Gumbo Chaff
"Gumbo Chaff", also spelled "Gombo Chaff", is an American song, first performed in the early 1830s. It was part of the repertoire of early blackface performers, including Thomas D. Rice and George Washington Dixon.
The title character was one of the earliest blackface characters in the United States. He was based largely on the
tall-tale riverboatsmen and frontiersmen characters that were popular in fiction during the Jacksonian Era. "Gumbo Chaff" merged these frontier elements with stereotypes of black
The song's
Notes
References
- Gura, Philip F. (1999). America's Instrument: The Banjo in the Nineteenth-century. The University of North Carolina Press.
- Hutton, Lawrence (1891). Curiosities of the American Stage. New York: Harber & Brothers.
- Mahar, William J. (1999). Behind the Burnt Cork Mask: Early Blackface Minstrelsy and Antebellum American Popular Culture. University of Illinois Press.
- Nathan, Hans (1962). Dan Emmett and the Rise of Early Negro Minstrelsy. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press.
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