Frontier Fiddler, 1990, Kenneth C. Kartchner, Univ. Arizona Press, 280 pp. plus casette tape of about 30 tunes. Still in print.
This is more a listing of contents; I hope that I can talk a son-in-law fiddler into a review. The book has been mentioned a 2-3 times with regard to specific songs by Richie and Les, but little has been said about the book itself.
Mormon fiddler Kartchner began to play dances in 1902, mostly in Arizona. He worked as a cowboy, forest ranger, and for the Fish and Wildlife Service.
Although the book is an important record of the life of a Mormon family in Arizona, its interest for musicians lies in the appendices and tape cassette. Appendix A- Principal Fiddle Tunes played by Kartchner. Tunes are listed under these headings: Hoedowns, Reels and Hornpipes Fox Trots, One-steps, Two-steps and Polkas Schottisches Waltzes A number of these tunes were not originally waltzes, etc.
Appendix B Brief Analysis of Kartchner's Playing Style Droning and "a driving rhythm characterized by off-beat elements... pervade Kartchner's music." Examples are shown.
Appendix C Dance Descriptions
Appendix D Seventeen Fiddle Tune Transcriptions (Some names local; check Bluegrass Messenger and Ceolas)
Black Hills Waltz (Les was looking for an ABC in an earlier posting) Bobtailed Mule Old "C" Waltz Cacklin' Hen Chicago Glide The Drunkard's Hiccups Grey Eagle Johnny Blevin's Tune Leather Britches Pinedale Waltz Rattlesnake Schottische Sally Johnson Sweets O'Weaver Tom Wagner Walk Along John to Kansas
Cassette Tape The tape has no markings and no listing of tunes. Tracks were home-recorded over the years, with piano accompaniment. The names of most of the tunes are announced before they are played, but the sound is muffled and difficult to understand. I hope to get my son-in-law to go through them.