Identified on AFS card by first line: "Years of time are swiftly passing." Followed by discussion with Flatt, who says the song was her mother's favorite and thus is hers.
Preceded by announcement by Jean Thomas who identifies Walter Caldwell as Alice Williams' son-in-law^ James Williams as her son^ and Canas Williams as her husband.
Introduced by Thomas and Day^ the latter says he learned it in Carter County, where the creek flows. Title spelled on AFS card as "Tigert"^ Thomas drops the "s."
Announcement following by Jean Thomas (stating that Day/Setters, despite the fact that an operation had given him a little sight in one eye, composed this song when he was in fact blind).
Announcement by Jean Thomas follows the song. Credits Vincent Caldwell, originally from Harlan Co., with the composition. (A similar version of this piece was recorded by Mary Barnicle at the Church of Ten Elders in Pineville, Ky., 1938, with the refrain "There's no man who does it like Jesus." [See AFS 1965A.]?ยจ Whether it was a derivation of Caldwell's composition or a local variant on which Caldwell based his own is unknown.)
Announcement by Jean Thomas follows. She identifies Canas and Alice as husband and wife, although this is muddled by the fact that Alice's sister Martha is also named Williams.
Identified on AFS card as "Mary and Martha." Jean Thomas announcement follows. The Williams sisters recall their parents singing it "in the hills of Tennessee."
Jean Thomas introduces the children after the performance, explaining that they sung at the National Folk Festival in Dallas and at the "Rockefeller ---" before the disc runs out.