On Jan 3, 2020, at 11:35 AM, Erik Hoffman via Contra Callers 
<contracallers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:

> ...
> I'd look for other good 40-bar tunes like:
>       • Three Thin Dimes
>       • Three-way Hornpipe
>       • The Snoring Mrs. Gobiel
>       • the 5-part Fox Hunter's Jig
> ...

Those titles could be good leads, but beware that when a title is a associated 
with a 40-bar version of a tune, it may also be associated with versions of 
other lengths.

For example, "The Snoring Mrs. Gobiel" (a/k/a ("[La] Ronfleuse Gobiel") is 
indeed commonly played as a 40-bar tune, as in the rendition by La Bottine 
Souriante at

     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cvLY38H9R0I

However, the Traditional Tune Archive's page on the tune

     https://tunearch.org/wiki/Ronfleuse_Gobeil

shows both 32-bar and 40-bar versions, the essential difference being that the 
B part is played only once in the 32-bar version and twice in the 40-bar 
version.  The 32-bar  version is almost identical to the one in _The New 
England Fiddler's Repertoire_ (at least in my second edition).  I presume the 
editors of NEFR chose a 32-bar version to fit standard-length contras.  The 
annotations at

     https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Ronfleuse_Gobeil

also mention a version lacking the C part recorded by Jos Bouchard under the 
title  "Reel St-Siméon" and a slightly crooked version recorded by Isidore 
Soucy under the title "Gigue des vieux souliers" (Old Shoes Jig).

Unfortunately if a tune has been recorded in versions with different numbers of 
bars, the sample snippets at Amazon and other sites are often too short to 
reveal which version is being offered.

--Jim
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