A hootenanny is an event involving music in the United States. It is particularly associated with folk music.
Etymology
Placeholder
Hootenanny is an Appalachian colloquialism that was used in the early twentieth century U.S. as a placeholder name to refer to things whose names were forgotten or unknown. In this usage, it was synonymous with thingamajig or whatchamacallit, as in: "Hand me that hootenanny."
Folk music performance
Hootenanny is also an old country word for "party" or get-together. It can refer to a folk music party with an open mic, at which different performers are welcome to get up and play in front of an audience.
According to Pete Seeger he first heard the word hootenanny in Seattle, Washington in the summer of 1941 while touring the area with Woody Guthrie.[1] It was used by Hugh DeLacy's New Deal political club[2] to describe their monthly music fund raisers.[3] After some debate the club voted in hootenanny, which narrowly beat out wingding. Seeger, Woody Guthrie and other members of the Almanac Singers later used the word in New York City to describe their weekly rent parties, which featured many notable folksingers of the time.[3] In a 1962 interview in Time, Joan Baez made the analogy that a hootenanny is to folk singing what a jam session is to jazz.[4]
Events
During the early 1960s at the height of the American folk music revival, the club Gerdes Folk City at 11 West 4th Street in Greenwich Village started the folk music hootenanny tradition every Monday night, that featured an open mic and welcomed performers known and unknown, young and old.[5] The Bitter End at 147 Bleecker Street continued the folk music hootenanny tradition every Tuesday night.[6][7]
A weekly hootenanny has been held during the summers at Allegany State Park most years since 1972.[8]
The Hootenanny was an annual one-day rockabilly music festival held at the Oak Canyon Ranch in Irvine, California, which also incorporated a vintage car show, and was discontinued in 2015.
For years there have been online hootenannies. The most long-standing example is Small Talk At The Wall,[9] which originated in 1999.
Recordings
- Hootenanny with the Highwaymen is a 1963 album by folk band The Highwaymen
- "Surfin' Hootenanny" is a surf pop/rock song written by Lee Hazlewood (tune) and Al Casey, and performed by Al Casey with The K-C-Ettes (aka The Blossoms). It opens Casey's 1963 album Surfin' Hootenanny (issued as LP record by Sundazed Music Inc.). The song re-appeared in 1996 (in remastered version) on the Cowabunga! Set 2: Big Waves (1963) compilation. Cowabunga! Set 2: Big Waves (1963) is a second disc from Rhino Records' Cowabunga! The Surf Box 4-CD set compilation that contains most famous songs from the four-decade long history of surf music.
- The Glencoves had a hit single with their release "Hootenanny", which peaked at No. 38 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1963.
- Eels released an album titled Shootenanny! in 2003. The album's title is a portmanteau of the words "shoot" and "hootenanny".
- The rock and roll band The Replacements released their second album in 1983, titled Hootenanny on Twin/Tone Records.
- The band Weezer had a "Hootenanny" tour in 2008 which allowed fans to play songs with the band.[10]
- The New Zealand rock band HLAH released a single entitled "Hootenanny" (which also appears on their 1996 album Double Your Strength, Improve Your Health, & Lengthen Your Life on the Wildside Records label) in 1997.[11]
- A song called "We Are Having a Hootenanny" appears on The Magnetic Fields's 2010 album Realism.[12]
- The album The Repercussions of Angelic Behavior by Rieflin, Gunn and Fripp contains a track titled "Hootenanny At The Pink Pussycat Cafe".
- Reggae legends The Wailers recorded a song called "Hoot Nanny Hoot", sung by Peter Tosh, available on Tosh's CD The Toughest.
- Swedish 1960s folk band Hootenanny Singers included Björn Ulvaeus, who later was a member of ABBA.
- In 1964 George Jones and Melba Montgomery released a country/bluegrass album titled Bluegrass Hootenanny.
- Paul & Paula, who had a big hit with "Hey Paula" in 1963, also released a single later in that year called "Holiday Hootenanny".
Television
Several different television shows are named hootenanny and styled after it, including:
- Hootenanny, an early 1960s musical variety show broadcast on ABC in the United States. In 2007 a set of three DVDs called The Best of Hootenanny was issued, culled from the series. It contains clips of performances by The Chad Mitchell Trio, The Limeliters and The New Christy Minstrels, and even Woody Allen as a stand-up comedian.
- In 1963 and 1964, a BBC 1 show The Hoot'nanny Show, recorded in Edinburgh, was broadcast.[13] Two albums with the same title were released, with contributions from Archie Fisher, Barney McKenna (before he joined The Dubliners), and The Corries.
- In the United Kingdom, Jools' Annual Hootenanny, a special New Year's Eve edition of Later... with Jools Holland featuring a wide selection of musicians, has been broadcast every year since 1993.
Other uses
- Framus Hootenanny, a 1960s-era twelve-string guitar
See also
References
- ↑ Seeger, Pete (1992). Schwartz, Jo Metcalf (ed.). The Incompleat Folksinger. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. p. 327. ISBN 0803292163.
- ↑ "Hugh DeLacy papers". Washington.edu. Special Collections, Libraries of University of Washington. Retrieved January 1, 2010.
- 1 2 Hendrickson, Stewart. "Hootenannies in Seattle". PNWFolklore.org. Retrieved December 31, 2009.
- ↑ "Joan Baez: Biography". IMDB.com. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved December 31, 2009.
- ↑ Woliver, Robbie (1986), Bringing It All Back Home, Pantheon/Random House, ISBN 9780394740683
- ↑ Santoro, Gene (8 June 2003). "Gene Santoro, NY Times review, Beginning at the Bitter End.: SERIOUSLY FUNNY The Rebel Comedians of the 1950s and 1960s. By Gerald Nachman". NY Times. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
- ↑ Nachman, Gerald (2003). Seriously Funny: The Rebel Comedians of the 1950s and 1960s. New York: Pantheon Books. p. 659. ISBN 9780375410307. OCLC 50339527. Archived from the original on 2018-09-19. Retrieved 2020-06-25.
- ↑ Everts, Deb (May 22, 2021). "Senecas to host Sally Marsh's 50th year of Hootenannies". Salamanca Press. Retrieved July 24, 2021.
- ↑ Petersen, Nils Holger, Music Practices around Bob Dylan, Medieval Rituals, and Modernity. Københavns. 2005. ISBN 978-87-635-0423-2. Retrieved 2011-03-24.
- ↑ Silver, Dylan (June 23, 2008). "Weezer Cover Radiohead's 'Creep,' Jam with Fans in S.F." Spin.com. Retrieved 2023-08-18.
- ↑ "HLAH". WildsideRecords.com. Wildside Records.
- ↑ "Nonesuch Records Realism". Nonesuch Records Official Website. 26 January 2010.
- ↑ "June 1964". Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved September 27, 2016.
External links
- The Best of Hootenanny review, The Pseudobook Review.