Bob Livingston wrote:
<<The Slow One, known as Solomon Levi, will most likely be called at the Heath and
Cummington, MA Fairs before August is finished.>>
Many thanks, Bob, for mentioning the Cummington Fair! I recently searched for local fairs
that featured square dancing, and the only one I found was Heath (Aug. 19-21), which has
its dance on the Friday. We decided against taking time off our day jobs to drive 2+ hours
on a Friday night. Somehow I overlooked Cummington (Aug. 25-28), where the dance is on the
Saturday. We happen to be free that night, so we'll likely go.
Everyone: The dances at both fairs are by the Falltown String Band with Doug Wilkins
calling. The Square Dance History Proect
(
www.squaredancehistory.org<http://www.squaredancehistory.org>) has several video
clips of this band with Bob Livingston calling, recorded in Chesterfield, CT in 2013.
<<In CT/RI fiddler Tom Hall does a neat "doodle dee do" during the quiet
part... But there is no quiet part on the Square Dance History recording. And there is
no
slow part; with the complete stops that come after each line during the arm turns...at the
caller's discretion. "I'm not going too fast for anybody am I??"
...followed by double time for the dosadoes and promenades. Caller Ted Glabach in
Southern VT was great with it.>>
I don't think I've ever danced The Slow One, though I've heard a lot about it.
Jon Lurie, who got me started as a caller at the Farm & Wilderness Camps, used to
threaten to call it, whereupon one or two people who knew it shouted "No! No!
Anything but that!" I think it was Jon who sang it to me offstage, with fast and slow
parts alternating.
Curiously, although Jon learned many of his calls from David Park Williams, there is no
fast part on the recording that Dave made of The Slow One. (Several of Dave's dances
are at the History Project, but apparently not The Slow One.)
The only place I've seen it in print is in a folio by Allemande Al Mueller (of upstate
New York), published around 1940 I think. It's called something like "To the
Corner with Your Right," and there's no indication of a change in tempo. The tune
is similar but not identical to Solomon Levi.
Tony Parkes
Billerica, Mass.