Annotation:Kitty Puss (1)
X:1 T:Kitty Puss S:Buddy Thomas (1935-1974, northeastern Ky.) M:C| L:1/8 D:Rounder 0032, Buddy Thomas - Kitty Puss (1976) F:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/kitty-puss Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:G ef||g2e2d2BA|GBAG EGDE|G2Bd BGAG| ([FA]G)[DA]F D4| DGAB dcBA|GBAG [G,2E2][G,E]F|[G,2G2]Bd BGAG|EFGE D4|| DFA^c d2[F2d2]|A^c[ce]c defd|[e3e3]a fgaf|[M:3/2]g2ed BGAF G2[G2B2]| [M:C|]DFA^c d2[F2d2]|A^c[ce]c d2[df]d|[e3e3]a fgaf|[M:3/2]g2ed BGA(F G2)Af||
KITTY PUSS [1]. AKA and see "Homemade Sugar," "Hop Up Kitty Puss (1)," "Possum up a Simmon Tree (1)," "Puncheon Camp," "Puncheon Camps," "Tucker's Old Barn (1)," "Old Time Mockingbird." American, Reel. USA; northeast Kentucky, Tennessee. G Major (OTH/Thomas): D Major (Phillips). Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB'. A somewhat archaic sounding American fiddle tune<ref>In liner notes to Thomas's 1976 Rounder LP, Mark Wilson and Guthrie Meade called it one of the oddest Southern fiddle tunes on record. <ref>, widely known throughout the Appalachians and Southern states under a myriad of titles. Low Gap, North Carolina, fiddler Gaither Carleton called it "Tucker's Old Barn (1)," as did his son-in-law, Doc Watson. In Kentucky, Pineville, Bell County, fiddler Estill Bingham knew it as "Homemade Sugar" while Clyde Davenport (from the south-central part of the state) had it as "Puncheon Camps," and Owen "Snake" Chapman played it under the title "Doc Chapman's Breakdown." Hillside, Va., fiddler Norman Edmonds called his version "Old Time Mockingbird." It was played by Pocahontas County, West Virginia, fiddler Burl Hammonds as "Kick Mr. Possum and He Won't Come Down." Delbert Hughes (1905-1982, Kentucky/southern West Virginia) called it "Old Coon Bunch."
Hop up, Kitty Puss, hop up higher,
Hop up, Kitty Puss, your tail's in the fire.
Poor little Kitty Puss, poor little feller,
Poor little Kitty Puss, died in the celler.
The title "Poor Little Kitty Puss" was one of 350 tune and song titles collected in 1915 for a class project for the Normal School taught by Professor John F. Smith in Berea, Kentucky. The melody survived in tradition and was in the repertoire of Kentucky fiddlers Buddy Thomas (Lewis County), Owen "Snake" Chapman (Pike County), Clyde Davenport (Wayne County), Estill Bingham (Bell County), Everett Kays (Anderson County) and others.