A lively polka-march with the name of the Florida city, Pensacola. Written for banjo by the American virtuoso, Parke Hunter (1876-1912), and played here in ...

Rating:
  • Currently 5/5 stars.

Views: 243

Comment by Trapdoor2 on December 29, 2020 at 20:33

Well done!

My parents were married in Pensacola...back in 1941.

Comment by carrie horgan on December 30, 2020 at 8:10

Brilliantly played Tony

Comment by TONY BRYAN on December 30, 2020 at 14:11

Glad you all like it.  Apart from being a memorable place to be married, does anyone have any suggestions as to why Parke Hunter would name his composition after Pensacola?  Why not Miami?  What would Parke have said to his audience as an introduction to the piece before he played it? 

Comment by TONY BRYAN on January 1, 2021 at 17:46

The idea of a connection between Hunter's Pensacola and the similarly-named Pepsi-Cola is an interesting one, but is unlikely to hold much water; however, there is an interesting date coincidence.  I can't find a date for the writing of Pensacola, but In 1898 the name-change from Brad's Drink to Pepsi-Cola did take place, and there may have been a resulting publicity drive, but the first official celebrity endorsement was by Barney Oldfield in 1909, and he was unlikely to have been dyslexic.  In Pensacola itself, however, the town was becoming embroiled in the Spanish-American War, and Florida was generally the mobilisation state for troop embarkment to Cuba.  Not that Hunter could have participated in any of it as he and Mays went to London in 1897 for the best part of a year.  But, following the war, Roosevelt bolstered the Navy with what became known as "The Great White Fleet", and about 30 of the ships visited Pensacola in 1903 - 1904.  That event would probably have been enough to warrant naming a polka-march after the town, though Mays died suddenly in 1903, and Hunter could be forgiven for being short of motivation.  

Anyone have any better insights?

Tony 

Comment by Jody Stecher on January 1, 2021 at 18:15

Another part of the puzzle is that the advert for Pepsi emphasizes the pep aspect of PEPsi.  Coca Cola originally contained Coca; that's why it was known as an energizing drink. Pepsi came along nearly a decade later. Written histories claim that the name refers to the pepsin enzyme as a digestive aid. But I wonder if the name wasn't really meant to make Pepsi seem like a stimulating alternative to Coca Cola.  I don't think the name was meant to suggest a town on the western edge of the Florida panhandle.   As for the musical composition "Pensacola", it is plenty energizing to listen to and to play as well. It has no cocaine or enzymes in it but it does contain octaves.

Comment by Trapdoor2 on January 1, 2021 at 19:25

Yah, I would peg the visit from the fleet, which would have been national news.

There's nothing similarly notable going on in Pensacola during the late 19th century. Mobile, AL is just a few miles away and a much larger population center. The US Navy had a shipyard in Pensacola but it didn't get much attention until the Navy placed their aviation facilities there in 1913/14 (and it was a tiny facility until well after WWI).

The beaches in the area didn't become viable for tourism until good roads were built...well into the 1950s.

Comment by TONY BRYAN on January 2, 2021 at 15:28

Even so, Pensacola was the largest US Gulf port in the days of sailing ships and was its principal trading port with Cuba in 1898, bringing in all that lovely mahogany for banjo arms, some on its way to the Weaver workshop(?). 

It would be exciting to find a personal connection between the town and Parke Hunter, other than a visit from US Naval fleet.  Did he play a concert at the Naval Academy?  We can be sure that Hunter personalised the titles of his compositions as, for example, he went to Wabash College, Indiana - hence Fun on the Wabash. 

It's also interesting to note that the editor of the Pensacola News in 1898 was a Frank Mayes - no relation to Hunter's partner, Cadwallader Mays? 

Regards

Tony

Comment by Trapdoor2 on January 2, 2021 at 17:55

The Pensacola Naval Academy didn't get its start until WWI, so that timeline is off. The Naval Yard there was quite small and seriously underfunded. I imagine its only link to the local economy was thru the red-light districts of Pensacola...

Unless he had some personal connection, I haven't been able to find any newsworthy link beyond the fleet visit.

Comment by Jody Stecher on January 2, 2021 at 21:15

I am not convinced about the Wabash College connection to "Fun On The Wabash". This is for reasons of geography and common word usage. Two Wabash-y things occur to me that one might have fun *on*.  There is the Wabash River and the Wabash Railroad. As far as I can tell neither is near Wabash College.  You can have fun *at" or *in* a college but not *on* it, unless you decide to have a party on the rooftop of one of its buildings. And the article "the" is also troublesome. Why would Wabash College be called "The Wabash"?  It seems unlikely.

The Wabash Railroad was a pretty Big Deal in its time, connecting important midwest cities.  But I'm thinking the river is what is being referenced in the title of the banjo solo. "On The Banks Of The Wabash, Far Away " was a popular 19th century song. There is a precedent of having Wabash-y titles to musical compositions. There *is* the song "The Wabash Cannonball", based on an older song about the Rock Island Route, but there was no train of that name on the Wabash line or anywhere else until the late 1940s.   So I think Parke Hunter selected the title to connect with the sentimental imagination, much as Joe Morley did in his fanciful titles such as Alabama Barn Dance and Kentucky Days or as Grimshaw did with Life In Louisiana. 

Comment by Richard William Ineson on January 3, 2021 at 10:24
An interesting discussion which has prompted me to look at the list of Hunter’s compositions to identify which other locations he favoured in his titles.

Here is what I found: Alhambra, (not the Spanish variety but the famous theatre in Leicester Square ( now demolished) on the stage of which, he and Mays triumphed on many occasions, Boston is mentioned in Boston Boys and Boston Ideals, Brooklyn, Crete (Cretan Patrol), Dakota, Edinboro, Emerald Isle, Erin, Eversholt (A village in Bedfordshire, England), Hoosier State,
Indiana (March and Echoes), Levanto, Pasadena, and Tennessee is mentioned in a song published by Sheard (My Home in Tennessee) in 1901, the music by Hunter.

All very intriguing but which throws little light on the current problem of Pensacola and Hunter’s association therewith.

Add a Comment

You need to be a member of Classic-Banjo to add comments!

Join Classic-Banjo

© 2024   Created by thereallyniceman.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service