Product Details
Come & Trip It: Instrumental Dance Music 1780s-1920s

Come & Trip It: Instrumental Dance Music 1780s-1920s
Various Artists

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Track Listing

  1. Prima Donna Waltz - Judith Plant
  2. Jenny Lind Polka - Ellen Farren
  3. Minuet and Gavotte - Ellen Farren
  4. Country Fiddle Music: College Hornpipe/La Belle Catherine/Hunt the ... - Rodney Miller
  5. Natalie Polka [Mazurka] - Ellen Farren
  6. Flying Cloud Schottische - Judith Plant
  7. Victoria Galop - Alan Moore, Judith Plant
  8. Flirt Polka - Ellen Farren, Alan Moore
  9. Sonnambula Quadrille Number Two - Judith Plant
  10. Eliza Jane McCue - Gerard Schwarz
  11. Blaze Away - Gerard Schwarz
  12. Ma Ragtime Baby - Gerard Schwarz
  13. Hiawatha - Gerard Schwarz
  14. Chinatown, My Chinatown - Gerard Schwarz
  15. Irresistible - Gerard Schwarz
  16. At the Mississippi Cabaret - Dick Hyman & His Dance Orchestra
  17. Valse de Ma Coeur - Dick Hyman & His Dance Orchestra
  18. Kansas City Blues - Dick Hyman & His Dance Orchestra
  19. Hold Me - Dick Hyman & His Dance Orchestra
  20. Waltzing the Blues - Dick Hyman & His Dance Orchestra
  21. Sweet Man - Dick Hyman & His Dance Orchestra

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #276785 in Music
  • Released on: 1994-08-02
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .22 pounds

Customer Reviews

Treasured since childhood5
I have had tape recordings of this album since I was a child and am excited to find it on CD. It is truly a wonderful collection that will force you to get up and dance--you won't be able to resist! I can't add to the great review above except to say I heartily agree with everything that was said. I really love these songs.

Indispensible Music for Dancing (and Listening)5
Honestly, I'm flat-out floored to be the first to review this album. As a lover of early popular music and historical dance, this collection has always meant the world to me - for its selection and scope, it cannot be surpassed.

Three stellar orchestras are featured - the Federal Music Society tends to the Victorian era, Dick Hyman & his Dance Orchestra (need I even go into Hyman's musical contribution to culture) lovingly represent the Edwardian years through the early 1920's, and Gerard Schwartz and his Dance Orchestra treat the 1920's with charming respect and authenticity. The transition from one orchestra to the next is seamless, and the decades just drift by the ears.

Specific numbers that stand out include "Prima Donna Waltz", a wonderfully smooth composition - it practically begs to be danced to. "Country Fiddle Music", a set of six pieces, is a sheer delight. "Flying Cloud Schottische" is the ideal example of this dance - it lilts along, just like the steps demand. "Ma Ragtime Baby" is an utterly delicious cakewalk, with truly addictive usage of upbeats and that certain ineffable swagger that just sums up popular dance at the turn of the twentieth century. Wordy, yes - but it's just that good. "Kansas City Blues" is a marvel, and is PERFECTLY transcribed here. I have an original 78 record here that I've compared it to, and there isn't even the slightest difference. Wonderful. "Waltzing the Blues" is truly unique - it brings to mind the image of the sheiks and honeys of the 1920's embracing a dance of their forebearers, giving it their own little twist. I'm hard pressed to imagine violin and saxophone having a happier relationship musically than in this piece - sheer fun. Finally, we finish the album with an appropriately raucous Charleston, the classic "Sweet Man".

And, that's not all - the many offerings interspersed are truly wonderful, as well. This album is a MUST-HAVE for lovers of early popular music, and especially for vintage dance folks. Every piece is a gem, and ideally timed and arranged for dancing. It's a collection that I wouldn't part with for anything.

Wonderful5
If anyone needs proof how America has grown fat, listen to this album, especially the last dozen tracks. Once upon a time dancing was not merely convulsing in place. Nearly every selection here requires a limber body, and our forebears must have been up to it to be able to dance to such extraordinarily lively music. It is hard to believe it was once considered junk, mere hack work, throwaway culture. An utterly adorable tune like "At the Mississippi Cabaret" or "Hold Me" was a fad of the moment, if even of a moment, however brilliantly arranged as it was. It is further hard to believe popular music was so capable of charm, that it required -- indeed, thrived on vigorous social activity. Now we can only pine and sigh for a time when high commerce could, in its own way, yield high art.