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Subject Item
n2:5714ded925ac0d8aee490107
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wsb:Song
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n15:
dct:title
Cumberland Gap
dct:subject
American folk songs UK Singles Chart number-one singles Appalachian culture Woody Guthrie songs
dct:abstract
%22Cumberland Gap%22 is an Appalachian folk song that likely dates to the latter half of the 19th century and was first recorded in 1924. The song is typically played on banjo or fiddle, and well-known versions of the song include instrumental versions as well as versions with lyrics. A version of the song appeared in the 1934 book, American Ballads and Folk Songs, by folk song collector John Lomax. Woody Guthrie recorded a version of the song at his Folkways sessions in the mid-1940s, and the song saw a resurgence in popularity with the rise of bluegrass and the American folk music revival in the 1950s. In 1957, the British musician Lonnie Donegan had a No. 1 UK hit with a skiffle version of %22Cumberland Gap%22.The song's title refers to the Cumberland Gap, a mountain pass in the Appalachian Mountains at the juncture of the states of Tennessee, Virginia, and Kentucky. The gap was used in the latter half of the 18th century by westward-bound migrants travelling from the original 13 American colonies to the Trans-Appalachian frontier. During the U.S. Civil War (1861–1865), Union and Confederate armies engaged in a year-long back-and-forth struggle for control of the gap.
schema:datePublished
2008-12-19
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n13:56d85ca953a7ddfc01f9918e
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n10:
mo:bpm
105.0
mo:duration
118000.0
mo:isrc
DEAF75107703
mo:track_number
35
schema:album
n7:5714debe25ac0d8aee368880
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n16:mt0026905000
wsb:deezer_artist_id
140715
wsb:deezer_page
n11:2792902
wsb:deezer_song_id
2792902
wsb:explicit_lyrics_count
0
wsb:has_explicit_lyrics
false
wsb:language_detected
english
wsb:rank
94367
wsb:recording_description
June 1924
wsb:spotify_page
n8:1mq5ILZd3G28J5LJAIJlsy
wsb:title_without_accent
Cumberland Gap
wsb:arousal
-0.0422125
wsb:has_emotion_tags
false
wsb:has_social_tags
true
wsb:lastFm_song_id
TRQHROX128F9320C88
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-0.0672114