Canadian fiddling legend Reg Hill was born in
Brockville, Ontario in 1927 and moved to Avonmore (near Ottawa) at a
young age. After learning how to play the fiddle from his mother,
Hill taught himself guitar, drums, saxophone and piano, and was
performing at dances by the age of 15. After spending some time in a
group named The Rock Mountain Rangers, Hill formed his own group,
Reg Hill's Swingsters, which became a popular draw throughout
eastern Ontario. After getting married in 1950 and moving to Oshawa,
Hill accepted an invitation to join
Mac Beattie and The Ottawa Valley
Melodiers, one of the biggest country groups in the Ottawa area,
and made frequent appearances on radio and television, including
many guest spots on CBC-TV's
Don Messer's Jubilee. Reg stayed with the
Melodiers until 1978, when poor health forced him to retire, and he
passed away the following year. In 1981 he was posthumously inducted
into The Ottawa Valley Country Music Hall of
Fame.
The names of Hill's bandmates on this album
are not mentioned on the back cover, but
Ottawa Valley Fiddling was recorded at
Stereo Sound Studios in Montreal, produced by George Taylor and
engineered by Gaetan Desbiens, and every one of the songs was
written by Hill. His fiddling is markedly different from, say, King Ganam or Ned Landry, but what I found most
interesting about these three tunes was the addition of some
crisply-played piano solos to the mix, which gives them an almost
jazzy flavour at times.
Uncle John McDermid's Reel
Lake Kamaniskeg Waltz
Puffin' On The Old Cigar