Annotation:Texas Wagoner
X:1 T:Texas Wagoner S:Eck Robertson (1887-1975, Amarillo, Texas) M:C| L:1/8 D:County CD CO 3515, "Eck Robertson: Old Time Texas Fiddler" (1998) D:Victor V40145 (78 RPM), Eck Robertson & Family (1929) F:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/texas-wagoner Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:C ag|edcG ABcd|efga gedc|BGAG EFGA|Bcde d2ag| edcG ABcd|efga gedc|egaa abag|ec[Ec][Ec] [E2c2]ag| edcG ABcd|efga gedc|Bddd dedc|BGBc d2gf| edcG ABcd|efga gedc|egaa abag|ec c2||cAGF| |:ECDC A,B,CD|EGAB cBAG|FD3 D2Bc|dedB cBAG| ECDC A,B,CD|EGAB c2c2|cdeg aged|1c2 (d/c/B) cAGF:|2 c2 (d/c/B) c2|| P:Alternate 'A' part |:[E2A2]-|[EA]cgc [EA]cgc|[EA]cga gedc|Bcdc Bcdc|BGBc d2gf| [EA]cgc [EA]cgc|([EA]c)[cg][ca] [c2g2] +slide+a-g|egga +slide+c'eag|e[c2e2]d [c2e2]:|]
TEXAS WAGONER. American, Reel (cut time). C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). "Texas Wagoner" is fiddler Eck Robertson's [1] (1887-1975, Amarillo, Texas) version of the reel "Wagoner (1)" or "Tennessee Wagoner," with parts reversed. Robertson recorded the tune in August, 1929, in Dallas, Texas, for Victor Records, accompanied by his family band that included his wife Nettie on guitar, his daughter Daphne on tenor guitar and his son Dueron on tenor banjo. It was one of four sides recorded at the session, including "There's a Brown Skin Gal Down the Road", "Amarillo Waltz" and "Brown Kelly Waltz".