Wait for the Wagon

Wait for the Wagon

Infobox Standard
title=Wait For The Wagon
comment="(As arranged by Knauff)"


image_size=
caption=Cover of "Wait For The Wagon", 1851.
writer=
composer=
lyricist=
published=1851
written=
language=English
form=Minstrel
original_artist=
recorded_by=
performed_by=

"Wait for the Wagon" is an American folk song, first popularized in the early 1850s.

"Wait for the Wagon" was first published as a parlor song in New Orleans, Louisiana, with an 1850 copyright, and music attributed to Wiesenthal and the lyrics to "a lady". All subsequent versions seem to derive from this song.

History

A number of different versions were published the next year.

Along the Mississippi River, most were nearly identical to the 1850 publication. Peters, Webb and Co. in Louisville, Kentucky, published it as "Wait For The Wagon: A Song For The South West" with no attribution to music or lyrics. [Benedict, "Wait For The Wagon: A Song For The South West".]

On the east coast several versions were published as minstrel songs with slightly different lyrics and differently arranged music. One was published in May of 1851 ("Wait For The Wagon: Ethiopian Song") in Baltimore, Maryland, and it was attributed to George P. Knauff. It is agreed upon that R. Bishop Buckley (1810 - 1867) probably first performed the song and Knauff arranged it as a composition. Knauff was a music teacher in Virginia, who compiled popular and folk fiddle tunes into a large compendium, "Virginia Reels" (1839). Buckley was born in England and came to America as a young man and, with his father and two brothers, formed the "Buckley Serenaders". This minstrel show toured America and Europe.

J.E. Boswell also published a minstrel version ("Wait For The Wagon: A New Ethopian Song & Melody") in 1851, as arranged by W. Loftin Hargrave. [Hargrave, "Wait For The Wagon: A New Ethopian Song & Melody".]

"Wait for the Wagon" was also published in London circa 1847 - 1869.

The song became a hit in the Eastern United States, and other minstrel troupes added it to their own performances. Through them, it spread to the South and West. It remained particularly popular in the Ozarks and Mississippi through the Civil War.

Comparison of original to minstrel lyrics

The South West versions was popular enough that "Answer To Wait For The Wagon" was publised in 1852, the first verse of which opens with::"I thank you, Mister Jacob, but I'm not inclin'd to go,":"Your wagon is so clumsey, and your team so very slow." [Morris, "Answer To Wait For The Wagon".]

References

Bibliography

*Benedict, Joseph (arranger). "Wait For The Wagon: A Song For The South West". Louisville, Kentucky: Peters, Webb and Co. (1851).
* Fuld, James (1966)."The Book of World Famous Music, Classical, Popular and Folk".
*Hargrave, W. Loftin (arranger). "Wait For The wagon A New Ethopian Song & Melody". Baltimore: J. E. Boswell (1851).
*Knauff, George P. (arranger). "Wait For The Wagon: Ethiopian Song". Baltimore: F. D. Benteen (1851).
*Morris, George (words); W. Wallace (music). "Answer To Wait For The Wagon". Louisville, Kentucky: G.W. Brainard & Co. (1852).
* Raph, Theodore (1964). "The American Song Treasury: 100 Favorites". Mineola, New York: Dover Publications.
*Waltz, Robert B; David G. Engle. " [http://www.csufresno.edu/folklore/ballads/RJ19222.html Wait For The Wagon] ". "The Traditional Ballad Index: An Annotated Bibliography of the Folk Songs of the English-Speaking World". Hosted by [http://www.csufresno.edu/folklore/ California State University, Fresno, Folklore] , 2007.

External links

* [http://www.pioneergirl.com/songs_waitwagon.htm] "Wait for the Wagon" on pioneergirl.com


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