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Clarke Buehling sent me a copy of this. It's an interesting book, but in the end, I didn't find any tunes that were likely to enter my repertiore. That could change, of course, if I heard others play the material.
I would politely disagree with your assesment of the opening paragraph as "sarcastic." I just read it as the typical nineteenth-century mindset of everyone and everything having a natural "station" in life, from "low class" to "high class". And to Stewart, the stroke style was the natural style for the lower class, less refined (and presumably less intelligent) banjoist.
And to that I might add that true artistic worth cannot assigned simply by genre, and the relative merits must be judged on a case by case basis. I think Frank Converse would agree. His method books didn't patronize the stroke-style quite so much.
OK, try it again, all is well.
I don't know, the whole thing seems to be talking down to the reader. From "Organizing A Minstrel Troupe" where he tells the reader that he is not smart enough to put it together himself, To using quotes around "Comic Banjoist," "Banjoist Soloists" and "Banjo stories."
Then there is that corny joke, long and goes on and on. It all seems to me to be making fun of the person who would buy it.
I like the section on "How to Remove the Cork, or 'Wash Up.'" So we could not have figured out how to use soap on our hands and faces? Thus, the reader is a nasty and unwashed person.
I Don't know about his dislike of stroke style. He went through a lot of expense and effort to deign and patent a thimble, patents being something he did make fun of.
Then there was his promotion of Horace Weston, a thimble player.
In fact, in "Observations on Stroke or Thimble Playing on the Banjo" Stewart wrote "A thimble which had been used by Horace Weston for some time had become so worn that it was difficult for an inexperienced observer to believe that it had not been ground off."
I do a good deal of practicing with a thimble, I've yet to wear the end off of one.
Horace Weston could have just been an anomaly with SSS, as Weston was notation illiterate. It's clear how he felt about that. That said, SSS did publish many of his arraingments that fit perfectly with a thimble on.
I plays it pretty straight in "Observations on the Banjo and Banjo Playing."
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