I have found a recording from 1912 of Fred Bacon playing Thomas Glynn’s composition “West Lawn Polka”.

 

Fred Bacon with a Fairbanks Whyte Laydie No7   Oooohh what a banjo :-)

 

I have added the score, with piano part, to the MUSIC LIBRARY for free download.

 

I had not heard this recording before and think that the playing is superb, so I hope that you like it too.

 

… REAL sizzling Bacon !!

THE WEST LAWN POLKA Fred Bacon

Views: 544

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Played with real flair... nice piece, too. I don't know much about Thos. E Glynn, but a look at the score for West Lawn Polka was enough to make me feel dizzy! I noticed Bacon ignored the crazy cadenza in bar 6 altogether.

Hey Mike, You once said that you needed a challenge, well here it is.

It is only Moderato  !

I saw this and immediately thought of you :-)

Tommy Glynn was right there among the top American banjoist/composers. I believe most of his stuff was published by Gatcomb. He hung out with the likes of George Lansing, A.A.Babb, etc., all Boston area players.

 

I have a number of his pieces but can't recall which ones. The only one that seems to stick out for me has a horrifically racist title: "N----- In A Fit".  I'll flip thru the files this evening if I remember...bit of a pub crawl tonight, so perhaps I'll have to do it another evening. ;-)

Now I'm thinking "Queen of the Forest", "Woodland Echoes", "Gloriana Waltz", "Pretty Little Blue Eyes"...there's one of his on ebay right now "Sounds From Africa".

 

 

It appears that Tommy Glynn moved in the right circles!

Alabama's own Classic Banjo recording artiste, Doug Back, recorded "West Lawn Polka" on his "The Banjo Goes Highbrow" CD...and I believe he included the cadenza (I haven't listened to it in a while). Certainly all the "finger-wiggle" trem is in there. Doug is a site member here.

Looks like Vess and Tommy were shilling for Morrison banjos in that pic.

http://www.billsbanjos.com/Morrison2.htm

these kind of tunes could be played from moderato to presto  ,  with several  tempo variations up & down ; so should be play with a 2nd banjo or piano ( exactly what i didn 't do with " tender glances " )

Richard Ineson has kindly provided a transcription of the version that Fred Bacon is playing on the recording (or a very close version of it).

Thank you Richard, we can always rely on you!

I have appended the full transcription of the West Lawn Polka, which was done in the 1960s by Cliff Spaulding of the ABF, to the published score in the MUSIC LIBRARY

Reply to Discussion

RSS

© 2024   Created by thereallyniceman.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service