X:1
T:Chickens don't Roost too High
S:Lowe Stokes
M:C|
L:1/8
N:Slide the slurred notes.
F:
https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/chickens-dont-roost-too-high-0
Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz
K:C
+slide+"*"c'ege gecg|eg2a ge [de]-[ee]-|[e2e2]cA c2 [d2e2]-|[c3e3][ce] [c2e2](b|
c')ege gecg|eg2a ge[G2A2]- |[G2B2]G2[G2A2][G2B2]|g3a ge(b2|
c')ege ggag|eg2a ge [de]-[ee]-|[ee]AcA [c2e2] [d2e2]|[c3e3][ce] cAG2|
z2 G2Accd |eg2a ge [d2e2]-|[e2e2]A2 (E2G2)|[E6c6]||
(D2|E2)c2-cAGD|E2[E2c2]-[E2c2][_E2_c2]-|[=E2=c2][E2c2] cAGE|E2[E2c2]-[E2c2][_E2_c2]-|
[=E2=c2][Ec][Ec] [E2c2][E2c2]|[_E-c]-[=E=c]cA d2[d2^f2]|[d4^f4]g3a|[M:2/4]ge [_E2_c2]-|
[M:C|][=E2=c2][E2c2] cAGA|[M:3/2][c2e2][c4e4][d2e2]-[ee]dcA|[M:C|][G2c2][G2d2] [G3c3][Gc]|
[Gc]AG2-|G2 GG Ac3 |eg2a ge [d2e2]-|[e2e2]A2 (E2G2)|[E6c6]||
P:Alternate 2nd strain
[e_g]-|[e2=g2][e2g2][ea][eg]- [eg][e_g]-|[e3=g3][eg] [e2g2][e2g2]-|[c2e2]c2 cdcA|c2c4[e2_g2]-|
[e2=g2][e2g2][e2a2][eg][e_g]-|[e3=g3][eg][e2g2][d2g2]-|[d2^f2]A2 cAdA|g2 gg- ge d[e_g]-|
[e2=g2][e2g2][e2a2][eg][e_g]-|[e3=g3][eg][e2g2][eg]-[ce]-|[c2e2]A2 cAde|c2 c3A G2|
z2A2c2d2|eg2a ge [d2e2]-|[e2e2]A2 (E2G2)|[E6c6]||
P:substitutions
|"*"edge ga2g|
CHICKENS DON'T ROOST TOO HIGH. AKA and see "Chicken, Oh Chicken." American, Country Blues. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB.The ragtime song from which this tune was derived was published in 1899, credited to Bob Cole and J. Rosamund Johnson, who called it "Chicken Don't Roost Too High." It was a popular instrumental tune in the South in the early decades of the 20th century. It was, for example, in the repertoire of north Georgia fiddler Lowe Stokes and was recorded by several Southern groups during the 78 RPM era, including the Dixie String Band, composed of north Georgia musicians Arthur Tanner (banjo), Earl Johnson (fiddle) and Lee Henderson (guitar), who recorded the tune in New York around 1925.
Additional notes
Source for notated version : - Leonard Keith [Phillips].
Printed sources : - Phillips (Traditional American Fiddle Tunes, vol. 2), 1995; p. 30.
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