Oops. That was supposed to go to my fiddle-L list.  Sorry.


Ed



Edward I. Pollak, Ph.D.
Professor emeritus
Department of Psychology
West Chester University of Pennsylvania

Subject: Re: Cherokee Shuffle question
From: "Pollak, Edward" <epol...@wcupa.edu>
Date: Fri, 6 May 2011 03:48:38 +0000
X-Message-Number: 6

Jim Nelson  wrote, "I've heard Cherokee Shuffle played in both keys. The melody 
is very imilar to the Tommy Magness piece "Lonesome Indian" which is in D. I
suspect that the former was derived from the latter by Tommy Jackson 
...............



Thatis, of course, why fiddle tunes have names, i.e., so you can tell them 
apart!


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