- My Old Kentucky Home
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This article is about the Stephen Foster song adopted as the state song of Kentucky.
For other uses, see My Old Kentucky Home (disambiguation)."My Old Kentucky Home"
Sheet music, 10th edition, 1892(?)Music by Stephen Foster Lyrics by Stephen Foster Published New York: Firth, Pond & Co. (January 1853) Language English Form Strophic with chorus Original artist Christy's Minstrels "My Old Kentucky Home" is a minstrel song by Stephen Foster (1826-1864), probably composed in 1852.[1] It was published as "My Old Kentucky Home, Good Night" in January 1853 by Firth, Pond, & Co. of New York.[1][2] The song was introduced by Christy's Minstrels the same year.[3]
Foster allegedly composed the song after visiting a relative's home at Bardstown, Kentucky called Federal Hill, but scholars have discounted the allegation. Richard Jackson believes Foster took inspiration from Harriett Beecher Stowe's 1851 bestseller Uncle Tom's Cabin, and hoped to exploit its popularity. In Foster's sketchbook, the song was titled "Poor Uncle Tom, Good Night" and each verse ended with the line "Den poor Uncle Tom, good night." Jackson describes the song as "one of [Foster's] most appealing nostalgia pieces".[1] Abolitionist Frederick Douglass thought the song stimulated "the sympathies for the slave, in which anti-slavery principles take root and flourish."[4]
"My Old Kentucky Home" became the official state song of Kentucky on March 19, 1928 by an act of the Kentucky legislature, but, in 1986, the song fell victim to political correctness. Japanese students visiting the Kentucky General Assembly sang the original as a gesture of respect, but Carl Hines, the only black member of the Kentucky House of Representatives, was quoted as saying that the lyrics "convey connotations of racial discrimination that are not acceptable". Within days, Hines was sponsoring a bill to revise the lyrics, and, with the passage of House resolution 159, the word "darkies" was changed to "people".[5]
Foster's composition is the official song of the Kentucky Derby and, for decades, has been played annually by the University of Louisville Marching Band to accompany the Post Parade. In 1982, Churchill Downs honored Foster by establishing the Stephen Foster Handicap.[6] Both the University of Louisville and the University of Kentucky play the song at their schools' football and basketball games,[7] and the song has been heard in many films including The Little Colonel; Gone With the Wind; The Story of Seabiscuit; The Human Comedy; and the Bugs Bunny cartoon Southern Fried Rabbit.
References
- ^ a b c Richard Jackson (1974). Stephen Foster song book: original sheet music of 40 songs. Courier Dover Press. p. 177.
- ^ "My Old Kentucky Home, Good Night!". 2008. http://www.stephen-foster-songs.de/foster016.htm. Retrieved September 2011.
- ^ William Emmett Studwell (1997). The Americana song reader. Psychology Press. p. 110.
- ^ PressRoom (2001-04-09). "American Experience on KET profiles "My Old Kentucky Home" author, Stephen Foster". KET. http://www.ket.org/pressroom/2001/15/AmExp_StephenFoster.html. Retrieved 2011-07-11.
- ^ "The Kentucky State Song: Adoption of State Song". http://www.netstate.com/states/symb/song/ky_my_old_kentucky_home.htm. Retrieved September 2011.
- ^ "My Old Kentucky Home: Official Song of the Kentucky Derby". http://www.kentuckyderby.info/my-old-kentucky-home.php. Retrieved September 2011.
- ^ "My Old Kentucky Home". University Place Patch. May 2011. http://universityplace.patch.com/blog_posts/my-old-kentucky-home. Retrieved September 2011.
External links
Stephen Foster Songs Minstrel songs: Angelina Baker · Camptown Races · Don't Bet Your Money on de Shanghai (1861) · The Glendy Burk (1860) · Lou'siana Belle (1847) · Massa's in de Cold Ground (1852) · My Brodder Gum (1849) · My Old Kentucky Home · Nelly Bly · Nelly Was a Lady · Oh! Lemuel · Oh! Susanna (1848) · Old Folks at Home (Swanee River) ·
Parlor songs: Ah! May the Red Rose Live Alway! · Beautiful Dreamer (1864) · Come Where My Love Lies Dreaming · Hard Times Come Again No More · Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair · Old Black Joe · Old Dog Tray (1853) · Open Thy Lattice Love (1844) · Some Folks (1855) · Willie We Have Missed You (1854) ·
Civil War songs: Nothing But a Plain Old Soldier (1863) · A Soldier in the Colored Brigade (1863) · That's What's the Matter (1862) ·People and Places People: Christy Minstrels · Dan Bryant · Dan Emmett · Dan Rice · Edwin Pearce Christy · Elizabeth Cochrane · Fletcher Hodges, Jr. · Henry Kleber · Jane McDowell Foster ·
Places: Allegheny, Pennsylvania · Allegheny Cemetery · Baltimore, Maryland · Cincinnati, Ohio · New York City · Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania · Suwannee River · Warren, Ohio ·Publishers F. D. Benteen · Firth, Pond & Co. · Firth, Son & Co. · John J. Daly · W. C. Peters & Co. · Wm. A. Pond & Co. ·Films, musicals, recordings Films: Harmony Lane · I Dream of Jeanie · Swanee River ·
Musicals: Stephen Foster - The Musical ·
Recordings: Beautiful Dreamer: The Songs of Stephen Foster ·Culture Halls of Fame and State Parks Other Stephen Foster Handicap · Stephen Foster Memorial · Stephen Foster Memorial Day · Stephen Foster Sculpture ·Categories:- 1853 songs
- American songs
- Blackface minstrel songs
- Kentucky culture
- Songs written by Stephen Foster
- United States state songs
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