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|f_page=p. 60
|f_page=p. 60
|f_theme_code_index=3575 3235L
|f_theme_code_index=3575 3235L
|f_pdf_score=[[File:Cotton Eyed Joe.pdf|thumb|left|200px|page=1|Cotton Eyed Joe]]
|f_score=1
|f_player=Dykes Magic City Trio
|f_player=Dykes Magic City Trio
|f_label=Brunswick 120 (78 RPM)
|f_label=Brunswick 120 (78 RPM)
|f_recording_date=1927
|f_recording_date=1927
|f_media={{FeaturedTunes  |f_track=Cotton Eyed Joe.mp3 |f_artwork=Sourwood tonic and the sassafras tea.jpg |f_tune_name= Cotton Eyed Joe |f_played_by=Pete Denahy |f_notes= Mattie Cole Stanfield's book: Sourwood Tonic and Sassafras Tea (1963) |f_source=[https://soundcloud.com/pete-denahy/cotton-eyed-joe Soundcloud] |f_pix=220  |f_picpix=80  |f_piclink=Cotton_Eyed_Joe_(1) }}
}}
}}
<p><font face="garamond, serif" size="4">
{{featured}}
'''COTTON-EYED JOE [1]'''. AKA - "Dominicker Duck." See "Citaco." Old-Time, Breakdown. USA, widely known, but may have originally been a Texas tune. A Major (most versions): G Major (Ford, Kaufman): D Major (Zenith String Band). Standard or AEae, ADae, GDad (Thede, John Dykes) tunings (fiddle). AABB (Beisswenger & McCann, Perlman): AABBA: AA'BB' (Kaufman). Charles Wolfe has called this tune "a Texas dance-hall anthem" but it has had such widespread currency in the United States that the tune is really a pastiche of melodies using interchangeable phrases, the most recognizable of which usually is associated with the verses:
 
<blockquote>
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''Where did you come from, where will you go?''<br>
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''Where did you come from Cotten-Eyed Joe.''<br>
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|keywords=fiddle tune finder, find recordings, irish fiddle tunes, original folk music, abc music finder, english country dance, old-time music
Pope's Arkansas Mountaineers (1927) also sang:
|description=The semantic index of North American, British and Irish traditional instrumental music with annotations
<blockquote>
|image=TUC-160x120.png
''Want to go to church and couldn't get to go,''<br>
|image_alt=Traditional universal music
''I had to stay home with Cotton-Eyed Joe.''<br>
}}
</blockquote>
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There have been several thoughts about what the title might refer to. Some think 'cotton-eyed' means to be drunk on moonshine, and a related suggestion is that it refers to an individual who has been blinded by drinking wood alcohol (as happened during the Prohibition, for example), turning the eyes milky white.  Marion Thede believes 'cotton-eyed' may refer to a (black) person with very light blue eyes. Alan Lomax suggests it was used to describe a man whose eyes were milky white from Trachoma (a bacterial infection), while others have suggested cataracts, syphilis or glaucoma. Some recall the term referring to the contrast of dark skin tone around white eyeballs in African-Americans, and indeed, the '''Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang''' references the 'prominent whites of the eyes' meaning to 1905. Charles Wolfe (1991) writes that African-American collector Thomas Talley, in his manuscript of stories, Negro Traditions, related a story entitled "Cotton-Eyed Joe, or the Origin of the Weeping Willow." The story includes a stanza from the song, "but more importantly details a bizarre tale of a well-known pre-Civil War plantation musician, Cotton Eyed Joe, who plays a fiddle made from the coffin of his dead son."  "Cotton Eyed Joe" was the name of a heel-and-toe dance in Texas in the 1880's.
 
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The tune was a favorite of John Dykes (Magic City Trio {Eastern Tenn.}), was recorded in the 1920's by Carter Brothers and Son and the Skillet Lickers, and it was in the repertoire of Arizona fiddler Kenner C. Kartchner (in the key of G Major) who said a fellow fiddler named Youngblood brought it to the territory from Mississippi around 1890. It was one of the tunes played at the turn of the century by Etowah County, Alabama, fiddler George Cole, according to Mattie Cole Stanfield in her book '''Sourwood Tonic and Sassafras Tea''' (1963), and was mentioned in accounts of the DelKalb County Annual (Fiddlers) Convention, 1926-31. It was recorded by North Carolina fiddler Marcus Martin, whom Alan Jabbour suspects learned the tune from Fiddlin' John Carson's recording. The title appears in a list of traditional Ozark Mountain fiddle tunes compiled by musicologist/folklorist Vance Randolph, published in 1954. Some versions are similar to North Georgia fiddler Lowe Stokes popular "Citaco," notably that played by John Dykes of the Dykes Magic City Trio and the rendition in Marion Thede's book (both in GDad). Alan Jabbour believes it may have ties to the Mississippi version of "Dusty Miller" (supported by Fiddlin' John Carson's 1927 recording of "Cotton Eyed Joe"), and "Corn Bread, Mollasses and Sassafras Tea" has also be pointed to as a related melody. Ken Perlman (1996), who collected the tune on Prince Edward Island, believes Canadian versions probably derived from the playing of radio and TV Maritime fiddler Don Messer (the 'B' part is played with a strong Acadian flavor). See also Bayard's (1981) note to a related tune "The Horse Called Rover" (No. 10, pgs. 20-21).
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The reel is often played crosstuned in AEae (e.g. Pope's Arkansas Mountaineers), a "Cotton-Eyed Joe" in AEac# tuning (as played by Scott Meyer on Yodel-Ay-Hee 024, "The Improbabillies") is a current 'revival' favorite. Kerry Blech says this version was originally collected from the playing of Noah Beavers by Garry Harrison.
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See also Bayard's (1981) note to a related tune "The Horse Called Rover" (No. 10, pp. 20-21).
<blockquote>
''Where'd you come from, where'd you go?''<br>
''Where'd you come from Cotten-Eyed Joe.''<br>
''I'd-a been married a long time ago,''<br>
''If it hadn't a-been for Cotten-Eyed Joe.''<br>
<br>
''Cornstalk fiddle and shoestring bow,''<br>
''Come down gals on Cotten Eyed Joe.''<br>
''Wanna go to meeting and wouldn't let me go,''<br>
''Had to stay home with Cotten Eyed Joe.''<br>
<br>
''Come a little rain and come a little snow,''<br>
''The house fell down on Cotten Eyed Joe. ''  (Thede)<br>
<br>
''Hold my fiddle and hold my bow,''<br>
'''Till I knock the devil out of cotton-eyed Joe.''    (Ford)<br>
<br>
''I'll make me a fiddle and make me a bow,''<br>
''And I'll learn to play like Cotten-eyed Joe.''<br>
''I tun'd up my fiddle, I went to a dance,''<br>
''I tried to make some music, but I couldn't get a chance.''<br>
<br>
''You hold my fiddle and you hold my bow,''<br>
''Till I whip old Satan out of Cotten-eyed Joe.''<br>
''I've make lot of fiddles and made lot of bows,''<br>
''But I never learned to fiddle like Cotten-eyed Joe.''  (Thomas & Leeder).<br>
</blockquote>
Thomas Talley gives the following in Negro Folk Rhymes:
<blockquote>
''Hol' my fiddle an' hol' my bow,''<br>
''Whilst I knocks ole Cotton Eyed Joe.''<br>
<br>
''I'd a been dead some seben years ago,''<br>
''If I hadn' a danced dat Cotton Eyed Joe.''<br>
<br>
''Oh, it makes dem ladies love me so,''<br>
''W'en I comes 'roun' pickin' ole Cotton Eyed Joe.''<br>
<br>
''Yes, I'd a been married some forty years ago,'' <br>
''If I hadn' stay's home wid Cotton Eyed Joe.''<br>
<br>
''I hain't seed ole Joe, sonce way las' Fall;''<br>
''Dey say he's been sol' down to Guinea Gall.'' <br>
</blockquote>
"Cotton Eyed Joe" was recorded several times in the 78 RPM era, first by the Dykes' Magic City Trio in 1927 (fiddler John Dykes and family) and, independently in 1927 by north Georgia's Fiddlin' John Carson. This was followed by recordings in 1928 by Pope's Arkansas Mountaineers (of Searcy, Arkansas, consisting of two fathers-and-sons, with John Chism on fiddle), and in the same year by Gid Tanner & His Skillet Lickers. Lowe Stokes and Clayton McMichen released it in 1930.
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Sources for notated (print) versions: Highwoods String Band (New York) [Brody]; John Hendricks (Bates, Arkansas) [Thede]; Tommy Magness [Phillips/1994]; Steve Hawkins (Rowan County, Kentucky, 1911) [Thomas & Leeder]; Louise Arsenault (b. 1956, Wellington, East Prince County, Prince Edward Island) [Perlman]; John Chism with Pope's Arkansas Mountaineers [Beisswenger & McCann].
<br>
<br>
Print versions: Beisswenger & McCann ('''Ozarks Fiddle Music'''), 2008; p. 175. Brody ('''Fiddler's Fakebook'''), 1983; p. 74. R.P. Christeson ('''Old Time Fiddlers Repertory''', vol. 1), 1973; p. 20. Ford ('''Traditional Music in America'''), 1940; p. 60. '''Frets Magazine''', "Byron Berline: The Fiddle," September 1981; p. 64. Kaufman ('''Beginning Old Time Fiddle'''), 1977; p. 50. Perlman ('''The Fiddle Music of Prince Edward Island'''), 1996; p. 86. Phillips ('''Fiddlecase Tunebook'''), 1989; pg. 12. Phillips ('''Traditional American Fiddle Tunes'''), 1994; pp. 56 & 57 (two versions). Thede ('''The Fiddle Book'''), 1967; pp. 26-27. Thomas & Leeder ('''The Singin' Gatherin' '''), 1939; p. 60.
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Recorded versions: Bay 209, "The Gypsy Gyppo String Band" (1977. Learned from Paul Ermine of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan). Bay 727, "Kenny Hall and the Sweets Mill String Band." Briar 0798, Earl Collins- "That's Earl." Caney Mountain Records CEP 213 (privately issued extended play LP), Lonnie Robertson (Mo.), c. 1965-66. Cassette C-7625, Wilson Douglas - "Back Porch Symphony." County 506, The Skillet Lickers- "Old Time Tunes, 1927-1931." County 518, Pope's Arkansas Mountaineers- "Echoes of the Ozarks, Vol. 1." County 520, Carter Brothers and Son- "Echoes of the Ozarks, Vol. 3." County 528, Carter Bros. & Son - "Mississippi Breakdown, Traditional Fiddle Music of Mississippi, Vol. 1." County 544, Fiddlin' John Carson- "Georgia Fiddle Bands, Vol. 2." County 756, Tommy Jarrell- "Sail Away Ladies" (1976. Learned after 1925 from a friend, Charlie Lowe, a clawhammer banjoist who heard the tune broadcast on Nashville radio). Gusto 104, Tommy Jackson- "30 Fiddler's Greatest Hits." Heritage XXIV, Dave Holt - "Music of North Carolina" (Brandywine, 1978). Heritage XXXIII, Zenith String Band (Conn.) - "Visits" (1981. Learned from the Carter Brothers via Vermont/Ohio fiddler Pete Sutherland). June Appal JA 028, Wry Straw - "From Earth to Heaven" (1978. Version learned from Creed Power {Dungannon, VA} and Byard Ray {Shelton Laurel, N.C.}). Mercury SRW 16261, Tommy Jackson- "Instrumentals Country Style." Marimac 9000, Dan Gellert & Shoofly - "Forked Deer" (1986. Version learned from Carter Bros. & Son recording). Marimac 9009, Doris Kimble & Dave Spilkia - "Old Time Friends" (1987). Old Homestead OHCS191, "Dykes Magic City Trio" (Eastern Tenn.) {originally recorded in 1927 on a Brunswick 78}. Rounder 0074, Highwoods String Band- "No. 3 Special" (1977). Rounder 0047, Wilson Douglas- "The Right Hand Fork of Rush's Creek" (1975). Rounder 0193, Rodney Miller - "Airplang" (1985). Rounder CD0262, Mike Seeger - "Fresh Oldtime String Band Music" (1988. With the Ithica, N.Y., group Agents of Terra). Rounder 18964-1518-2, Various Artists (Marcus Martin)- "American Fiddle Tunes" (a reissue of the 1971 Library of Congress LP of field recordings). Rounder CD 0529, Dwight Lamb - "Hell Agin the Barn Door" (2005. Learned from Nebraska fiddler Uncle Bob Walters, who had it from his father, Wilse, of a family originally from Kentucky). Stoneway 143, Ernie Hunter- "All About Fiddling." Tennvale 004, Bruce Molsky- "An Anthology." See also listing at: Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [http://ibiblio.unc.edu/keefer/c11.htm#Coteyjo1].
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X:1
X:1
T:Cotton-Eyed Joe [1]
T:Cotton-Eyed Joe [1]
Line 104: Line 48:
G|c2 AA A<(G G)A|c2 AA A3A|c AA G2E2|G<F D2 C3C|
G|c2 AA A<(G G)A|c2 AA A3A|c AA G2E2|G<F D2 C3C|
C2 EE G<(G G)G|A2 AA G3G|AAAA GGEE|G<ED>C C3||
C2 EE G<(G G)G|A2 AA G3G|AAAA GGEE|G<ED>C C3||
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<section begin=X1 />
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X:1
 
T:Cotton Eyed Joe [1]
<pre>
M:C
L:1/8
N:Compare tunes with "Sugar in my Coffee" and "Cornstalk Fiddle"
B:Ira Ford - Traditional Music in America (1940, p. 60)
Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion
K:G
e2d2 BAGB|e2d g3f|e2d2 BAGB |AGEF G2z2|
e2d2 BAGB|e2d2 g3f|e2d2 BAGB|AGEF G2||
D2G2 BGBG|A2B2c4|E2G2 BGBG|AGEF G2z2|
D2G2 BGBG|A2B2 c4|e2d2 BAGB|AGEF G2||
<section end=X1 />
<section begin=X2 />
X:2
T:Cotton-Eyed Joe [1]
S:Noah Beavers (1897-1990, Elkville, southern Ill.)
M:C|
L:1/8
R:Reel
N:AEac# tuning
D:Pickaway Press, Noah Beavers - "Dear Old Illinois" (2007. Various artists).
F:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/cotton-eyed-joe-8
Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz
K:A
(AB|c2)cB cBAB|cB c2E4|+slide+c2 cB cBAE|(FG)AF E3F:|
|:E2FE A2Ac|BAFG A3F|ECEF A2Ac|(BA)FAE4:||
P:Alternate 1st strain:
"+"c2"+"A2 BA F2|"+"c2"+"A2E4|"+"c2"+"A2 BAE2|F2 AF E4:|]
<section end=X2 />
<section begin=X3 />
X:3
T:Cotton Eyed Joe [1]
M:2/2
L:1/8
S:Thomas Jefferson "Duck" Wootan  (1882-1864, Kimble County, central Texas)
N:From a 1958 home recording by Tim Wooten
F:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/johnny-walk-along-your-paper-collar
Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz
K:G
(Bd)dd d2B(d|d)fed Bd3|dedA BAGB|[GB]AB2+slide+[A4A4]|
Bd2d d2 B(d|d)edc B3[GA]-|[GB]GAG EGG[GB]|AG G2 [D4A4]|
(Bd)dd d2B(d|d)fed Bd3|dedA BAGB|[GB]AB2+slide+[A4A4]|
(Bd)dd d2B(d|d)fed Bd2d|dedd BA[G2B2]|AG[G2B2][D4A4]||
|:"+"d2"+"d2 DEGB|AG[G2B2]{B}[G3c3]A|"+"d2"+"d2 DEGB|AG[G2B2]{B} [D4A4]:|]
<section end=X3 />
<section begin=X6 />
X:4
T:Cotton Eyed Joe
N:Harley Luse and his Orchestra, Imperial 1045 (ca. 1946)
Z:V.T. Williams
M:C|
K:A
"A"E2A2cA cA|B2c2"D"d4|"A"E2A2cA cA|"E"BAGB"A"A4:|
|:"A"f2e2ed ce|f2e2a3g|f2e2c2Ac|"E"BA GB"A"A4:|
<section end=X6 />
<section begin=X8 />
X:1
X:1
T:Cotton Eyed Joe [1]
M:2/4
L:1/8
R:Reel
B:R.P. Christeson - Old Time Fiddlers Repertory vol. 1 (1973, No. 27)
K:A
E/F/|AA/c/ B/A/F/G/|A/G/A/B/ cc/B/|AA/c/ B/A/F/G/|A/B/A/F/ EE/F/|
AA/c/ B/A/F/G/|A/G/A/B/ cc/d/|e/f/e/c/ B/A/F/G/|A/B/A/F/ E:|
|:c/B/ A/B/c/d/ e/c/e/c/|fe a2|f/e/c/A/ B/A/F/G/|A/B/A/F/ EE|
A/B/c/d/ e/c/e/c/|fe a2|f/e/c/A/ B/A/F/G/|A/B/A/F/ E:|
<section end=X8 />
<section begin=X12 />
X:5
T:Cotton Eyed Joe [1]
T:Cotton Eyed Joe [1]
L:1/8
L:1/8
M:2/4
M:2/4
S:Howdy Forrester, learned from his Uncle Bob
N:Howdy Forrester, learned from his Uncle Bob,
N:Originally transcribed by John Hartford
N:transcribed by John Hartford. It was one of Forrester's
N:featured numbers with Bill Monroe and Roy Acuff.
N:Fiddle tuned GDAd 
B:Stephen F. Davis - Devil's Box, vol. 22, No. 4, Winter 1988 (p. 50)
Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion
K:G
K:G
A/|B/d/d d>d|f/d/e/f/ d>d|B/A/G/B/ A/G/E/G/|B/A/B D>:|
A/|B/d/d d>d|f/d/e/f/ d>d|B/A/G/B/ A/G/E/G/|B/A/B D>:|
|:E/|D/E/G/B/ A/G/E/F/|G/A/B/d/ cd/c/|B/A/G/B/ A/G/E/G/|B/A/B D>:||
|:E/|D/E/G/B/ A/G/E/F/|G/A/B/d/ cd/c/|B/A/G/B/ A/G/E/G/|B/A/B D>:||
</pre>
<section end=X12 />
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'''© 1996-2010  Andrew Kuntz. All Rights Reserved.'''
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Engraver Valerio M. Pelliccioni
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Latest revision as of 18:16, 14 June 2024


Cotton Eyed Joe (1)  Click on the tune title to see or modify Cotton Eyed Joe (1)'s annotations. If the link is red you can create them using the form provided.Browse Properties <br/>Special:Browse/:Cotton Eyed Joe (1)
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 Theme code Index    3575 3235L
 Also known as    
 Composer/Core Source    
 Region    United States
 Genre/Style    Old-Time
 Meter/Rhythm    Reel (single/double)
 Key/Tonic of    G
 Accidental    1 sharp
 Mode    Ionian (Major)
 Time signature    2/4
 History    
 Structure    AABB
 Editor/Compiler    Biography:Jean Thomas & Joseph A. Leeder
 Book/Manuscript title    Book:Singin' Gathering (The)
 Tune and/or Page number    p. 60
 Year of publication/Date of MS    1939
 Artist    Biography:Dykes Magic City Trio
 Title of recording    
 Record label/Catalogue nr.    Brunswick 120 (78 RPM)
 Year recorded    1927
 Media    
Cotton Eyed Joe

Played by: Pete Denahy
Source: Soundcloud
Image: Mattie Cole Stanfield's book: Sourwood Tonic and Sassafras Tea (1963)
 Score   (1)   
Cotton Eyed Joe





X:1 T:Cotton-Eyed Joe [1] M:4/4 L:1/8 S:Steve Hawkins, Rowan County, Ky. 1911 B:Thomas & Leeder - "Singin' Gathering" (1939) K:C G|c2 AA A<(G G)A|c2 AA A3A|c AA G2E2|G<F D2 C3C| C2 EE G<(G G)G|A2 AA G3G|AAAA GGEE|G<ED>C C3||


X:1 T:Cotton Eyed Joe [1] M:C L:1/8 N:Compare tunes with "Sugar in my Coffee" and "Cornstalk Fiddle" B:Ira Ford - Traditional Music in America (1940, p. 60) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:G e2d2 BAGB|e2d g3f|e2d2 BAGB |AGEF G2z2| e2d2 BAGB|e2d2 g3f|e2d2 BAGB|AGEF G2|| D2G2 BGBG|A2B2c4|E2G2 BGBG|AGEF G2z2| D2G2 BGBG|A2B2 c4|e2d2 BAGB|AGEF G2||


X:2 T:Cotton-Eyed Joe [1] S:Noah Beavers (1897-1990, Elkville, southern Ill.) M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel N:AEac# tuning D:Pickaway Press, Noah Beavers - "Dear Old Illinois" (2007. Various artists). F:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/cotton-eyed-joe-8 Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:A (AB|c2)cB cBAB|cB c2E4|+slide+c2 cB cBAE|(FG)AF E3F:| |:E2FE A2Ac|BAFG A3F|ECEF A2Ac|(BA)FAE4:|| P:Alternate 1st strain: "+"c2"+"A2 BA F2|"+"c2"+"A2E4|"+"c2"+"A2 BAE2|F2 AF E4:|]


X:3 T:Cotton Eyed Joe [1] M:2/2 L:1/8 S:Thomas Jefferson "Duck" Wootan (1882-1864, Kimble County, central Texas) N:From a 1958 home recording by Tim Wooten F:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/johnny-walk-along-your-paper-collar Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:G (Bd)dd d2B(d|d)fed Bd3|dedA BAGB|[GB]AB2+slide+[A4A4]| Bd2d d2 B(d|d)edc B3[GA]-|[GB]GAG EGG[GB]|AG G2 [D4A4]| (Bd)dd d2B(d|d)fed Bd3|dedA BAGB|[GB]AB2+slide+[A4A4]| (Bd)dd d2B(d|d)fed Bd2d|dedd BA[G2B2]|AG[G2B2][D4A4]|| |:"+"d2"+"d2 DEGB|AG[G2B2]{B}[G3c3]A|"+"d2"+"d2 DEGB|AG[G2B2]{B} [D4A4]:|]


X:4 T:Cotton Eyed Joe N:Harley Luse and his Orchestra, Imperial 1045 (ca. 1946) Z:V.T. Williams M:C| K:A "A"E2A2cA cA|B2c2"D"d4|"A"E2A2cA cA|"E"BAGB"A"A4:| |:"A"f2e2ed ce|f2e2a3g|f2e2c2Ac|"E"BA GB"A"A4:|


X:1 T:Cotton Eyed Joe [1] M:2/4 L:1/8 R:Reel B:R.P. Christeson - Old Time Fiddlers Repertory vol. 1 (1973, No. 27) K:A E/F/|AA/c/ B/A/F/G/|A/G/A/B/ cc/B/|AA/c/ B/A/F/G/|A/B/A/F/ EE/F/| AA/c/ B/A/F/G/|A/G/A/B/ cc/d/|e/f/e/c/ B/A/F/G/|A/B/A/F/ E:| |:c/B/ A/B/c/d/ e/c/e/c/|fe a2|f/e/c/A/ B/A/F/G/|A/B/A/F/ EE| A/B/c/d/ e/c/e/c/|fe a2|f/e/c/A/ B/A/F/G/|A/B/A/F/ E:|


X:5 T:Cotton Eyed Joe [1] L:1/8 M:2/4 N:Howdy Forrester, learned from his Uncle Bob, N:transcribed by John Hartford. It was one of Forrester's N:featured numbers with Bill Monroe and Roy Acuff. N:Fiddle tuned GDAd B:Stephen F. Davis - Devil's Box, vol. 22, No. 4, Winter 1988 (p. 50) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:G A/|B/d/d d>d|f/d/e/f/ d>d|B/A/G/B/ A/G/E/G/|B/A/B D>:| |:E/|D/E/G/B/ A/G/E/F/|G/A/B/d/ cd/c/|B/A/G/B/ A/G/E/G/|B/A/B D>:||