Annotation:Pretty Little Cat: Difference between revisions

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|f_tune_annotation_title=https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Pretty_Little_Cat >
|f_tune_annotation_title=https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Pretty_Little_Cat >
|f_annotation='''PRETTY LITTLE CAT.''' American, Reel. USA, West Virginia. A Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Douglas): AABB. Usually played at a relaxed tempo. "Pretty Little Cat" is a more major sounding tune than "[[Pretty Little Dog]]" from West Virginia fiddler Lee Tiplett (1897-1982), who told similar stories about the origin of the two tunes (for which see "[[annotation:Pretty Little Dog]]"). Some see similarities between "Pretty Little Cat" and  "[[June Apple]]/Appal," "[[Kitchen Girl]]" and "[[Sandy Boys]]."
|f_annotation='''PRETTY LITTLE CAT.''' American, Reel. USA, West Virginia. A Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Douglas): AABB. Usually played at a relaxed tempo. "Pretty Little Cat" is a more major sounding tune than "[[Pretty Little Dog]]" from West Virginia fiddler Lee Tiplett (1897-1982), who told similar stories about the origin of the two tunes (for which see "[[annotation:Pretty Little Dog]]"). Some see similarities between "Pretty Little Cat" and  "[[June Apple]]/Appal," "[[Kitchen Girl]]" and "[[Sandy Boys]]."
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The transcription by Nigel Gatherer has been discovered by musician John Ivy to actually be "[[Henry Reed's Breakdown]]." John recognized the tune thought he recognized as "Pretty Little Cat" being played at a contra dance in Austin, Texas, by Eden MacAdam-Somer and Notorious.  However, after speaking with Eden after the dance, he learned that their title for it was "[[Henry Reed's Breakdown]]."  He notice that Nigel remarked on his "Tune of the Week" site, “This is an American Old-Time tune which I learned from a French musician called Cathy Castet. Recently she told me she’d got the name wrong, but I guess I’m stuck with this title.” John compared sound recordings and transcriptions and concluded Nigel's tune was misnamed, and in the spirit of accuracy has shared the corrected information.
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Revision as of 03:12, 19 October 2021




X:1 T:Pretty Little Cat N:From the playing of fiddler Lee Triplett (1897-1982, Clay County, W.Va.) M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel Q:"Fast" D:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_AMyf41ABg4 D:https://dla.acaweb.org/digital/collection/berea/id/2024/ Z:Andrew Kuntz K:Amix J[c2e2]ec B2G2|ABAG E4|J[A2A2]AB c2d2|J[e3e3]-[^de] [e2e2]eg| a2b2 abag |edBA GAB2|c2e2 d2B2|J[A3A3][AA] [A2A2]|| ((3efg|a2)eg g2ag|ed B2 A2 ((3efg|a2)eg g2d2|J[e3e3][ee][e2e2]((3efg| a2) eg g2 ag|ed B2 A2AB|c2ec B2 G2|J[A3A3][AA][A2A2]||



PRETTY LITTLE CAT. American, Reel. USA, West Virginia. A Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Douglas): AABB. Usually played at a relaxed tempo. "Pretty Little Cat" is a more major sounding tune than "Pretty Little Dog" from West Virginia fiddler Lee Tiplett (1897-1982), who told similar stories about the origin of the two tunes (for which see "annotation:Pretty Little Dog"). Some see similarities between "Pretty Little Cat" and "June Apple/Appal," "Kitchen Girl" and "Sandy Boys."

The transcription by Nigel Gatherer has been discovered by musician John Ivy to actually be "Henry Reed's Breakdown." John recognized the tune thought he recognized as "Pretty Little Cat" being played at a contra dance in Austin, Texas, by Eden MacAdam-Somer and Notorious. However, after speaking with Eden after the dance, he learned that their title for it was "Henry Reed's Breakdown." He notice that Nigel remarked on his "Tune of the Week" site, “This is an American Old-Time tune which I learned from a French musician called Cathy Castet. Recently she told me she’d got the name wrong, but I guess I’m stuck with this title.” John compared sound recordings and transcriptions and concluded Nigel's tune was misnamed, and in the spirit of accuracy has shared the corrected information.


Additional notes





Recorded sources : - Cassette C-7625, Wilson Douglas - "Back Porch Symphony" (1995). Yew Pine Mt. YP IX3, Dwight Diller - "Harvest" (1996). Wilson Douglas - "Fiddle Tunes from Central West Virginia" (1998). Erynn Marshall - "Calico" (2012).

See also listing at :
Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [1]
Hear Lee Triplett play the tune at a 1971 festival at Berea Sound Archives [2]
See/hear youtube versions [3][4]
Hear Wilson Douglas's recording at Slippery Hill [5]
Hear Erynn Marshall's recording [6]



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