Radiolab - Birdie in the Cage
Episode Date: June 21, 2024People have been doing the square dance since before the Declaration of Independence. But does that mean it should be THE American folk dance? That question took us on a journey from Appalachian front... porches, to dance classes across our nation, to the halls of Congress, and finally a Kansas City convention center. And along the way, we uncovered a secret history of square dancing that made us see how much of our national identity we could stuff into that square, and what it means for a dance to be of the people, by the people, and for the people.Special thanks to Jim Mayo, Claude Fowler, Paul Gifford, Jim Maczko, Jim Davis, Paul Moore, Jack Pladdys, Mary Jane Wegener, Kinsey Brooke and Connie Keener.We have some exciting news! In this “Zoozve” episode, Radiolab named its first-ever quasi-moon, and now it's your turn! Radiolab has teamed up with The International Astronomical Union to launch a global naming contest for one of Earth’s quasi-moons. This is your chance to make your mark on the heavens. Submit your name ideas now through September, or vote on your favorites starting in November: https://radiolab.org/moonSubscribe to our newsletter!! It includes short essays, recommendations, and details about other ways to interact with the show. Sign up (https://radiolab.org/newsletter)!Radiolab is supported by listeners like you. Support Radiolab by becoming a member of The Lab (https://members.radiolab.org/) today.Follow our show on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @radiolab, and share your thoughts with us by emailing radiolab@wnyc.org.Leadership support for Radiolab’s science programming is provided by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Science Sandbox, a Simons Foundation Initiative, and the John Templeton Foundation. Foundational support for Radiolab was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.
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You're listening to Radiolab.
Radiolab.
From WNYC.
Rewind.
This is Radiolab.
I'm Lula Miller.
So around this time of year, in the States anyway, the days are getting longer,
the nights are getting warmer. So everybody just find a partner. It's dancing weather. And if you
don't know them, that's fine. You can just walk up to somebody and say, Hi, I'm so and so. Will you
dance with me? You know, time for weddings and hoedowns and of course the great American tradition,
square dancing.
But whose American tradition is it?
As we come up on July 4th, a time to ponder our Americanness, we are rerunning a piece
from the archives that gets into the surprising roots of square dancing.
It comes from the wonderful producer and reporter Tracy Hunt.
Tracy, we love you, we miss you.
In conversation with Jad, and it actually begins.
If anybody needs a partner,
just raise your hand and then look around for other hands that are up.
With the two of them hosting an actual square dance. So here we go.
Join hands and circle left.
Back to the ride, don't take all night.
A little while ago, Tracy and I threw a dance party over to a place called the Bell House.
That's in Brooklyn.
We had a live band.
We had a caller named Alex Kramer.
We swung our partners around.
You swing mine and I'll swing yours.
We do-si-do.
We do for the clam.
I'll swing mine, you swing yours.
Who might have even shot through the hole in the old tin can.
Drawing hands in that pretty little ring.
One couple will make an arch.
Duck for the oyster.
There were about 100 of us there that night,
learning the very American art of...
of square dancing.
But, but, but...
You might be asking,
why would we do this?
Why would Radiolab do a square dancing event in Brooklyn in 2019?
Well, it's Tracy's fault.
Why can't I hear anything?
Oh, ha! It's not plugged in!
Oh, it all goes back. I need to find a frickin' adapter.
To a conversation Tracy and I had in the studio before we ever got up on stage together. Okay, um,
so square dancing. Lay it on me. A dance that I should say before I started reporting this story
I'd never seen. I kind of knew about it.
Saw it in the musical Oklahoma.
It was inflicted on me in grade school.
I know.
Yeah, but I think that's just an inheritance
from growing up in the South.
Well, actually, no.
It's not just a Southern thing.
Besides the fact that it somehow missed me in Miami,
it was taught in pretty much every other school
in the country.
Huh.
Quick scan of the audience.
How many of you had to do square dancing in school?
That's something that we actually confirmed later at the event.
Oh my god, so many of you.
Wow, most of the audience.
I feel like that was most of the audience.
But the thing is, it doesn't just stop at schools.
Square dancing is a state dance, or the state folk dance, in about 30 states.
30! Alabama, California, Idaho, Maryland, Oklahoma, Texas, Washington, and on and on
and on. And on top of that, it's been pushed in front of Congress on two separate occasions
where people fought to make it the national folk dance of America, elevating it right
up there with a bald eagle.
By the way, that's a red tail hawk because eagles do not sound as cool as we think they do.
And, you know, square dancing isn't exactly what we thought it was either.
I mean, you know, it didn't really kind of mesh with my idea of America exactly.
But when I started digging and I went super deep, I gotta say it kinda messed with some
of my ideas of my America and your America and our America.
Mm, okay.
So just to get things started off, I'm gonna take you back to the 1890s or 1890-ish.
In the late 1800s, there were many immigrants coming to this country
from southern and eastern Europe. According to folk dance scholar Phil
Jamieson, at that time a new wave of immigrants were coming to America.
Italians and Slavs and Polish people and Jewish people. And they were seen as
very different from the earlier waves of English and Irish and German immigrants. And the old stock Americans sort of pushed back against these immigrants and said,
wait a minute, we are the real Americans. Our ancestors were here first. And, you know,
think of 1890 is when the Daughters of the American Revolution was founded.
We were a generation past the Emancipation Proclamation and the Trail of Tears, and in 1892, the Pledge
of Allegiance was put into our public schools.
And so, Phil says around this time, there was a national conversation bubbling up about
who we as Americans are.
Like when we say us, who is us?
Well, according to Phil, one answer to that question came from a music scholar.
An English ballad collector named Cecil Sharp who came to the Southern mountains.
From about 1916 to 1918, he went all around the Appalachian mountains in the southern
U.S., visiting families, sitting on front porches, and asking people to sing. Remember, remember the other day
when you in town are drinking...
And was astounded that people were still singing
old British ballads that had long since died out in England.
...and I did bobby and...
They were singing about Barbara Allen,
and they were singing about lords and ladies and
milk white steeds and bloody daggers and all that.
Now this was interesting to him because Sharp's idea, and he wasn't alone in this, is that
the people living in southern Appalachia, the white people living there.
These people had been isolated here in the mountains for generations.
And were therefore the keepers of the purest Anglo-Saxon heritage in America.
And when he was in eastern Kentucky, he came across that pure heritage and dance form.
He came across some people doing a square dance that was a demonstration for him.
And the thing about this dance that he was seeing, it had some elements of French dances.
French cotillions and quadrilles.
Where six couples would be in some sort of formation, holding hands, moving in a circle.
But also parts of it that looked like old Scots-Irish and English country dances.
Where couples would link arms and skip around each other, then make arches for other couples to duck through.
So all of these different moves were coming together
in this one dance he was seeing happening
right in front of him.
And he just made this assumption
that these were Anglo-Saxon people
and this is the folk dance of our ancestors.
Now obviously there were a lot of different kinds of
people living in those mountains that he was ignoring.
But despite that, or maybe more like because of it,
this idea that square dancing was quintessentially American just took off.
Shortly after that is when they started teaching folk dances in schools.
So the first place I heard any of this was
this tweet thread that was very tantalizing.
It sort of pegged Henry Ford as the mastermind behind this white supremacist plot to put
square dancing in all the schools in order to like save white children from jazz or something.
I see.
So this is an attempt at whitewashing.
Basically, yes.
Got it.
Now, first of all, Henry Ford was an anti-Semite,
and for some reason thought Jews invented jazz and hated jazz,
and he tried to promote dances from, quote, northern peoples, but...
Henry Ford had nothing to do with teaching square dancing
in physical education classes.
That part of the tweet thread isn't quite true.
But the whitewashing part isn't exactly wrong.
It was actually one dance educator in Michigan,
Grace Ryan in Michigan,
who started teaching the square dance
as a way to assimilate the children of European immigrants to be true Americans.
More teachers picked it up.
She wrote some books.
That kind of popularized it around the country among teachers.
And before you know it, bam, square dancing in schools.
From Tuscumbia, Missouri, they call themselves the Lake of Ozarks Square Dance.
And then the dance started to spread.
People were dancing in community halls, in public squares, in churches, in barns.
By the 30s, square dancing is all over the radio.
As TV's start popping up in American homes.
Square dance is too.
You know, you could just go to YouTube and like Google lucky strike square dancing and you see this like really weird commercial where there's actually like cigarettes doing the square dance.
By the 40s and 50s, it's huge.
The square dancing craze sweeping across the nation
keeps on growing in New York in a big way.
Square dancing clubs start forming all over the place.
From Burbank, California.
Out west, it starts to get a little yee-haw
with men in cowboy shirts and boots
and women in big fluffy skirts.
It's so beautiful.
In 1951, they form a national organization that puts on this national square dancing convention,
where tens of thousands of people gather from all over the country and square dance together.
Square dancing is part of the heritage of the United States,
born with the very birth of the country.
And then...
The square dancers of America want something from Congress.
They want their dancing, square dancing,
officially named the National Folk Dance of the United States.
These groups went to Congress
to say that square dancing should be the American dance.
The square dance is indeed uniquely American.
It's American American.
And actually it was officially the National national folk dance from 1982 to 1983.
So I really wanted to talk to the people who were part of this effort.
But a lot of them are dead.
You mean, oh, so this is an old movement?
This is an old movement.
But this is Leslie.
I did manage to find the congressman who introduced some of these bills.
His name is, hello, Leon Panetta.
Hey, how are you, Tracy?
Former Secretary of Defense and former director of the CIA, Leon Panetta.
The Leon Panetta?
The Clinton Leon Panetta?
The Clinton Leon Panetta, former White House chief of staff.
I think this is a moment for a strong, steady hand.
Usually these days he's on CNN answering hard questions about drones.
The responsibility of the intelligence community.
National security.
It has to be comprehensive.
So I think he was a little surprised when I called him up and said, you know, hey, you
want to talk about square dancing?
Well, it came out of nowhere and brought back us.
He introduced a bill about square dancing?
Yep.
Well, I actually did folk dancing when I was in grammar school
and enjoyed it then and always kind of kept track of...
Back in the 1980s, he was a congressman out of California.
And there was a couple that were involved in folk dancing,
George and Anne Holzer, I believe were their names.
He had some square dancers who were very supportive of his campaigns.
So it was very much a politically kind of like, favoritized type of thing.
They came to me with the idea.
But he was actually pretty kind of passionate about it
when I was talking to him.
Oh, yeah.
I thought it made sense to try to establish and recognize
it as the national folk dance.
Well, on the face of it, all that sounds harmless enough.
But there was this kind of immediate and very muscular opposition to this bill.
This House subcommittee today suddenly discovered that about the only people who would be happy
to commemorate square dancing are square dancers.
One by one, dance historians, folklorists got in front of the mic and said, you got
to be kidding me.
This makes absolutely no sense. This is a nation of immigrants.
The United States is a country filled with a lot of different kinds of people from a
lot of different parts of the world.
To single out a dance that represents even a very small fraction of British origin immigrants
would be insulting to every other cultural group in this country.
Everyone was like, square dancing?
Seriously?
What about hula? Isn't that dancing? Seriously? What about hula?
Isn't that a folk dance?
What about sas?
Or for that matter, break dancing,
as an expression of urban folk culture.
Not to mention the people who were here first.
Native Americans who have their own dance traditions.
Um, you know, one bit of testimony that actually stuck with me was from the 1988 hearing.
It was a woman named Raina Green.
She was at one time the head of the American Folklore Society and she is a member of the
Cherokee Nation.
And she said, my grandmother has only ever done the square dance in schools.
That's the only place she ever did it. And at the same time, she was forbidden from doing her own tribal dances.
And so to come and say that square dancing is now the national folk dance
would be to dishonor her and dishonor all her ancestors.
And even just to put a finer point on it, I mean, you take something like the massacre
at Wounded Knee, I mean, that was the culmination of a series of events that I think began with
a dance.
Wow.
So, it wasn't simply that they were being forgotten.
I think they were being very violently suppressed at times.
So, the dance has, the question of what dance you do is not always, it's sometimes violent, you know?
Yeah.
So I'm curious about like what would be your reaction to that argument?
Well, I mean, I certainly appreciate Indian tradition and what happened to the Indians throughout history.
There's no question how abused they were. At the same time, it's important to recognize some of the things that make the United States
what it is today.
So I always remember de Tocqueville's comments when he came to this country and went to the
frontier and, by the way, saw people folk dancing at that time.
But he mentioned something that I think is particularly important.
He said the difference about America is that in those small communities throughout the
West, people care for one another. They have a sense of community.
Yeah. I don't think that that was when the Tocqueville was here and he was looking at
the West. I don't think that that was much of a time of togetherness.
I mean, plenty of Indian tribes
are being driven off their land.
No, it was tough.
It was a...
I get, I don't want to like start a whole thing,
but I guess it's just, I'm kind of,
don't want to have like a romanticized view
of that time period.
No, I don't think we have to have a romanticized view.
I mean, the fact remains that all of us in our communities
do recognize the importance of helping one another. And that isn't romanticizing a damn
thing. And I just think at some point, it would be a nice gesture to all of those that
enjoy that to make clear that the United States recognizes the square
dance is particularly unique to the history and to the culture of America.
Well, I really appreciate you taking the time to talk about this.
Sure.
That was a... I wish there was a slightly more satisfying response there.
I feel like you guys were not having the same conversation or something. That was like...
Yeah, to say the least.
And it made me realize that, you know, maybe I shouldn't be talking to a politician.
I should be talking to square dancers.
And so I made some phone calls.
Oh, are you Linda?
I'm Linda.
I traveled to the heartland of America and...
Square dancers hug. Okay.
That's called a yellow rock.
What I found out about square dancing was...
actually really surprising.
Like what?
Well, you're gonna have to wait till after the break.
Oh. Well, then.
Radiolab will continue in a moment.
I'm Jad. This is Radiolab. We are back from break with producer Tracy Hunt doing the dance of the square,
where we haven't actually done the dance yet, that's coming. Where we've left off so far,
we'd seen what happened when a bunch of square dance
evangelists took their cause to Congress, pushed for square dance to be the American
folk dance. People pushed back against that, claiming actually no, the square dance leaves
people out. It actually represents something truly painful in our country's past. That's
where we left off.
Yeah, but that was in the 80s, more than 30 years ago. And I wanted to see what was going
on with square dancing today. And I was making a bunch of calls and I eventually talked to
this one woman named Linda Peterson. She was probably the effort to make square dancing today. And I was making a bunch of calls and I eventually talked to this one woman named Linda Peterson. She was part of the effort to make square dancing the state
folk dance for the state of Maryland. And she invited me to the National Square Dancing
Convention.
Hi, I'm in the lobby of the downtown Marriott in Kansas City, Missouri, in this huge convention
center. People were just arriving.
They had their suitcases.
You can see, like, they were bringing in these costume racks, I guess,
filled with big, huge skirts, Western shirts, cowboy boots, lots of glitter,
lots of crinoline.
And anyway, Lynn and I had planned to meet in the lobby of this hotel.
So hopefully she will notice that I'm the person with the big fuzzy microphone, also the black one. I will say that I did
find black squared answers there. You did? I counted while I was there about 11.
Out of how many? About 3,000. Oh wow wow. So, I guess one in 300.
Oh, that's a ratio.
Yeah. But eventually,
oh, are you Linda?
Linda spotted me.
I'm good. Square dancers hug.
Okay.
Then she just takes me around and she just starts.
This is Tracy. Hi Tracy just starts introducing me to everybody.
Hi, glad to meet you.
Hi Tracy.
In the score dance world.
Each person was just friendlier than the last.
There was an opening ceremony, some speeches, a prayer.
Eventually we did finally get to see some dancing.
And it sounds like this.
Wow. And there's these super complicated calls and instead of a traditional fiddle band with
a banjo and so on, they're actually playing 80s pop hits.
Wow.
And this is actually common.
I talked to this one caller who was like,
yeah, I use JLo sometimes.
See.
Yes.
I actually walked into one room where they were using
Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah.
["Hallelujah"]
So they really do use just all kinds of music.
And you know, it was just a long ways off from like, you know, Oklahoma style Western
frontier version of square dancing that I had in my head.
And when I started going around talking to people, it was also pretty clear that this This is my mic and I'm recording. That's a microphone. It is a microphone.
It was also pretty clear that this push to make it the national folk dance was kind of waning.
So after a while I think the square dance folks decided, you know what, let's let it, let's not stir up trouble.
Let's keep a positive attitude and image for our activity.
This is Roy. I talked to him and his wife, Betsy Gata.
Right.
Betsy Gata is kind of a big deal in the square dancing world.
Anyway, they made it sound like they had heard the backlash
and sort of in some way kind of got the point.
We were talking about that, and there were times
when the square dance activity, to be perfectly honest,
for a long time, it was a white activity.
I think that that does make someone like me,
who I'm a black person, as you probably tell, go, huh?
Why is this activity that's seemingly foreign
by and created by white people,
why does that have to be the national American dance, you
know? And it kind of does feel like a little, like I'm being excluded or I'm being told
that this is what it means to be American.
And a lot of people in our community took heed of that and said, yeah, you know, there's a valid point. But we still kind of felt that it was the one dance form that
hopefully transcended all of that because it is all inclusive.
Granted, it wasn't. But then again, America wasn't an inclusive society.
And what we kind of wanted to do was bring everybody in.
That was our strategy. We wanted to set the hook
and reel everybody into the group.
And what sort of came out for me over time was that for them, you know, being the national
dance, it wasn't so much like trying to make this like piece of white culture like enshrined
it into, you know, some sort of national symbol, it was more about good marketing.
You know?
You know, to make square dancing better,
to get more people and keep them.
Numbers are declining.
Yeah.
And so, because...
Interesting.
So, their idea was this is a way to...
It's not about let's whitewash America,
or maybe it was, but that wasn't the sort of spoken idea.
It was more like let's not die.
Yeah.
And while I was there, they really made a point about how
screen dancing is really, really just open and inclusive.
What makes it unique to us?
This is Dana Shermer.
He was the president of Collor Lab.
That's the group that trains all the collars.
And he's also the guy who said he uses J-Lo sometimes.
I think when you hear the music, the first time you step in there and touch hands
The magic it just goes right through your hands You can just feel the warmth and the friendliness of all the people in the group with you like you come into the square and
You don't care who they are where they came from or what happens. Nobody knows anything about anybody else
But you all have to work together, you know, you're in the group and
but you all have to work together. You know, you're in the group and you're gonna have fun.
And I don't look, I'm an accountant.
I don't go out there looking for accountants.
I go out there and get in the square and what you do?
I'm a farmer, I'm a doctor, I'm a lawyer, you know,
doesn't matter, we have all kinds of people
and we're all gonna dance together.
It's a teamwork, you're doing something together as a team.
Yeah, it's like an equalizer.
Yeah, we're all together.
This is something that I heard over and over and over again,
that square dancing welcomes everyone.
It doesn't matter who you are.
You don't worry about sexual orientation.
You don't worry about color.
You don't worry about where they're from.
All you worry about is, can they square dance?
Can they help me have a good time square dancing?
That's all that matters.
So. Can they help me have a good time square dancing? That's all that matters.
I can remember when we were, we the square dance world, were making some strides and opening out.
In 1965, which was the year of Martin Luther King's march from Selma to Montgomery,
the national convention was in Dallas, Texas. And I was there and the country in the south
was scary enough. We drove through the south in a car from New Jersey and for
a while we were followed because they thought we might have been outside
agitators who were going to register people to vote or something. And we were
just a family coming back from the Square Dance Convention. But for some
reason, and I do not know the background,
that was the year that a group of African-American dancers
from, I believe, the Detroit and or Chicago areas
decided to attend the national convention.
This could have been very scary in that atmosphere,
but they were very smart. And I watched them. I was just out of were very smart and I watched them. I was just
out of high school and I watched them and what they did was they never entered
a square uninvited. They started a group. They'd stand on the floor and put up
their hand with three fingers up which means we need three couples and let
people come to them who would be comfortable dancing with them.
And they never forced the issue. If three couples needed a fourth and they all said come and join us,
they would fill that square. And there was not a single problem at that convention and the,
you know, the African-American dancers have been part of the activity since then.
I'm going to let y'all go.
Thank you. Love you.
Then we'll line again.
Breaks through just in case.
Huh.
I mean, walking away from that visit, what did you make of all that?
Of the convention, the whole thing?
Well, you know, it was a great experience.
I felt very welcomed and everyone was really, really sweet.
But you know, it still kind of felt like it was welcome and come do our thing, you know?
And I have talked to some Black screen dancers and LGBTQ screen dancers who, you know, didn't want to go on the record with me.
But they said, you know,
we don't really feel comfortable coming to this convention every year.
And all that to just say that, you know,
it just doesn't really necessarily feel like it could be like my dance.
It's still kind of their dance.
Yeah.
But I talked to Phil Jamison after I went to the convention.
And Phil, if you remember, he was the guy who told us about Cecil Sharp and the mountains
and kind of the traditional story about where square dancing comes from.
And during that conversation, he really kind of upended this whole idea of my dance or
our dance and their dance.
I spent about 10 years of my life as a professional musician and dancer.
So Phil was actually a musician and dancer for a long time,
and he was actually part of this club group called.
The Greengrass Cloggers.
I was on the road for seven years with that group,
and we traveled all over the US and overseas as well.
And he says a lot of times after these performances, people would come up and ask him, you know,
where did these dances, these folk dances like the square dance, where did it come from?
And I go and look in books and try to read up on the history of these dances and all
the books that were out there, square dance books, just talked about the British Isles
and the, you know about the British Isles and
you know the the hearty pioneers coming to the mountains with their dances. And you know they would basically tell the same story that he told us, you know, Cecil Sharpe and
how this dance is a combination of French and English and Irish dances. But at a certain point,
Phil says...
It just didn't seem right to me because the population of Appalachia has never been pure white Anglo-Saxon.
It's always been a mix.
Of course, there were Native American people there to begin with, but there were enslaved
people with the earliest settlers.
And there was slavery throughout the southern mountains.
And you know, when you look at the the musical traditions the fiddle is accompanied by the banjo and that has African roots and
you look at the vocal traditions.
When I first come to this country.
Yes people still sing the old British ballads but they also sing gospel songs, blues songs, tin can alley
songs and minstrel songs, all kinds of things. So around 2001, I just started digging into
it and I just wanted to get to the bottom of the story and you know figure it out. So Phil would end up spending 14 years looking at letters and travel narratives, historical
accounts and dance manuals, anything he can get his hands on.
And what I discovered was there was an evolution of the dances that occurred during the 19th
century and they're you know basically a multicultural hybrid that have elements of dances from the
British Isles, Reels, and there's African American and Native American influence as
well, all in the mix.
Oh, well, what does he mean?
Does he mean?
Well, he means that they were all doing these dances, not just white people.
This was shared culture back in the day. You'd find African American folks dancing these dances,
and white folks dancing them,
and Native American folks were dancing them.
And things from their own past would creep into this dance.
For example, there's this one move in square dancing
where you have one dancer in the middle.
And some people think this is actually related
to something called the ring shout,
which is like a traditional dance
from West and Central Africa.
And the crazy thing is that he told me, the thing that makes the square dance,
the square dance.
Dance calling itself comes from the black tradition.
There's no evidence that that ever happened in the European dances, but
there's a lot of call and response in African dances.
And the earliest dance callers were all black fiddlers
who were playing for dances.
TARYN SOUTHWICK Basically, Phil told me that when you were back in Europe,
the way you learned these dances is that you had a dancing master,
you had a dancing school, you go to these schools
and you learn all the steps.
But when you came to America, to colonial America,
there weren't as many dancing masters and dance schools to go around.
And so the way that the fiddlers who were performing at these dances
could tell people what the next move was, was to call it.
And this was a way for people who didn't go to dancing schools
to be able to do the dances.
a way for people who didn't go to dancing schools to be able to do the dances.
So you discovered that square dancing
is a melting pot of dances.
Yes, square dancing is definitely
so-called melting pot dance.
But what happened by the 20th century
is that basically these traditions became whitewashed. And the black history behind it got forgotten. Did anyone at the hearing make the argument that he was making?
No.
No, this is something that he's kind of discovered in the last few years.
It is interesting because now you're like, maybe it should be the national folk dance.
But I don't know.
I mean, does that still feel like someone else's dance that you just now have a small
side role?
Yeah, I did.
I still don't think that square dancing should be the national folk dance.
But I told Phil that, but I was like, if you told me that black people had something to do
with this dance, that Native Americans have something
to do with the development of this dance,
if you told me that, then I would say,
oh, so that actually this dance is a lot more American
in that inclusionary way that we would like to think
of America as, then I would have thought,
and maybe it wouldn't be such a bad idea.
And then he pointed out, well, what about Latino people?
What about Asian people?
And what about, you know, like, once again,
we're like way too multicultural a society to like just say.
But what if.
This thing, okay.
What if you...
I'm trying to create a scenario that's the most inclusive thing possible. Okay.
But I'm not going to get there. I'm going to leave so many people out.
But it's like, I don't know, I mean, couldn't...
Isn't there room in square dancing, in other words, for...
If there's room for black people...
I shouldn't say room, I mean, if there...
What's the word?
Yeah, fine. If there's room for black people,
there's certainly room for white people.
Why not create a square dance that's as diverse as America?
I mean, fuck, you could tap dance at a square dance.
I mean, it's just, if all it is is like for people.
You could tap dance in a square dance,
you can clog in a square dance.
Why not?
You can find videos of people clogging
in a square formation.
You could, I don't know, do modern dance in a square dance?
That's a little harder, but maybe.
It's a little harder, but.
Ballet?
Sure.
Hip hop dancing?
I could see more hip hop dancing in a square dance.
Well, okay, it was at this dancing in this dance. Well, okay.
It was at this point when this conversation started to go somewhere that we decided, you
know what?
We should have a live show.
Does anyone else have any other ideas about what's a fun group dance that we can all do
together?
What did you say?
The moonwalk.
Okay.
All right.
All right.
Problematic, no.
But whatever. Documentary. All right. Problematic, no, but whatever, you know. It's a documentary, but...
Ha ha ha.
Any others?
The Charleston?
The Twist?
So we had done our introductory square dance with everyone,
and we told them this history.
The what?
The butt?
Okay.
Ha ha ha. But then we heard about this one particular square dance call, and this is the one that's
related to the ring shout, which I mentioned earlier.
So Alex, let's talk a little bit about the last dancer tonight.
So we brought our square dance caller, Alex Kramer, back on stage.
But at some point, you're going to use a call that's, what's the call going to be?
Oh, right, right, right. So, um...
Did you forget already?
So, the dance is called Birdie in the Cage.
Okay.
So, the call is, the first call is put the birdie in the cage.
And so then what happens is if you're the birdie at that moment,
you just like hop on in to the center of the circle
and you get to do your special dance.
It can be the YMCA, the Da Butt.
The funky chicken.
The funky chicken.
The floss.
You can floss, you can milly rock, you can kid and play.
You can...
Twerk.
You can twerk.
You can nae nae.
You can what?
Nae nae.
Nae nae, yeah, absolutely. Doggy.erk. You can nae nae. You can what? Nae nae.
Nae nae, yeah.
Doggy.
Absolutely.
So that's what we're going to do.
We're going to do a little square dance and then he's going to say, bring in the cage,
and then everyone's going to do whatever the F you want.
Hey, show us what you're working with.
And join hands.
Circle left, circle to your left, round you go.
Back to the right, don't take all night.
Go into the center with a great big shout.
Do it again, do it again.
Swing your partner all about.
Promenade, promenade, go around the town and you'll wave it upside down.
Were you dancing?
Yeah, I was trying, I was trying to.
Couple one, let's have some fun.
Couple one, go out to the right circle, laugh with couple two birdie in the cage. Couple one, go up to the right circle left with couple two birdie in the cage.
Couple one, couple two circle left.
I remember it was just chaos. It was like crazy chaos.
Bird hop out and co-hop in.
Because like he was doing these calls and we were swinging around.
And like you kind of want to get your dance going in the middle, but then you don't have enough time
and then you throw off the rhythm and then suddenly it all falls apart.
But then he'll do a call and everyone snaps back onto the beat.
Circle to the left. Birdie in the cage.
Yeah, I was standing off, I had gotten off the stage and I was standing off to the side,
leaning against the wall and trying to just stay out of people's way,
because there was a lot of limbs flailing around.
Yeah, there was. From where I was standing, when people got into the middle,
when the birdie got into the middle of the cage, the birdie was usually just hopping around and
jumping up and down.
Because you didn't have much time. You're just like, I gotta do my thing and then I gotta get out.
Circle and around you go. Last chance. Birdie number four, show us what you're working with.
It's Chance, Birdie number four, show us what you're working with.
And so whatever our national dance is, I guess it's just people hopping around a lot until it's not their turn to hop around anymore.
Now swing your partner all around. Yeah.
It was just a hot mess. But it was the happiest hot mess I've been a part of in a long time.
Kind of beautiful. Yeah, really beautiful.
One more thing, you know, as I was going through all this, I kind of just stumbled into this
community of African American musicians who are really embracing this kind of this old
time music, this folk music, and really reclaiming it.
And one of those musicians was Jake Blunt, and he actually performed for us at that live event.
He is a fiddler.
So you're gonna perform a song for us.
Can you tell us a little bit about it?
Yes, it's called Poor Black Sheep,
and it comes from a black banjo fiddle duo,
Nathan Frazier and Frank Patterson,
who were from Nashville, Tennessee,
were recorded in, I think, 1946.
And I learned this tune from them via my teacher and friend,
Rhiannon Giddens.
So I thought it'd be a really cool idea if he just played his song.
Yeah, totally.
And say thank you, Jake.
I loved his description.
I keep thinking about when he said when he plays,
it's like his brain moves into his arm.
Because I was like, when you hear this, you're like, oh, yeah, he's just all arm. So
do So I'm gonna be a good boy. So I'm gonna be a good boy. Well, thank you, Tracy.
You're welcome.
This episode, of course, was reported by Tracy Hunt and produced by Annie McEwen, and we
also had an assist on the sound design mix front from Jeremy Bloom.
Also, I just want to say thank you to Lea Ellen Friedland, Bob Dalsamer, Alex Kramer,
our caller, our amazing band
from the live event, Stephanie Coleman,
Courtney Harmon, and Steph Jenkins.
And Phil Jamison has a book out called
Hodowns, Reels, and Frolics,
Rips and Branches of Southern Appalachian Dance.
You should definitely check that out.
Thanks.
Hi, I'm Basit Khadi and I'm from Somerset, New Jersey and here are the staff credits.
Radio Lab was created by Jad Abumrad and is edited by Soren Wheeler.
Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser are our co-hosts.
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Hi, I'm Luis Vera and I'm calling from Mexico City.
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