"Too Young to Marry", also known as "Buffalo Nickel", "Cat Ate the Handsaw", "Chinky Pin", "Crooked Stovepipe", "Darling Child", "Fourth of July", "Grey-Eyed Cat", "Hair in the Butter", "I'm My Momma's Darling Child", "Lead Out", "Liesel", "Love Somebody", "Midnight Serenade", "My Love is but a Lassie Yet", "Old Mose", "Raymondville", "Richmond Blues", "Soapsuds Over the Fence", "Sweet Sixteen", "Ten Nights in a Bar Room" or "Yellow Eyed Cat" is an American reel in cut time and D Major. The parts are played AABB. "Too Young to Marry" is one title for a reel widespread in the upland South/Appalachian region and beyond as well. It has many titles and variants, with the "Too Young to Marry" title being particularly associated with western North Carolina/southwestern Virginia fiddlers such as Tommy Jarrell and Oscar Jenkins. The tune is derived from the well-known Scottish reel "My Love is but a Lassie Yet".
The standard notation is derived from the playing of Wicked Chicken (Huck Tritsch and Gus Tritsch with Cameron DeWhitt).
The banjo notation is by John Letscher from the playing of Judy Hyman and Bob Carlin on Banging and Sawing.
It was printed in Brody's Fiddler’s Fakebook (1983), Songer's Portland Collection (1997) and Welling's Welling’s Hartford Collection (1976).
It was recorded by Cockerham, Jarrell and Jenkins on Down to the Cider Mill, Clark Kessinger on Fiddler (appears as "Chinky Pin") and on The Legend of Clark Kessinger (appears as "Chinky Pin"), The Old Virginia Fiddlers on Rare Recordings (appears as "Midnight Serenade"), Bob Carlin on Banging & Sawing (1985) and Vivian Williams and Barbara Lamb on Twin Sisters (appears as "Fourth of July") (1975).