Pinery Boys: Songs and Songcatching in the Lumberjack Era (Languages and Folklore of the Upper Midwest)

Pinery Boys: Songs and Songcatching in the Lumberjack Era (Languages and Folklore of the Upper Midwest)

by Franz Rickaby (Editor), J. Baird Callicott (Editor), Susan L. Flader (Editor)

Synopsis

As the heyday of the lumber camps faded, a young scholar named Franz Rickaby set out to find songs from shanty boys, river drivers, and sawmill hands in the Upper Midwest. Traveling mostly on foot with a fiddle slung over his shoulder, Rickaby fell into easy conversation with the men, collecting not just the words of songs, but the tunes, making careful notes about his informants and their performances. Shortly before his groundbreaking and much-praised Ballads and Songs of the Shanty Boy was published in 1926, Rickaby died, leaving later folklorists, cultural historians, and folksong enthusiasts with little knowledge of his life and other unpublished research.

Pinery Boys now incorporates, commemorates, contextualizes, and complements Rickaby's early work. It includes an introduction and annotations throughout by eminent folklore scholar James P. Leary and an engaging, impressively researched biography by Rickaby's granddaughter Gretchen Dykstra. Central to this edition are Rickaby's own introduction and the original fifty-one songs that he published-including Jack Haggerty's Flat River Girl, The Little Brown Bulls, Ole from Norway, The Red Iron Ore, and Morrissey and the Russian Sailor -plus fourteen additional songs selected to represent the varied collecting Rickaby did beyond the lumber camps.

Supplemented by historical photographs, Pinery Boys fully reveals Franz Rickaby as a visionary artist and scholar and provides glimpses into the past lives of woods poets and singers.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 368
Edition: Annotated
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
Published: 30 May 2017

ISBN 10: 029931264X
ISBN 13: 9780299312640

Media Reviews
[Rickaby] was the first to put the singing lumberjack into an adequate record and was of pioneering stuff. ... His book renders the big woods, not with bizarre hokum and studied claptrap ... but with the fidelity of an unimpeachable witness. -Carl Sandburg
Author Bio
Franz Rickaby (1889-1925) was born in Arkansas, educated at Knox College and Harvard University, and taught at the University of North Dakota. Gretchen Dykstra was the founding president of the National 9/11 Memorial Foundation, commissioner of the New York City Department of Consumer Affairs, and president of the Times Square Alliance. James P. Leary is professor emeritus of folklore and Scandinavian studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His publications include the Grammy-nominated multimedia production Folksongs of Another America.