“Bonaparte’s Retreat” is the title of several related songs. Although there are several different fiddle tunes titled “Bonaparte’s Retreat,” the one that is most common is an American old-time tune dating back to at least the late 1800s and probably well before that. In 1950, American country music artist Pee Wee King recorded a modified version of that tune, with lyrics added, which he also called “Bonaparte’s Retreat”. King’s version has since been covered by many country artists. “Bonaparte’s Retreat” (sometimes called “Boneyparte’s Retreat” or “Boney’s Retreat”) is the name of several fiddle tunes, most of them found in the old-time tradition (the Traditional Tune Archive at tunearch.org lists 8 separate tunes under the name “Bonaparte’s Retreat”) The title “Bonaparte’s Retreat” is a reference to Napoleon Bonaparte’s disastrous retreat from Russia in 1812, which cost the French ruler most of his Grand Armée and eventually led to his downfall. Some 19th-century British folk songs celebrated the event, since it ended the longtime danger that Napoleon would try to invade England. The first audio recording of Bonaparte’s Retreat was made by Georgia fiddler A. A. Gray in 1924. In 1937, American ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax, while travelling through Kentucky, recorded fiddler William Hamilton Stepp playing “Bonaparte’s Retreat”. This recording became a touchstone in American culture, and was inducted in 2016 into the Library of Congress’s National Recording Registry.[5] Ruth Crawford Seeger transcribed it for John and Alan Lomax’s book Our Singing Country in 1941, and most fiddlers in the modern day who play Bonaparte’s Retreat play the version recorded by W.H. Stepp. Stepp’s version of the song was used as a major component of Aaron Copland’s orchestral composition “Hoe-Down” from the ballet Rodeo. Copland most likely learned it from the transcription found in the Lomaxes’ book Our Singing Country. “Hoe-Down” has in turn been covered by various artists, including Emerson, Lake and Palmer on their 1972 album Trilogy. It has also received use in television and film, including the American TV ad campaign “Beef. It’s What’s For Dinner”. Famous versions of Bonaparte’s Retreat include several recordings by Doc Watson (often with others), a recording by Ola Belle Reed (off her album Rising Sun Melodies), and more recently, a recording by Tyler Childers (off his album Long Violent History).