This is another of my arrangements of a tune from Southern Harmony, and Musical Companioncompiled by William Walker and published in 1835. It’s a compendium of marvelous, mostly anonymous hymn tunes from American folk musicians.
My original settings of these arrangements featured solo piano but with the participation of two string instruments (a high and a low) and a treble woodwind which were written in such a way that they could be performed live by separate instrumentalists or covered by a second keyboardist performing on two, stacked synthesizers.
After I’d done two albums of folk tunes like this (the second one was mainly Irish tunes), I gave up on the idea of ever doing them live and began the task–only partially complete…many more to go–of rewriting them as solo piano pieces with no orchestral accompaniment.
As sometimes happens, you go back to things. I finally decided the practicalities of sheet music publication “aren’t the boss of me,” and I’m video taping them in their original form. I’m also publishing their sheet music as “keyboard duos” in case there’s some keyboardists out there who want to do them. I love concert grand piano, but I also love a good electric keyboard and these days I’ll bet there’s a least as many of those in homes as acoustic pianos.
One last tidbit: I love the string countermelody I wrote for this arrangement. (The Southern Music tune is the right-hand of the piano, NOT the string line…that’s mine!) I’m going to steal my own countermelody (from myself) and make it the main tune in a song of my own!
