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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Eldanger25 (talk | contribs) at 15:56, 14 October 2023 (→‎disputed authorship: Reply). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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references

I've added references, and so am removing the 'references' tag. BuffaloSpringfield 13:34, 22 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

stub tag

I've removed the stub tag, after reviewing WP:stub guidelines and be bold policy BuffaloSpringfield 21:55, 22 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

disputed authorship

The actual author of Hickory Wind seems likely to be Sylvia Sammons, a blind singer-songwriter who began singing it in the early Sixties, and certainly by 1963, when Parsons visited the city. The second verse added by Bob Buchanan was not written by Parsons, so the original deception was probably that of Parsons alone. It may have been a honest mistake at first, since his various addictions made him an unstable witness, but it's also true that he claimed or hinted at co-authorship of at least one song, Honky Tonk Women, which was vigorously disputed by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. In any event, the copyright was purchased from Sammons and credit assigned by fiat, if not in fact. Among folk musicians of that era and area, Sammons is widely known to be the true author. You can find the dispute in many places on the web, but the most detailed seems to be at [Folklinks], Crediting Hickory Wind, written by David W. Johnson. -- Lee-Anne 18:26, 2 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Should the above be included in some way into the article?Airproofing (talk) 18:47, 30 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The above source doesn't qualify as WP:RS, so unless there's a better source for those claims they shouldn't be included in the article. Adam McMaster (talk) 12:03, 31 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I see the authorship controversy has been added using the above links. Please discuss here. Thanks. Airproofing (talk) 22:58, 13 September 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I was the user who added the "Authorship controversy" section. I must say that my own feeling is that the song was almost certainly written by Parsons and Buchanan. The lack of any physical or musical proof to support Sammons' claim as well as the scarcity of anyone who can corroborate her story (I think only two of her friends have come forward thus far), leads me to suspect that it's untrue. Plus, to me at least, Buchanan's detailed account of exactly how the song was written has the ring of truth to it. However, I felt that in the interest of an unbiased article, this authorship dispute should be mentioned, since it's an important issue and one that is being increasingly discussed amongst fans of Gram Parsons and The Byrds. I must also disagree with Adam McMaster's claim that the Folklinks source doesn't qualify as WP:RS. Folklinks is a well respected and reliable, third-party, publisher of roots music related articles and as such, I think it’s fine for Wikipedia purposes. Kohoutek1138 01:23, 14 September 2009 (UTC)[reply]
this is clearly the work of gram parsons, who ever authored the writing controversy has a vendetta against parsons or listened to someone who lied. I don't know how a blind woman can write a song about climbing trees. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 150.108.232.72 (talk) 19:31, 10 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Sylvia Sammons became blind at the age of six due to glaucoma, so she has childhood memories of being sighted, possibly even climbing trees. [Video interview with Sylvia Sammons] As was pointed out in the Folklinks article, she was born in South Carolina, so her depiction of the events of her childhood is real, where Parsons has no ties to South Carolina whatsoever, so the imputation of faux memories of South Carolina would be pure fabulation. To me, the song is interesting too, in that there is no visual imagery involved, but only feeling and odors. On a purely emotional level, it sounds to me like a song a woman might sing to her lover, and not at all a typical man's song, because it shows a vulnerability and position of social inferiority. How many men sing about an older woman as a lover? As a Parsons song, it's remarkably distinct from the rest of his oeuvre. And then there are the other accusations of his claiming more credit than was due. Lee-Anne (talk) 06:25, 3 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]


One small but factual point: in the main entry, the use of the word "refuted" in describing the claims of Buchanan and Parsons should be "rebutted," since the meaning of "refuted" is to PROVE an argument wrong...; they mainly assert their view, not prove hers wrong.... Stephen Lee, Grand Forks, ND  —Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.174.58.20 (talk) 02:56, 20 December 2010 (UTC)[reply] 

This section is filled with WP:SYNTH. The paragraph beginning with "Calling her claim further into doubt..." talks of "a woman with the same name, Sylvia Sammons" with no evidence this is the same Sammons. It is WP:OR to claim this is evidence of anything without a reference saying it is the same person. There is further original research in using that article to extrapolate what her age "must have been" and therefore deciding that it is proof of anything at all. I have removed it but the editor who added it, @Eldanger25:, keeps readding it. References must explicitly state what is being claimed in the article and this reference does not do that. ThaddeusSholto (talk) 12:22, 14 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Hello - I am confused by your reasoning and will explain mine (and restore the edit with some clarifications in an effort to address your concerns): the so-called "authorship controversy" arose in 2002, roughly 35 years after the song was released, 30 years after Mr. Parsons's death, and nearly 40 years after the alleged act of song plagiarism.
The claim in this section, in essence, is that a blind female professional folk singer named Sylvia Sammons from South Carolina wrote the song circa 1963, and Mr. Parsons heard a live performance around the same time and, after waiting 4-5 years and making several recordings in the interim, recorded and published the song under his own name (and the name of a co-writer).
The article in question that you have been removing is from 1993 - 25 years after the song's release, and 10 years before Ms. Sammons's claims were made. The article is a profile of a woman with the same name, Sylvia Sammons, the same disability, blindness, and the same occupation, professional (or aspiring professional) folk singer. In the 1993 article, Ms. Sammons provides a different age and hometown than she claimed in 2002, and in particular provided a different professional history - she states she was a folk musician since roughly 1980, a dozen years after the song was published, than she provided 10 years later in claiming she was an adult and a live performer circa 1963, as part of the "authorship controversy."
You state that there must be a reference in the article stating "it is the same person." That seems to be an arbitrary rule in the context of an alleged controversy that arose decades after the events in question. If Ms. Sammons wished to claim authorship of a song written in the 1960s circa 2002, and if excerpts of interviews she gave circa 2002 are included, then contradictory comments credibly made by her in a published article 10 years earlier is and should be relevant.
I can certainly understand an effort to amend the paragraph if you think there is original research, but deleting the paragraph and reference entirely on the grounds that the author did not identify the subject as the source of a controversy that (1) did not occur for another decade, and (2) was related to a work of art published several decades prior, seems like overkill. Eldanger25 (talk) 15:00, 14 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
There is no proof the Sammons in your article is the same Sammons who claimed authorship. You are the one making that assertion and that is WP:SYNTH and WP:OR. These are actual policies that govern what can and cannot be in articles. Unless and until you can find a reliable source that says this is the same person it cannot be in the article. ThaddeusSholto (talk) 15:09, 14 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
There is strong circumstantial evidence that it is the same person - name, identifying physical characteristic (blindness), occupation, gender. The information is located in a published, reliable source that was made during a relevant time period - after the events in question and before the belated claim of authorship was made.
In an effort to find common ground, I have amended the paragraph to cite the article and identify the inconsistencies and strong circumstantial evidence of it being the same person. I invite you to review the new edits, and consider, as stated here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:These_are_not_original_research - "Organizing published facts and opinions that are based on sources that are directly related to the article topic . . . is not original research." Eldanger25 (talk) 15:30, 14 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia doesn't work on "circumstantial evidence" strong or otherwise. It requires verifiable reliable sources. You are talking about real people here and you can't make up claims that seem probably accurate. I invite you to read WP:SYNTH specifically "Do not combine material from multiple sources to reach or imply a conclusion not explicitly stated by any source." You are creating a narrative based on your own reading of sources that never explicitly claim what you are saying they claim. ThaddeusSholto (talk) 15:33, 14 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
WP:NOTOR is an essay, not policy. WP:OR which is policy states "original research means material—such as facts, allegations, and ideas—for which no reliable, published source exists.[a] This includes any analysis or synthesis of published material that reaches or implies a conclusion not stated by the sources." Your claim is synthesis as you are using a source that precedes any claim of authorship to personally refute a later claim of authorship. This is original research on your part. Other editors have removed your OR before as well and yet you keep adding synth material based on your own views of what is or isn't likely to be true. ThaddeusSholto (talk) 15:37, 14 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I am not personally refuting anything. An individual made a claim in 2002 - and I will note that the link at FN 10, the primary source of Ms. Sammons's claims for this section, is broken and cannot be retrieved or verified as of 2023, yet 2 paragraphs based on that source remain on that page - about a 1968 recording.
A 1993 article (likely after digitization) became available online after 2002 and is directly relevant to this topic. I edited the paragraph to simply list relevant data in that published source.
If I gave an interview today claiming to have written the first draft of the screenplay for "Ghostbusters" in 1982, which Dan Aykroyd stole from my briefcase in a coffee shop at the time, and it turned out that I had given a newspaper interview 10 years ago stating I'd never been Hollywood in my life until 2002, the latter source is directly related to my claim of authorship and should be a part of the so-called "controversy," even though the article did not identify me as the same person who made a claim for the first time 10 years later.
We are talking about "real people here," including someone accused of fraudulent conduct 30 years after his death, by someone who - at a time when she had no motive to lie - told a different story about herself to a newspaper. Her own words rebut her later tale. If the relevant facts from the 1993 article from the Orlando Sentinel is not included on policy grounds, then really this entire section should be deleted, particularly as the primary source for the claim, folklinks is unverifiable/a broken link.
I propose the following solution: restore the most recent, consolidated sentence about the 1993 article in my edit dated 15:31, but delete the preceding sentence from the prior paragraph "although many people have chosen to dismiss.....," which I did not write in any event. Eldanger25 (talk) 15:56, 14 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]

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