I've called cats with a variety of sounds. Bryon South's Cottontail in Distress got one, the Johnny Stewart's Rodent sound got a couple. I called two cats with doe bleats, and even had them come to a series of coyote howls and hurt pup sounds. You just never know what a cat will respond to.
One time I called a bobcat on the run with a raccoon fight sound. I had tried rabbit, bird, rodent and fawn sounds for close to 45 minutes, with no results. Finally I switched to the raccoon fight sound, and within seconds I saw the cat coming along on old logging road on the farm, about 100 yards away. It was running hard while the raccoon fight sound was playing. But once the sound paused for a moment, the cat stopped. Then, when the sound continued, he began running again. I don't know what it was about that sound, but this particular cat liked it. No doubt the other sounds had the cat coming in, but there was something about that raccoon fight that triggered it to running toward the sound.
In general, from what most guys say, cats respond better to high-pitch, squeeky sounds, bird sounds etc. It doesn't hurt to mix 'em up and do something different sometimes. Whatever works, works.