Annotation:Lost Girl (1)
X:1 T:Lost Girl [1] S:Emmett Lundy (1864-1953, Galax, Va.) M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:G [Ae]-[B2g2][Bg] [B2g2][Bg][Bg]|agaba2b2|[Ae]-[B2g2][Bg] [B2g2]aa|aa b2b2a2| [Ae]-[B2g2][Bg] [B2g2]gg|abab a2b2|abaf gede|gedB AG3:| |:[EB][EA][EB]d e3d|[EB]ABd B2A>A|BABd e2 ed|gedB A2GA| [EB][EA][EB]d e3d|BABG (AB)GD|GABd e2ae|gedB A2 G2:|
LOST GIRL [1]. American, Reel (cut time). USA, Magoffin County, Kentucky. G Major (Silberberg, Titon): C Major (Phillips/McNew, Songer). Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Silberberg): AABB (Songer, Titon): AA'BB (Phillips). The melody is nowadays known as a Magoffin County, Kentucky, melody, associated with the playing of John Salyer and Walter McNew (of neighboring Rockcastle County, Ky.). However, it was not confined to the Kentucky borders. Jeff Titon (2001) writes that the tune is thought to have come to Kentucky from Virginia (an older Galax, Va., fiddler, Emmett Lundy, for example, played a version), but that it is not a common tune in Kentucky, although different versions exist. A "Lost Girl" tune was played at the Berea, Kentucky, fiddlers contests in 1919 and 1920 by H.F. Green and by Anderson Bowling, according to records of the events reviewed by Titon, although what version (or tune) they may have played is not known.
Further afield, the title appears in a list of traditional Ozarks Mountain fiddle tunes compiled by musicologist/folklorist Vance Randolph, published in 1954 (although it is not known to what music this title was applied to in that region i.e. it may or may not be related to the Kentucky tune). Texas fiddler Lake N. Porter played a cross-tuned "Lost Girl (2)", and although his melody is not musically related to the Appalachian tune, the title may have been in circulation in fiddling tradition.
"Lost Girl" is usually played in G major (c.f. Emmett Lundy, John Salyer), although versions in C major are not uncommon (c.f. Walter McNew, and Oregon's Foghorn Stringband on their album "Weiser Sunrise", for example). See also the related "Old Beech Leaves," and John Salyer's own "Lost Boy, a variant or elaboration of "Lost Girl."