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"Turkey in the Straw" is a well-known American folk song dating from the early 19th century. The song's tune was first popularised in the late 1820s and early 1830s by blackface performers, notably George Washington Dixon, Bob Farrell and George Nichols. Another song, "Zip Coon", was sung to the same tune. This version was first published between 1829 and 1834 in either New York or Baltimore. All of the above performers claimed to have written the song, and the dispute is not resolved. Ohio songwriter Daniel Decatur Emmett is sometimes erroneously credited as the song's author.[1]
[edit] Lyrics"Turkey in the Straw" has a vocal range of an octave and a minor sixth (one half-step wider range than the Star Spangled Banner, itself considered difficult in range for the amateur). Both the verse and the chorus end on the tonic, and both begin a major third above the tonic. In the verse, the highest note is a fifth above the tonic and the lowest is a minor sixth below. In the chorus, the highest note is an octave above the last note, and the lowest is the last note itself. The song stays in key throughout. It is a catchy tune that has many different lyrical versions. The earliest lyrics under the name "Turkey in the Straw" were written by Dan Bryant (head of Bryant's Minstrels) and published in 1861. The words were set to new music, with the "Zip Coon" tune added at the end. The chorus as first published by Dan Bryant goes:
One traditional version has a chorus with these lyrics:
Another goes:
There are versions from the American Civil War, versions about fishing and one with nonsense verses. Folklorists have documented folk versions with obscene lyrics from the 19th century. Another version is called "Natchez Under the Hill". The lyrics are thought to have been added to an earlier tune by Bob Farrell who first performed them in a blackface act on August 11, 1834. Another one goes:
[edit] Contemporary uses"Turkey in the Straw" is still popular today among street fiddlers and ice cream vans. It is a playable song in the popular 2008 video game Wii Music for the Wii console. It can be heard in many movie sound tracks; the song was already public domain by the start of sound film, so it was extensively used. In animated cartoons it is commonly used for suggesting farms or rural life, or old fashioned country people. Perhaps the first use of the tune in an animated cartoon soundtrack was in Steamboat Willie. The popular children's song "Do Your Ears Hang Low?" is typically sung to the tune of "Turkey in the Straw". "Wakko's America", a song from a 1993 episode of Animaniacs, is also set to the tune. George Gobel sang this version on TV: Oh, I had a little chicken and she wouldn't lay an egg, In the acclaimed 1930 film Billy the Kid, actor Roscoe Ates sings "Turkey in the Straw". [edit] References
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