I was feeling nostalgic for the Salty Dog Rag pages I put together years back, many mourned computer crashes ago. I'm still dancing the Salty Dog Rag--in fact teaching it to my son now. I thought that old stuff was long, long, gone. But wait! Is that the Wayback Machine I'm reminded of? Thanks to that and a research paper someone posted online citing the old URL, I'm in business again! thanks Wayback Machine. (I'll have you know that I made that site in Notepad before I started messing with NetObjects Fusion...and it shows. Eh? what's that you say? sorry, I'm getting old, can't hear you...)
The Salty Dog Rag is a song recorded by Red Foley, and it's also a Dance
The Salty Dog Rag
Away down yonder in the state of Arkansas
Where my great-grandpa met my great-grandma
They drink apple cider and they get on a jag,
And they dance all night to the Salty Dog Rag.
They play an old fiddle like you never heard before,
They play the only tune that they ever did know-
It's a ragtime ditty and the rhythm don't drag,
Now here's the way you dance to the Salty Dog Rag.
Chorus: One foot front, drag it back,
Then you start to ball the jack.
You shake and you break and then you sag.
If your partner zigs, you're supposed to zag.
Your heart is light, you tap your feet
In rhythm with that ragtime beat.
(Just) pack up your troubles in your old kit bag
And dance all night to the Salty Dog Rag.
Away down South 'neath the old Southern moon,
The possum's up a tree and the hounds've treed a coon
They'll hitch up the buggy to a broken-down nag
And go out dancing to the Salty Dog Rag.
They tune up the fiddle and they rosin up the bow.
They strike a C chord on the old banjo
Then holler hang on 'cause we ain’t gonna drag.
Now here's the way you dance to the Salty Dog Rag.
(Chorus)
In the summer of '95, there was a lively discussion in rec.folk.dancing about how to do the Salty Dog Rag. With the authors' permission, I collected some of these descriptions.
If you live in or are visiting the San Francisco Area you can still, in 2011, join Changs International Folk Dancers for a Salty Dog Rag.
Friday, March 25, 2011
Monday, March 21, 2011
fantastical recommendations
Wonderful, well-written fantasy:
Ysabel by Guy Gavriel Kay (and I'm reading through his other stuff which is great but Ysabel is still my favorite, set in Provence with echoes back to ancient Rome and before)
The Sharing Knife Series by Lois McMaster Bujold set in post-apocalyptic american west
Fun:
Lonely Werewolf Girl by Martin Millar (heroin addicted werewolf rescued by humans and living among them in London . Her sister is a top fashion designer)
The best, original vampire adventure:
Sunshine by Robin McKinley (food, post apocalypse, mysterious magical powers, fantastic, and well-written)
Urban fantasy:
Greywalker (and series) by Kat Richardson starts a series about a Private investigator whose near-death experience allows her to act in the half-world of ghosts and more. They start hiring her to solve their problems.
War for the Oaks by Emma Bull --set in Minneapolis , our heroine is conscripted in a fairy war which wonderfully involves rock music and motorcycles. fun.
Singer of Souls by Adam Stemple (he's the son of Jane Yolen)--Our hero's talents for making particular songs about people are noticed by the fairies.
YA/Children's
The New Policeman by Kate Thompson. Music, fairies and a universal lack of time result in two worlds colliding.
Tithe by Holly Black. Will our Heroine become the latest tribute that allows the fairy court to rule for 10 more years?
Fire and Hemlock by Diana Wynne Jones-- a wonderful, wonderful re-telling of the Tam Lin story. Read the 398: Tam Lin: an Old Ballad retold by Jane Yolen as a preface. If you like this one, I also recommend Thomas the Rhymer by Ellen Kushner.
The Naming (and sequels) by Alison Croggon Epic fantasy, coming of age, hero on a journey story, but our hero is a, wait for it, GIRL! Really well done. Don't know why this hasn't caught on bigger but maybe because Alison Croggon is from down under.
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