Annotation:Rock Creek Girls
X:1 T:Rock Creek Girls N:From the playing of Monroe County, south-central Kentucky, fiddler N:Isham Monday (1879-1964), recorded by D.K. Wilgus, Nov., 1959. M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel N:A version of "Buck Creek Girls/Wild Horse/Stoney Point" Q:"Quick" D:https://soundarchives.berea.edu/items/show/459 Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:G |:[G,2G2][B2g2]d2 ed|[G,2G2][B2g2] edBA|[G,2G2][Bg][Bg]d2 ed|BGAc BGG2:| |:([Be]-[e2e2])[ee] [e2e2][e2e2]|{e}fedd edBA|([Be]-[de]-[ee])[ee] [e2e2]eg|feae- g2ed| [Be][Ae][B2e2]- [e3e3][ee]| {e}fed2 edBA|([Be]-[de]-[ee])[ee] [e2e2]e2|1bgaf g2ed:|2bgaf g3z||
ROCK CREEK GIRLS. AKA and see "Buck Creek Girls," "Stoney Point," "Wild Horse." American, Reel (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAAABB'. "Rock Creek Girls" is fiddler Isham Monday's (1879-1964) version of "Buck Creek Girls," the upland Kentucky title for the reel widely known in the South as "Stoney Point" and "Wild Horse." All of these tunes are derivative of Scottish/Irish "Miss McLeod's Reel."