Annotation:Cat Came Back (And the): Difference between revisions
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|f_recorded_sources= Challenge 307 (78 RPM), Fiddlin' Doc Roberts (1927). Decca 5442 (78 RPM), Riley Puckett (1937). Document DOCD 8042, "Fiddlin' Doc Roberts; Complete Recorded Works, vol. 1, 1925-1928," (1999). Dot Records 45-235 (45 RPM), Tommy Jackson (1955). Marimac AHS #3, Glen Smith – "Say Old Man" (1990. Learned from Tommy Jackson). OKeh Records 40119 (78 RPM), Fiddlin' John Carson (1924). | |f_recorded_sources= Challenge 307 (78 RPM), Fiddlin' Doc Roberts (1927). Decca 5442 (78 RPM), Riley Puckett (1937). Document DOCD 8042, "Fiddlin' Doc Roberts; Complete Recorded Works, vol. 1, 1925-1928," (1999). Dot Records 45-235 (45 RPM), Tommy Jackson (1955). Marimac AHS #3, Glen Smith – "Say Old Man" (1990. Learned from Tommy Jackson). OKeh Records 40119 (78 RPM), Fiddlin' John Carson (1924). | ||
Morning Star 45005, Doc Roberts – "Way Down South in Dixie" (Learned from Madison County, Ky., African-American fiddler Owen Walker {b. 1857), a well-known local entertainer). | Morning Star 45005, Doc Roberts – "Way Down South in Dixie" (Learned from Madison County, Ky., African-American fiddler Owen Walker {b. 1857), a well-known local entertainer). | ||
|f_see_also_listing= | |f_see_also_listing=Hear Doc Roberts' 1927 recording at Slippery Hill [https://www.slippery-hill.com/content/and-cat-came-back]<br> | ||
}} | }} | ||
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Revision as of 22:11, 6 March 2021
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But the cat came back, he couldn't stay no longer,
Yes the cat came back de very next day,
the cat came back—thought she were a goner,
But the cat came back for it wouldn't stay away.
It was popularized among country musicians in the early 78 RPM era through recordings by north Georgia's wikipedia:Fiddlin'_John_Carson and wikipedia:Riley_Puckett, and by Kentucky's wikipedia:Fiddlin'_Doc_Roberts. It was later recorded by fiddler wikipedia:Tommy_Jackson_(musician), and (late in his career) wikipedia:Clark_Kessinger.