Folks,
This is a reminder about the query I sent out in May asking for
people's lists of recommended tunes for patter squares.  If you
were thinking of sending me such a list, please do.  While I've
gotten some responses, the number so far has been disappointingly
low.  (If anyone knows of some other online forum where it would
be appropriate to post this query, perhaps with hope of a higher
response rate, please let me know.)
At the bottom of this message, I'm including a copy of my original,
rather detailed, request.  Perhaps that request was so wordy as to
put some of you off reading and responding.  To summarize the
essential points:
     * Please send (if you feel qualified and inclined  to do
       so) a list of tunes that you would play or recommend for
       traditional-style western and/or southern square dancing
       ("patter squares" for short, as distinguished from New-
       England-style prompted squares or singing squares of
       any sort).
     * Please send responses directly to me, <jim.saxe(a)gmail.com>om>,
       not to the entire mailing list on which you're receiving
       this, so that anyone else's responses won't be influenced
       by yours.  I'll eventually send out a summary of the
       responses.
     * I'm hoping particularly to hear from people who can come
       up with a list of ten or more (perhaps many more) tunes
       without scraping the bottom of their personal barrel.
       (At risk of belaboring the obvious, I mean ten or more
       tunes per responder, not as a grand total.)
     * Please don't send lists (or references to lists) where tunes
       suitable for patter squares are mixed in with other stuff.
     * You don't have to educate me about how "it's not just the
       tune; it's the way it's played."
Thanks in advance for any responses.
--Jim
On May 12, 2017, at 6:24 PM, James Saxe <jim.saxe(a)gmail.com> wrote:
  
 [I'm sending this query to the trad-dance-callers list, to the
 SharedWeight callers' and musicians' forums, and to a number of
 individuals.  Please send responses directly to me *off-list*
 (see Note 1 below).  I plan to collect responses for about the
 next two months and will summarize results to the lists and to
 individual respondents some time in July.  Thanks.  --Jim]
 
 Folks,
 
 As some of you may know, I've worked on and off in fits and starts
 for some time at gathering lists of recommended tunes [see Note 2
 below] for (traditional-style) patter squares.  [In case you're
 wondering what I mean by "(traditional-style) patter squares", see
 Note 6 below.]  My idea is to compile lists from a wide variety of
 sources and to look for tunes mentioned independently by many
 different recommenders.  So far, I've compiled tune lists from a
 few dozen books and albums, and I'm currently adding lists from
 a bunch more books, articles, record catalogs, etc.  I'm sending
 this message because I'd like to supplement all these sources with
 lists from current informants, possibly including you.  So ...
 
    * If you are a musician who has substantial experience
      playing for (traditional-stye) patter squares and if
      you have a list of recommended tunes that you're
      willing to share--either an existing set list or a
      list you come up with by sitting down and scratching
      your head for a while--please send it to me *off-list*
      [see Note 1] at 
 
          jim dot saxe at-sign gmail dot com
 
    * If you are a musician who mostly plays for other things
      than patter squares (e.g., contras or New-England-style
      squares or concert performances) or even if you're not
      a musician, but if you nonethelessAå have accumulated a 
      list of tunes you particularly like *for patter squares*,
      I'd also be interested in hearing from you.
 
    * I'd also be interested if anyone can supply lists of
      tunes played *for patter squares* by players skilled
      in the genre who are no longer living (e.g., Ralph
      Blizard, Lyman Enloe, Benton Flippen, Bob Holt, Pete
      McMahan, Lee Stripling, Joe Thompson, or Melvin Wine,
      to name a few).  However, see Note 5.
 
    * If you know other people who might be willing and able
      to contribute lists of recommended tunes, please feel
      free to pass this request along.  (But please try not
      to put up my email address in places where spammers
      are likely to harvest it.  Also, see Note 1.  Thanks.)
 
 Below are some notes clarifying what kind of responses I am
 and am not interested in.  ***Please read at least Notes 1-3
 before responding.***
 
 Note 1:  If you got this query via a mailing list, please send
 tune lists directly to me and *not* to the entire mailing list.
 As stated above, I'm trying to see which tunes get mentioned
 *independently* by many recommenders, so I don't want the lists
 anyone sends me to be influenced one way or another by whatever
 suggestions other people have already sent.  If you pass my
 request along to some of your friends, I'd prefer that you each
 send tune lists just to me rather than discussing tunes among
 yourselves first and then sending me a combined list (unless
 you and your friends are in the same regular band and such
 discussions are how you normally create your set lists).  Please
 look carefully at the "To:" (and "Cc:") line of any reply and
 make sure that that it doesn't include the address of any mailing
 list.  That would include addresses of the form
 
    James Saxe via ... <...>
 
 where <...> is a list address.
 
 I plan to gather recommendations for the next couple months and
 to post a summary some time in July.  
 
 Note 2:  Please *don't* explain to me that the suitability of
 a tune for a particular kind of dance can depend very strongly
 on how it's played.  I'm already quite well aware of that.
 However, I also think it would be widely agreed that some tunes
 lend themselves to being played well for dancing more than
 others.  (If you strenuously disagree, I will look forward to
 your forthcoming album of rip-roaring square dance arrangements
 of tunes from the Child ballads and _The Sacred Harp_.  Meanwhile,
 please don't respond to my query by attempting to un-ask it.)
 
 After I've settled on a list of frequently-recommended tunes,
 a possible follow-on project would be to try to identify one
 or more renditions--online and/or on commercial recordings--of
 each tune played in a danceable style worthy of study by 
 musicians learning to play for patter squares.  For such a
 project, style of playing would of course be a prime concern.
 But that's not what I'm working on or asking about right now.
 
 Note 3:  Please *don't* give me lists (or references to lists,
 albums, tune books, syllabi, etc) where tunes well suited for
 patter squares are mixed with other sorts of tunes without
 specific indication of which tunes are which.
 
 Note 4:  I'm not all that interested in recommendations for just
 one or a few tunes.  If you have substantial experience playing
 for patter squares, I'd expect that you can come up with at least
 ten tunes that you think are quite suitable, and perhaps you
 can come up with many more than that without feeling that you're
 starting to scrape the bottom of the barrel.  (If you send a long
 list, you might want to distinguish which are your favorites and
 which are the second-tier or third-tier choices.)
 
 Note 5:  If you send me a list of tunes from the repertoire of
 some deceased musician, please tell me something about how you
 compiled that list.  I'm not merely looking for a list of tunes
 played or recorded by, say, late great fiddler Bestus Bowslinger,
 but for a list of tunes that Bestus actually played *for patter
 squares*.  And if you happen to have some tapes of Bestus playing
 at actual dances, and if they include 30 different patter-square
 tunes, and if you send me the names of the 20 tunes you happen
 to recognize, then I'd like to be informed that the your sampling
 of Bestus's repertoire has been filtered by the limitations of
 what tunes you recognize.
 
 Note 6:  When I say "(traditional-style) patter squares," I mean
 to exclude singing squares and squares that are prompted to the
 phrase of the music in the New England style (or in the style of
 19th-century quadrilles) and I mean to include the kinds of
 squares generally thought of as traditional to the western and/or
 southern U.S.  I specifically would include visiting couple dances
 in this genre, even when the progression is around a big circle
 or by a scatter promenade, rather than around a square of four
 couples.  I'd also include most "transitional" (50's era) western
 squares (other than singing calls) as well as more recent
 compositions in similar style.  I do *not* mean to say that the
 dances in question must be called in a style that includes a bunch
 of rhyming doggerel ("do-si high, do-si low, chicken in the bread
 pan scratchin' out dough") or other extra verbiage.
 
 Much of the "hoedown"/"patter" music produced in recent decades
 for the MWSD market is, IMO, very non-traditional in character
 and thus not of interest for purposes of my current inquiry.
 (Hint:  If a tune isn't found in any tune books, played at any
 jam sessions, or recorded on any non-MWSD label, it's not what
 I'm after.)
 
 I'm happy to get recommendations for recently-composed tunes in
 traditional style, as well as for genuinely traditional (old)
 tunes.  I'm also happy to get recommendations for tunes from
 "northern" sources that nonetheless have the right feel to work
 well for traditional southern/western dances.
 
 Of course I realize there aren't precisely defined and widely
 agreed boundaries between different kinds of square dances or
 different styles of calling (prompted vs. patter vs. singing;
 phrased vs. unphrased; New-England vs. southern vs. traditional
 western vs. ...).  Ditto regarding precise definitions of musical
 genres.  I also realize that a particular choreographic pattern
 might be danced to different styles of music and calling, etc.
 That said, I still hope that the preceding paragraphs will suffice
 to provide an adequate idea of what I'm looking for.
 
 Thanks in advance to any of you who have tune lists to share.
 
 Regards,
 --Jim