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'''COWBOY WALTZ [1]'''. AKA and see "Cavalier's Waltz." Old-Time, Waltz. D Major. Standard tuning. ABB' (Phillips/1995): AABB (Phillips/1989). A simplified version of "Keller's Walz." Paul Tyler (Fiddle-L, 02/02/06) remarks that the 'A' and 'B' strains of the tune are each reminiscent of other tunes. The 'A' strain, for example, reminds of Eddy Arnold's pop song "Cattle Call," and Tyler also hears a "Minnesota Dutchman" waltz recorded as the "St. Paul's Waltz" by Whoopee John Wilfhart. "I first heard it played by Herman Fox," writes Tyler, "an old German concertinist in Fort Wayne, Indiana, who I met in 1976. (Indiana fiddler) Lotus Dickey played a similar tune. Herman sang a snatch of German lyrics in referring to the tune. He also called it 'Cheese, Cheese, Limburger Cheese'. Bruno Rudzinski, a wild Polish concertinist from Chicago who recorded in 1928 played that strain as the 'Pawel Waltz'." These different, but related melodies may have had a common ancestor in German tradition. Paul Gifford says he believes the melody was in circulation "among children of Germans who came to Ravenna, Michigan, after the Civil War."  
'''COWBOY WALTZ [1]'''. AKA and see "Cavalier's Waltz." Old-Time, Waltz. D Major. Standard tuning. ABB' (Phillips/1995): AABB (Phillips/1989). A simplified version of "Keller's Walz." Paul Tyler (Fiddle-L, 02/02/06) remarks that the 'A' and 'B' strains of the tune are each reminiscent of other tunes. The 'A' strain, for example, reminds of Eddy Arnold's pop song "Cattle Call," and Tyler also hears a "Minnesota Dutchman" waltz recorded as the "St. Paul's Waltz" by Whoopee John Wilfhart. "I first heard it played by Herman Fox," writes Tyler, "an old German concertinist in Fort Wayne, Indiana, who I met in 1976. (Indiana fiddler) Lotus Dickey played a similar tune. Herman sang a snatch of German lyrics in referring to the tune. He also called it 'Cheese, Cheese, Limburger Cheese'. Bruno Rudzinski, a wild Polish concertinist from Chicago who recorded in 1928 played that strain as the 'Pawel Waltz'." These different, but related melodies may have had a common ancestor in German tradition. Paul Gifford says he believes the melody was in circulation "among children of Germans who came to Ravenna, Michigan, after the Civil War."  
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Revision as of 10:34, 6 May 2019


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 Theme code Index    3H3H3H 3H3H3H
 Also known as    Cavalier's Waltz
 Composer/Core Source    
 Region    United States
 Genre/Style    Old-Time
 Meter/Rhythm    Waltz/Valse/Vals
 Key/Tonic of    D
 Accidental    2 sharps
 Mode    Ionian (Major)
 Time signature    3/4
 History    
 Structure    ABB'
 Editor/Compiler    Biography:Stacy Phillips
 Book/Manuscript title    Book:Fiddlecase Tunebook
 Tune and/or Page number    pp. 12-13
 Year of publication/Date of MS    1989
 Artist    Biography:New Lost City Ramblers
 Title of recording    String Band Instrumentals
 Record label/Catalogue nr.    Folkways FA 2492
 Year recorded    1964
 Media    
 Score   ()   


COWBOY WALTZ [1]. AKA and see "Cavalier's Waltz." Old-Time, Waltz. D Major. Standard tuning. ABB' (Phillips/1995): AABB (Phillips/1989). A simplified version of "Keller's Walz." Paul Tyler (Fiddle-L, 02/02/06) remarks that the 'A' and 'B' strains of the tune are each reminiscent of other tunes. The 'A' strain, for example, reminds of Eddy Arnold's pop song "Cattle Call," and Tyler also hears a "Minnesota Dutchman" waltz recorded as the "St. Paul's Waltz" by Whoopee John Wilfhart. "I first heard it played by Herman Fox," writes Tyler, "an old German concertinist in Fort Wayne, Indiana, who I met in 1976. (Indiana fiddler) Lotus Dickey played a similar tune. Herman sang a snatch of German lyrics in referring to the tune. He also called it 'Cheese, Cheese, Limburger Cheese'. Bruno Rudzinski, a wild Polish concertinist from Chicago who recorded in 1928 played that strain as the 'Pawel Waltz'." These different, but related melodies may have had a common ancestor in German tradition. Paul Gifford says he believes the melody was in circulation "among children of Germans who came to Ravenna, Michigan, after the Civil War."

Source for notated version: Mike Seegar and Mosheh Savitsky [Phillips].

Printed sources: Phillips (Fiddle Case Tunebook: Old Time Southern), 1989; pp. 12–13. Phillips (Traditional American Fiddle Tunes, vol. 2), 1995; p. 247.

Recorded sources: Folkways FA 2492, New Lost City Ramblers – "String Band Instrumentals" (1964. Learned from a Folkways recording called "Woody Guthrie and Friends"). New Lost City Ramblers – "Out Standing in their Field."