Checking with John Burke an old time fiddler in Seattle he said Rubber Dolly is 
in the key of whoever sings it.  Back up and Push is in C but the “B” part 
starts on the 4 chord (F).  The same tune though...
> On Oct 30, 2019, at 8:30 PM, jim saxe via Musicians 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Thanks to Jim McKinney, David Firestine, and John Beland for identifying 
> "Dusty Roads" as "My Love Is [/She's] but a Lassie-O [/Lassie Yet]," also 
> known by many other names (see
> 
>     https://tunearch.org/wiki/My_Love_is_but_a_Lassie_Yet_(1)
> 
> ) including "Too Young to Marry," and not to be confused, by the way, with 
> "Take Me Back to Tulsa," also also known as "Too Young to Marry."
> 
> Regarding "Rubber Dolly"/"Back Up And Push," the annotations at 
> 
>     https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Rubber_Dolly_(1)
> 
> mention the song lyrics
> 
>     My mama told me, If I'd be goody
>     That she would buy me, a rubber dolly
>     ...
> 
> one version of which can be heard, for example, here:
> 
>     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FPquvsacG5M
> 
> Looking at the musical score on 
> 
>     https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Rubber_Dolly_(1)
> 
> I believe the words "told" and "me" in the song correspond the first two 
> notes of the first full measure: a quarter-note for "told" and a quarter note 
> tied to an eighth note for "me", both on C-sharp, or scale degree 3 (mi) in 
> the key of A major.  In the music for "Back Up and Push" at
> 
>     https://tunearch.org/wiki/Back_Up_and_Push_(1)
> 
> (notated as 2/2 instead of 4/4 and in the key of G instead of A), I believe 
> the corresponding notes are a half note on D (sol in G major) and a half note 
> tied to a quarter note on A (re).  So those notes are rhythmically the same 
> in (the cited transcription of) "Rubber Dolly" as in (the cited transcription 
> of) "Back Up and Push,  but melodically different: "mi mi" in RD vs. "sol re" 
> in BUAP). 
> 
> Listening to the rendition of "Rubber Dolly" at
> 
>    https://www.ceder.net/recorddb/viewsingle.php?RecordId=9791&SqlId=249698
> 
> that I cited in my earlier message, I think that in the place where I've just 
> described transcriptions on tunearch as having two long notes, the banjo 
> player (Jack Hawes) on the record plays seven notes:
> 
>     told (ti-ka) me (ti-ka) ee
> 
> And yet I can still detect (albeit with a little stretching) a resemblance 
> between that recording and some recordings I've found of "Back Up and Push."  
> But it does set me wondering just how much two musical performances can 
> differ from each other rhythmically and/or melodically and still be regarded 
> as renditions of the "same" tune.
> 
> As I write this, I'm reminded of an occasion about 15 years ago when I was 
> sitting in a dining area with one of my aunts and she asked if I knew what 
> tune was playing on the P.A. system.  I said I thought it was "Tea for Two" 
> but she said it sounded nothing like "Tea for Two".  Years later 
> (unfortunately when my aunt was no longer living), I happened to hear this on 
> the radio
> 
>     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLDHCDz7S2g
> 
> and the mystery was solved when the DJ announced the title.
> 
> --Jim
> 
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