Annotation:Fine Times at Our House (1)
X:1 T:Fine Times at Our House L:1/8 M:2/2 S:James H. "Uncle Jim" Chisholm, Greenwood, Albermarle County, Va. K:Amix E2 E>D CD E2|EAA>A A>BcA|E2 E>D CDE>F|G>EAG F D3| E2 E>D C>D E2|EA A2 ABcd|efgf e2d2|cABd c A3|| A,4 CD E2|EA A2 ABcA|EDCD E2F2|GEAG F D3| EDCD E2A2|A2A2 ABcd|edcB Aagf|edcB c A3|| K:Ador ed c2 (d/c/)Bcd|efga gagf|ed c2 (d/c/)Bcd|ea2b a2 gf|edcB ABcd| |1 efga g2d2|efgf e2d2|^cABc c A3:|2 egfa g2d2|ed^cB Aagf|ed^cA c A3||
FINE TIMES AT OUR HOUSE [1]. AKA - "Fine Fun at Our House" (Pa.). AKA and see "Kitty's Got a Baby-O." Old-Time, Breakdown. USA; central W.Va., Virginia, Indiana, southwestern Pa. D Major/Mixolydian (Krassen {Hammons}, Bayard {Yeager & Yaugher}): A Mixolydian (Bayard {Smalley & Ireland}). AEae, ADae (Hammons) or standard tunings. ABB (Bayard, 1981): AABB (Krassen). Bayard (1981) points out that the tune "shades" between major and mixolydian in many versions, which is "a genuine, and once common, feature of our fiddling tradition" (p. 255). He sees some vague resemblance between this tune and the Scottish "Crieff Fair," but was unable to trace the tune further in British Isles collections. Bayard's (1944) source 'Bub' Yaugher knew the following rhyme associated with this tune:
Possum up a gum stump, Coonie in the holler,
Devil's on the other side--Don't you hear him holler?
....(Bayard, 1944). See "Possum Up a Gum Stump."
While another from Fayette County, Pa., (Bayard, 1981) gave the following:
Fine times at our house, Sally's got a little one:
A great beg yellow devil just like the other one.
Gerry Milnes collected this verse in West Virginia:
Fine times at our house, Kate's got a little one;
Bless its little soul, it's another little pretty one.
See also the related low strain of Braxton County, W.V., fiddler Ernie Carpenter's (1907-1997) "Downfall of Richmond."