“Old Joe Clark” is one of America’s most widely known fiddle tunes and folk songs. While some lyrics reference a Kentucky mountaineer named Joseph Clark, scholars find no verified documentation of the tune’s origins before 1900. The earliest known reference appears in E. C. Perrow’s “Songs and Rhymes from the South,” published in the Journal of American Folklore (1912), collected during Perrow’s 1905 fieldwork. Multiple conflicting (and unverified) stories exist about Joe Clark’s identity. The tune likely originated in late 19th or early 20th century, possibly circulating first as a children’s song or play-party tune before becoming a fiddle standard with approximately 90 verses across various versions. It has become part of America’s national folk repertoire, appearing at bluegrass and old-time jams nationwide.
What is a play-party? A play-party was a type of social gathering popular in rural America, especially in the late 1800s and early 1900s, that was essentially a compromise between dancing and religious restrictions.
Key: A major
Tradition: Old Time
Music by: Traditional
Type: Reel
Books
Lessons
- Old Joe Clark – George Jackson
- Old Joe Clark – Brittany Haas
- Fiddle with Darol Anger – Darol Anger (Subscription Required)
- Old Joe Clark Beginning Bluegrass Fiddle – Chad Manning (Subscription Required)
- Old Joe Clark – Casey Willis (Subscription Required)
- Old Joe Clark Basic Lesson – FiddleHed (Subscription Required)
