You can listen to the Max Gant album on youtube.
Rich

On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 3:43 PM, Tony Parkes tony@hands4.com [trad-dance-callers] <trad-dance-callers@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 

Tom Hinds wrote:

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This sounds like a reissue of “Town and Country Square Dances,” an LP on the Everest label (also issued on Olympic). I don’t think the caller was ever identified; I agree that the calls are not danceable.

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Originally, I believe there was no connection between the Treyz album and the Town and Country album, which didn’t use the same photo shoot.

 

The Treyz album was probably reissued more times, with more different fake names for the caller, than any other SD record. Robert (Bob) Treyz was his real name; I knew him slightly in the 1970s. He lived in the Acton-Boxborough area of Massachusetts. (The original issue of his album uses the correct spelling of “Acton Promenaders.”)

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There were several LPs that were repeatedly reissued on $1.99 supermarket labels with various callers’ names:

 

1. The Bob Treyz album; I’ve seen “Zeb Smith” listed as the caller, among other names. Bob was a real caller, and the selections (mostly traditional singing calls) are danceable. The music is a bit thin but adequate.

 

2. This one shows up most often as “Swing Your Partner” with “Uncle Bill Wiley and his Tall Corn Boys.” The caller has a decent voice, and the singing calls are pretty good, but he was obviously reading the patter calls from a script: he’s not even on the beat, and he doesn’t allow any time between commands. The band, however, is excellent, with a nice full sound. It’s unmistakably the Pinetoppers, who made several instrumentals for Decca/Coral including a terrific Life on the Ocean Wave backed with a Buffalo Gals that for years was the standard recording for Pattycake Polka (aka Heel and Toe Mixer).

 

3 & 4. I don’t know who the caller was on either of these; I believe they were both originally issued without a name. They can be identified by the dance titles: One includes “Caballero,” “Opposite Jitterbug,” “Round and Round Ho Down,” and “Inky Dinky Parley Vous” (sic). The other includes “Hi Jinks,” “Nine Pins,” “R.H. High,” “Merry Farmer,” and “Fort Lee Line.” (There’s some overlap in titles between this and the Treyz album, but if memory serves, it’s not just Treyz with the titles changed.) I assume that the “Emery Adams” and “Tex Daniels” issues are either #3 or #4 (unless they’re Treyz).

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HH is the esteemed Jerry Helt of Cincinnati, who has been a full-time caller for decades. He made this album over 50 years ago under his own name and was not pleased to see it under a false name. (I don’t think it’s been reissued as often as #1-4 above.) It’s an interesting album for two reasons: (1) The dance selections vary widely in difficulty, from absolute beginner level to routines that would have been challenging for the club dancers of the time (“Turn by the left to an arky thar – head gents, side ladies in a right-hand star”). (2) Jerry told me that the music was recorded on a tight budget; in some cases (e.g. Turkey in the Straw) the musicians were told to play one “A” part and one “B” part, and the parts were strung together in the studio to make a multiple-AABB sequence.

< money - no big surprise if that's the case.>>

 

I’ve always assumed that these albums were issued in most cases without informing the caller and musicians, let alone paying them.

 

By the way, some of the 1960s supermarket LPs were much better than average. If you see one by Mac Gant and the Tennessee Dew Drops, grab it; it’s an excellent job of teaching and calling Southern sets – two-couple figures in a big circle, with spoken instructions.

 

Tony Parkes

Billerica, Mass.