Annotation:Old Yeller Dog
X: 1 T: Old Yeller Dog (Came Trottin' Through the Meeting House) S: Charlie Acuff R: reel Z: 2012 John Chambers <jc:trillian.mit.edu> M: 2/4 L: 1/16 K: G D2- |\ D2E2 {E}G2AG | BABc BAGB | ADAB AGEF | GFGA GDB,C | D2E2 {E}G2AG | BABc BA{F}G2 | A2AG BGAF | {F}G6 :| |: ef |\ {f}g4 e4 | d6 G2 | {^A}B3=A G4 | {^D}E6 =D2 | {f}g4 e4 | d6 G2 | {^A}B3c =A2F2 | {F}G6 :|
OLD YELLER DOG (COME TROTTIN' THROUGH THE MEETING HOUSE). AKA and see "Old Grey Mare," "Old Blind Dog." AKA - "Old Yeller Dog Went A-trotting Through the Meeting Room." American, Reel (cut time). G Major (usually): F Major. Standard or FCfc (Rayna Gellert) tuning (fiddle). AABB. Rayna Gellert plays this tune in F, cross-tuned, although she notes that it is normally played in standard tuning in the key of G. Source Charlie Acuff had the tune from his grandfather, also named Charlie Acuff, from whom the young Charlie learned to fiddle. The tune/song is a variant of an old blackface minstrel song called "Down in Alabam" or "Aint I Glad I Got Out De Wilderness," more familiar nowadays as "The Old Grey Mare (She Ain't what She Used to Be). One version of the song was used as a campaign song for Abraham Lincoln ("Old Abe Lincoln came tearing out the wildnerness"), and fiddler Earl Johnson recorded a version in the 78 RPM ear as "Old Grey Mare Kicking Out of the Wilderness." Lyrics to "Old Yeller Dog" go (courtesy Mudcat [1]):
OLD YELLAR DOG
Old yellar dog went trottin' through the meetin' house,
Trottin through the meetin' house,
Trottin through the meetin' house;
Old yellar dog went trottin' through the meetin' house,
Down in Alabam'.
Brave boys here, brave boys there,
Brave boys here, down in Alabam'.
Old Joe Hooker wont ya come on out the wilderness,
Come on out the wilderness,
Come on out the wilderness;
Old joe hooker wont you come on out the wilderness,
And fight these boys in gray
CHORUS
Great big house nobody lives in,
Nobody lives in, nobody lives in;
Great big house nobody lives in,
Down in Alabam'.
CHORUS
The presence of dogs in a house of worship may seem incongruous to many, but the practice was not rare at one time, particularly in the South. South Carolina minister Charles Woodmason found it necessary to bar his congregation from bringing their animals with them to church in the late 18th century. Not only were they troublesome, he explained, they were also "an affront to the Divine Presence...to mix unclean things with our service." Yet, the population was only imitating longstanding practice in Britain. This passage is from James Hall's Travels in Scotland, by an Unusual Route: With a Trip to the Orkneys and Hebrides (London, 1807, p. 428):
I was amazed to see how much the minister in the interior of the Highlands are plagued with dogs in their churches. As almost every family has a dog, and some two, and as these dogs generally go with the people to church; so many dogs being collected often fight, and make such a noise during public worship, as not only disturbs the congregation, but endangers the limbs of many. I have seen more than twenty men plying with good cudgels, yet unable to separate a number of dogs fighting in a church. Nay, so much trouble do dogs give in some churches, that there is one appointed to go through the church-yard with a kind of longhandled forceps, which he holds out before him, and with which he wounds the tails, legs, and ears, &c. of the dogs, and thereby keeps the church and church-yard clear of these useful, but totally unnecessary animals in a place of public worship. Indeed, as these long-handled forceps have been found so useful in the Highlands, perhaps they might be of use in some other places; for ladies in too many places bring their lap-dogs to church, both on the north and south side of the Tweed. It often happens that a lady's lap-dog, running out and into her muff at church, and playing other antic tricks, draws more attention than the parson..."