water is deep and wide.") rich r |