The following is from David Millstone, who is not a list member, but asked me 
to share it.
David Smukler
Syracuse, NY

----

I'm happy to announce the release of A Hand to the Band! [see url at the end of 
this message], a celebration of dance musicians over the last half century. 
This project, centered on an interactive map, looks at groups who played for 
square dances or contra dances, who were among the early such musicians in a 
given community, and who made a recording. 

For each band, you'll find information about the musicians and instruments, the 
release date of their first album (cassette, LP, or CD), the cover image, an 
instrumental track from that album, and comments about the band, usually from 
one of the group's members. At the moment, there are more than 275 groups 
represented in the collection.

When you first open the site, the map displays all of the bands. However, you 
can also narrow your focus by geography and by chronology, so if you're 
interested in bands from the upper Midwest who recorded between 1980 and 1985, 
that's easy to arrange. There's also a robust search engine that lets you look 
for particular musicians or bands. The technical wizardry that makes this 
possible was provided by Andrew Frock, a young programmer who grew up in the 
dance world. Without his expertise, all of the information I gathered would be 
sitting on my desktop computer. He was a fantastic collaborator, and he is 
sharing the tech underpinnings of the site via GitHub.

I started this project from a New England perspective, thinking I knew all the 
early New England bands. (Surprise! I didn't.) Naively (and arrogantly) I 
thought there might be a handful of bands elsewhere around the country who had 
also recorded early on. (Surprise! There were far more than a handful.) In 
short, compiling the information for this project gave me a deep appreciation 
for the many musicians around the country who lifted dancers' feet over the 
decades.

>From the beginning, I was interested in musicians playing for square dances 
>and for contra dances. When I started dancing, in the early 1970s, both forms 
>would turn up on an evening's program, and I continue to enjoy both styles of 
>country dance. This eclectic approach in this project means that there is a 
>wide variety of musical styles represented here, tunes from northern New 
>England as well as southern Appalachia.

Enough! Enjoy the site and please tell others about it. Let us know [using the 
email ContraSquareMap at gmail dot com] if we need to make corrections or 
additions.

David Millstone

https://ahandfortheband.org/

[email protected]
_______________________________________________
Contra Callers mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

Reply via email to