Annotation:Right Foot Left Foot: Difference between revisions

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''Kitty lost her slipper going to the ball.''<br>
''Kitty lost her slipper going to the ball.''<br>
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Bayard's sets, all collected from southwestern Pennsylavania fiddlers, all have second strains that are different from one-another.  
Bayard's sets, all collected from southwestern Pennsylvania fiddlers, all have second strains that are different from one-another.  
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Revision as of 05:36, 24 September 2017


X:1 % T:Right Foot, Left Foot M:4/4 L:1/8 B:Bayard – Dance to the Fiddle (1981), No. 409A S:Thomas Patterson (Elizabeth, Pa.) c. 1930’s K:G d2|g2 Bc d2G2|BAGE D2z2|DEFG ABcd|e2d2 B3d| g2 Bc d2G2|BAGE D2z2|DEFG ABAF|G2G2G2 z2|| c2 ce G2 GE|CE Gc e4|d2 dg A2B2|cBce G2| c2 ce G2 GE|CE Gc e4|d2 dg A2B2|c2 cB c2|]



RIGHT FOOT, LEFT FOOT. AKA and see “Duck's Eyeball (2),” "Rainbow Schottische" (Pa.), “Stephen Baldwin's Schottische,” "Winter Night Schottische." American, Reel. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB'. The title comes from the rhyme associated with the piece:

Right foot, left foot, any foot at all,
Kitty lost her slipper going to the ball.

Bayard's sets, all collected from southwestern Pennsylvania fiddlers, all have second strains that are different from one-another.

Additional notes

Source for notated version: - Thomas Patterson (Elizabeth, Pa., 1930's), George Strosnider (elderly fiddler from Greene County, Pa., 1930's), John Meighen (elderly fiddler from Greene County, Pa., 1930's), Hogg (Pa., 1948) [Bayard].

Printed sources : - Bayard (Dance to the Fiddle), 1981; No. 409A-D, pp 388-389.

Recorded sources: -



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