Date of Award
May 2013
Degree Type
Thesis
Degree Name
Master of Music
Department
Music
First Advisor
Gillian Rodger
Committee Members
Martin Rosenblaum
Keywords
Bob Dunn, Decca, Hillbilly, Milton Brown, Transcription, Western Swing
Abstract
This thesis presents a full-score transcription of a recording of a string band performing a Tin Pan Alley song. Context is established through a review of events leading up to the recording, focusing on contributions by key personnel. Decca 5158-B, Who's Sorry Now? by Milton Brown and His Musical Brownies is today regarded as westerns swing, but the
style is hardly comparable to the slick, highly arranged sound of western swing orchestras from the late 1940s and early 50s. The Brownies were a Texas fiddle band playing mostly pop and jazz standards, not the cowboy and western themed repertory of later western swing bands. The Brownies played dance music on the radio and in dance halls during the Depression, and there wasn't time in their lives to devote to planning intricate chord progressions and solos. They achieved their excellence by doing it - over and over and over again, six days a week, four hours a day, for more than four years. Unarranged and spontaneous, this record is a three minute snapshot of a hot fiddle band doing what they did best, playing hard-driving dance music.
Recommended Citation
Dietrich, Madeline Olson, "Western Swing in Transcription: Who's Sorry Now? by Milton Brown and His Musical Brownies (Decca 5158-B)" (2013). Theses and Dissertations. 89.
https://dc.uwm.edu/etd/89