Annotation:My Last Gold Dollar

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X:1 T:Last Gold Dollar [1] N:From the playing of Bill Hensley (N.C.), from a 1940 field recording. M:C| L:1/8 N:ADad tuning (fiddle). While the notation can be played in N:GDae or ADae, it makes more sense when tuned to Henley's N:ADad. In his 1940 thesis on Hensley's tunes David Parker N:Bennett recorded that Hensley played "Last Gold Dollar" in N:BEbe tuning. Q:"Fast" D:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/last-gold-dollar Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:D "*"de|[df][de][df][de] [d2d2]B2|dedB A2de|fefe d2B-d|A3A A2 de| fefe d2B2|dedB A2DE|[FA]-[A2A2]B AFEF|D2DE D2:| |:"**"DE|F-A2B AFEF|A3B A2DE|F-A2B AFEF|D2 DF D2 DE| F-A2B AFAA|[EA]-[F2A2][FA] [F2A2]DE|F-A2B AFEF|D2 DF D2 || P:Substitutions "*"[d2d2]-|[dd]([de][df][de]) [d2d2][B2d2]|dedB A2d2-|d([de][df][de]) [d2d2][B2d2] || "**"DF|AA2 B AFEF|AA2 B A2DE||



MY LAST GOLD DOLLAR. AKA - "Last Gold Dollar (1)," "My Last Old Dollar Is Gone." Old-Time, Song and Fiddle Tune (cut time). D Major. ADad tuning (Hensley). AABB. The "My Last Gold Dollar" title appears in a list of traditional Ozark Mountain fiddle tunes compiled by musicologist/folklorist Vance Randolph, published in 1954. The title is a phrase that turns up in a number of "floating verses" in such fiddle tune/songs as "Don't Let Your Deal Go Down (1)." See also the country rag "Last Gold Dollar (2)."


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See also listing at :
Hear Bill Hensley's (N.C.) 1940 home recording at Slippery Hill [1]



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