Annotation:Cat Came Back (And the)
X:1 T:Cat Came Back, The M:2/4 L:1/8 K:A f/g/|a/b/a/f/ ec|a/g/a/e/ fe|a/b/a/f/ ea/e/|g/a/b/g/ a/e/f/g/| a/b/a/f/ ec|a/g/a/e/ fe|a/b/a/f/ ea|g/a/b/g/ a:| |:c/d/|ea a/g/a/b/ c' c'/b/ c'c'/b/|c'c'/b/ c'/b/a/g/|(e2 e) c/B/| c(f f/)e/c/B/|[c2e2] e2|c>B [c/e/][A/e/][B/e/][B/e/]|[A2e2]-[Ae]|| |:E/F/|AA c/d/e/c/|dc e/d/c/B/|AA c/ec/|d/c/B/A/ E/G/B/G/| AA/B/ c/d/e/c/|d/c/d/e/ fe|f/e/f/g/ a/f/e/d/|[c/e/][A/e/][B/e/][c/e/] [Ae]:||
(AND THE) CAT CAME BACK. American, Reel (2/4 or cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB (Devil's Box). Christeson (1973) notes: "Played by a few Missouri fiddlers in ... the early 1930's but is seldom heard any more." The tune was actually a Tin-Pan-Alley song from 1893, written by prolific songwriter wikipedia:Harry_S._Miller and popularized by New York entertainer and Broadway impresario wikipedia:Tony_Pastor. 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.