Fair Ellender
For the first selection: Fair Ellender.
Here is Jerry Garcia and David Grisman’s version from “Shady Grove.”
Fair Ellender (Spotify)
Here’s the same song on YouTube:
While not the most famous of the genre, this one has had some legs, with versions by Mike Seeger, another by the Seeger family, the Iron Mountain String Band, and Jean Ritchie, among others (also available on Spotify). It’s clearly one that made it across the pond.
It’s a version of Child Ballad #73, “Lord Thomas and Fair Annet.” One variant goes to 30 stanzas, another to 19. This one is shorter. Leach, in “The Ballad Book” (1955), offers that some of the stanzas may have come from fairy ballads, but it also has the “news story becomes song” aspect to it. A bunch of variant lyrics can be found here.
I picked this song because I’ve played it myself. The melody lends itself to a kind of Carter picking (playing the melody on the base strings between strums). The story is relatively short and to the point, and has the dimensions of classic tragedy. Lord Thomas offers up an epitaph for the three at the end, but otherwise the song is “show, not tell” as to why the tragedy comes to pass.
A lot going on here, with a love triangle, and a double-murder and suicide. Fair Ellender is closest to Lord Thomas’s heart, which is clear; but it also seems clear that he plans to go forward with his wedding to the Brown girl. She has house and land, and Lord Thomas follows the wishes of his father (or mother) over the apparent wishes of his heart.
The variants of the song differ as to whether the betrothed is the “Brown girl” or the “brown girl,” and some verses make a big deal of differences in complexion between the two women. More recent versions, Mike Seeger’s and the Garcia/Grisman one above, understandably downplay or eliminate this aspect. Finding these verses makes me like the song less, for obvious reasons, but also because I think the song has more than enough resonance tapping into the theme of jealousy based on Lord Thomas’s emotional attachment to Ellender alone.