Annotation:Jenny in the Cotton Patch (1)
X:1 T:Jenny in the Cotton Patch [1] C:Traditional S:Clyde Davenport N:"Tune AEae" N:Transcribed into ABC format by Dan Mozell from N:Graphic file of standard notation at Jeff Titon's web site. N:(http://www.stg.brown.edu/projects/davenport/JEFF_TITON.html) K:A M:2/2 L:1/8 (A2|:A)Bcd e2 d2 | (Bc)dd e2 e2 |([eB] [e2c2]) [ce] A2 AB | AFEF E A2 B | AFEF E(AA)B |[M:2/4]A4 (A4:|[M:2/2]|:A)BcA d2 ff | edef {f}=g3 f | edef abaf |[1 eaab a2 A2 :|[2 eaab a2 ||
JENNY IN THE COTTON PATCH [1]. American, Reel (cut time). USA; Tennessee, Ky. A Mixolydian. AEae or GDgd tunings (fiddle). AABB'. A 'jenny' is a mule. An archaic-style fiddle tune learned by Monticello, south-central Ky., fiddler Clyde Davenport (b. 1921) from his father, Will Davenport, who himself had it from one Will Phipps. Phipps was an old timer (born in 1812) from Rock Creek, Tennessee, who was supposed to have been buried with his fiddle in his coffin. Titon (2001) finds the tune in the "Granny Will Your Dog Bite? (1)"/"Betty Martin" tune family. See also the closely related Kentucky tune "Huldy in the Sinkhole."