Difference between revisions of "Drinking That Wine"

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“Drinking That Wine” is a net-hauling chantey, used by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_menhaden menhaden] fishermen off the mid-Atlantic North American coast.<ref>Bob Walser, “Drinkin’ That Wine.” [https://bobwalser.com/drinkin-that-wine/ bobwalser.com].</ref> These fishermen were almost all African-American, and their chanteys generally draw from gospel and from other worksong traditions, including field songs, rail-building songs, and chain-gang songs.  The net-hauling chanteys are unusual in that the work is ''not'' done while singing—the fishermen will pause between lines to actually haul up a section of net.  The song gives a chance to reset their grip, spread the net out, and prepare for the next pull.  During the pull, between sung lines, is “chatter”—sometimes encouragement, sometimes trash-talk.
 
“Drinking That Wine” is a net-hauling chantey, used by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_menhaden menhaden] fishermen off the mid-Atlantic North American coast.<ref>Bob Walser, “Drinkin’ That Wine.” [https://bobwalser.com/drinkin-that-wine/ bobwalser.com].</ref> These fishermen were almost all African-American, and their chanteys generally draw from gospel and from other worksong traditions, including field songs, rail-building songs, and chain-gang songs.  The net-hauling chanteys are unusual in that the work is ''not'' done while singing—the fishermen will pause between lines to actually haul up a section of net.  The song gives a chance to reset their grip, spread the net out, and prepare for the next pull.  During the pull, between sung lines, is “chatter”—sometimes encouragement, sometimes trash-talk.
  
I think I first heard this song from [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Johnson_Girls The Johnson Girls]; my version is influenced by them, but also the Northern Neck Chantey Singers, a group of men who actually did this work with these songs when they were younger, and other great interpreters of this tradition including Bob Walser and Ken Schatz.
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I think I first heard this song from [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Johnson_Girls The Johnson Girls]; my version is influenced by them, but also the Northern Neck Chantey Singers, a group of men who actually did this work with these songs when they were younger, and other great interpreters of this tradition including Bob Walser and Ken Schatz. I was coming off a cold, and so I got a nice gravelly feel to it.<ref>Chris Maden.  “Wine-drinking update,” [https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/crism/shower-chanteys/posts/2223849 Kickstarter update.]  28 June 2018.</ref>
  
 
While this song is attested for use as a net-hauling chantey, there’s really nothing fishing-specific or even ocean-specific about it; it is a straight-up spiritual, that happened to have a good rhythm to use for the task.  That’s one of the things I like about chanteys; they can be so amazingly musically diverse.
 
While this song is attested for use as a net-hauling chantey, there’s really nothing fishing-specific or even ocean-specific about it; it is a straight-up spiritual, that happened to have a good rhythm to use for the task.  That’s one of the things I like about chanteys; they can be so amazingly musically diverse.

Latest revision as of 19:05, 11 October 2018

“Drinking That Wine” is a sea chantey.

Alternate names

  • Drinking of the Wine

External links


Liner Notes

Drinking That Wine” is track 4 on Shower Chanteys, recorded 27 June 2018 at Mill Pond Music Studio.[1]

“Drinking That Wine” is a net-hauling chantey, used by menhaden fishermen off the mid-Atlantic North American coast.[2] These fishermen were almost all African-American, and their chanteys generally draw from gospel and from other worksong traditions, including field songs, rail-building songs, and chain-gang songs. The net-hauling chanteys are unusual in that the work is not done while singing—the fishermen will pause between lines to actually haul up a section of net. The song gives a chance to reset their grip, spread the net out, and prepare for the next pull. During the pull, between sung lines, is “chatter”—sometimes encouragement, sometimes trash-talk.

I think I first heard this song from The Johnson Girls; my version is influenced by them, but also the Northern Neck Chantey Singers, a group of men who actually did this work with these songs when they were younger, and other great interpreters of this tradition including Bob Walser and Ken Schatz. I was coming off a cold, and so I got a nice gravelly feel to it.[3]

While this song is attested for use as a net-hauling chantey, there’s really nothing fishing-specific or even ocean-specific about it; it is a straight-up spiritual, that happened to have a good rhythm to use for the task. That’s one of the things I like about chanteys; they can be so amazingly musically diverse.

References

  1. “Drinking That Wine,” recording by Chris Maden. MusicBrainz.
  2. Bob Walser, “Drinkin’ That Wine.” bobwalser.com.
  3. Chris Maden. “Wine-drinking update,” Kickstarter update. 28 June 2018.