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Country Legends #33: Pitty, Pitty Patter Letterbox Hybrid

Hidden : 7/31/2013
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:


Welcome to the Country Legends Series.

In this series we will be referencing songs from the Legends of Country, Western, and the Bluegrass Music genres.

Each cache in this series will be different. There will be different types, difficulties, terrains, and containers. Each will have something to do with the song though, in one way or another.

We hope you have as much fun finding them as we have hiding them.

Pitty, Pitty Patter by Susan Raye

About the artist:

Best known for her work in conjunction with mentor Buck Owens, singer Susan Raye was born October 8, 1944, in Eugene, OR. She first began singing with a high-school rock group, but after the band called it quits, she auditioned for a local country station. Not only did she begin performing on the radio, she also landed work as a disc jockey, eventually becoming the host of a Portland TV program called Hoedown.

It was at one of Raye's performances at an area nightclub where she met Jack McFadden, Owens' manager. McFadden was so impressed with her vocal talents that he persuaded Owens to fly her to his home in Bakersfield, CA, for an audition. Owens immediately offered Raye a slot on an upcoming tour, and in 1969, she cut her first record, "Maybe If I Close My Eyes (It'll Go Away)." Her next record, a cover of Jackie DeShannon's pop smash "Put a Little Love in Your Heart," was also her first Top 30 hit. At about the same time, she began a nine-year stint as a featured performer on the program Hee Haw.

Raye issued her first solo LP, One Night Stand, in 1970; the single "Willy Jones" became her first Top Ten hit, lending its name to the title of her follow-up album the next year. Also in 1970, she released two duet records with Owens, We're Gonna Get Together and The Great White Horse. Her biggest year as a solo artist came in 1971, when she issued three consecutive Top Ten hits -- "L.A. International Airport," "Pitty, Pitty, Patter," and "(I've Got A) Happy Heart." The title track of 1972's My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own also reached the Top Ten.

After hitting number nine in 1974 with "Whatcha Gonna Do With a Dog Like That" and scoring a success with Owens on a cover of the Mickey & Sylvia classic "Love Is Strange," Raye's hitmaking days were largely over; after issuing the 1976 LP Honey, Toast and Sunshine, she left Owens' tutelage to release a self-titled album in 1977. A year later, she retired in order to raise her six kids and returned to college to pursue a degree in psychology. In 1985, she came out of exile to release the album Susan Raye: There and Back, which generated the minor hit single "I Just Can't Take the Leaving Anymore."

Pitty, Pitty Patter:

Oh the pitty pitty patter of little bitty feet's
Gonna pitty pitty patter through our house
(Our house, our house, our house)
Gonna be a comin' in June
Gonna stop our honeymoon

'Cause the pitty pitty patter of little bitty feet's
Gonna pitty pitty patter through our house
(Our house, our house, our house)
Gonna be a thinkin' of a name
Yeah there's gonna be a great big change

Gonna be a-lookin' for a bottle in the middle of the ni-ight
Lookin' for a chance to hold daddy ti-i-ight
Washin' little diapers every day
A big doctor bill we're gonna have to pay
Hey – hey

Oh the pitty pitty patter of little bitty feet's
Gonna pitty pitty patter through our house
(Our house, our house, our house)
Gonna be a thinkin' of a name
Yeah there's gonna be a great big change

Gonna be a-lookin' for a bottle in the middle of the ni-ight
Lookin' for a chance to hold daddy ti-i-ight
Washin' little diapers every day
A big doctor bill we're gonna have to pay
Hey – hey

Oh the pitty pitty patter of little bitty feet's
Gonna pitty pitty patter through our house
(Our house, our house, our house)
Gonna be a thinkin' of a name
Yeah there's gonna be a great big change

'Cause the pitty pitty patter of little bitty feet's
Gonna pitty pitty patter through our house

The Cache:

This is our first LetterBox Hybrid.

We hope you enjoy it and bring along your stamp book. (This is not required to log the cache)

All that is required is to sign the log book.

There is no need to climb down the hillside.

Please place the logbook, the stamp, and the ink pad back in their separate bags so that they stay in good condition.

If there are any issues with any parts of the cache (stamp, logbook, inkpad) please let us know.

From the Coordinates given the Cache is about 65 Feet to the South-South-West.

You will climb up on the little berm and find the Rock, the Stump and the Tree (the tree has four trunks, but one is lazy).

To hear the music click on the link (this has no relevance on finding the cache)
Pitty, Pitty Patter


Congratulations to

biblemanrick

and

sewwatt

for the First to Find.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Ebpx n Gerr be n Fghzc? Bayl Bar vf Evtug.

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)