Annotation:Ten Cent Cotton
X:1 T:Ten Cent Cotton N:From the playing of Eck Robertson (1887-1975, Borger, Texas) N:A version of "East Tennessee Blues" M:C L:1/8 R:Country Rag Q:"Moderately Quick" D:Rounder CO 3515, "Eck Robertson: Old Time Texas Fiddler" (1998) D:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aAORrPadF9Q D:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/sally-johnson-0 Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:C ef|gage gage|ga2g e2d2|cdcA cdcA|cd2c A2G2| gage gage|ga2g e2 Bc|ddg2 d2g2|ddge g2ef| gage gage|ga2g e2d2|cdcA cdcA|cd2c A2G2| GGAc B2d2|e-g2g agec|cd2c d2 e2|[c4e4]- [c2e2]:| |:ef|gage ga2g|+slide+[e4e4]- [e2e2]ed|cdcA cd2c|+slide+[A4A4]-[A2A2]g-e| gage ga2g|+slide+[e4e4]- [e2e2](Bc|d2)g2d2g2|dggd g2ef| gage ga2g|+slide+[e4e4]- [e2e2]ed|cdcA cd2c|+slide+[A4A4]-[A2A2](EF| G2)Ac B2d2|e-g2g agec|cd2c d2 e2|[c4e4]- [c2e2]:|
TEN CENT COTTON. AKA and see "East Tennessee Blues." American, Country Rag (cut time). C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. "Ten Cent Cotton" is a rather inferior setting of "East Tennessee Blues", from the usually reliable Texas fiddler Eck Robertson (1887-1975). The last four measures of the stains (repeated in both parts) are awkward compared with the smooth delivery of The Hill Billies 1926 recording of "East Tennessee Blues."
Prices for cotton at the turn of the 20th century were quite good. The World's Work, a 1905 publication, proclaimed:
The cotton crop in the last two years [1902-1903] has brought the South more than enough money to pay off the national debt, That was the year of the second great emancipation. It meant financial independence for more than eleven million people. The proclamation was just the three words, "ten cent cotton" <ref> <ref>.
Illustrating that things are relative, a generation later the similar three-word statement meant the opposite of prosperity. The "Ten Cent Cotton" title mirrors piano player Bob Miller's song, copyrighted under the title "'Leven Cent Cotton, Forty Cent Meat" (also called "Seven Cent Cotton Forty Cent Meat" in folk versions), which refersto the Depression-era low price per pound paid for picking cotton and the relatively high price paid for meat. The song was absorbed into folk tradition, sung by field workers themselves, and picked up by folksingers such as Pete Seegar. The song, however, uses a different tune.