A string band from in and around Mineola, the East Texas Serenaders
are a fine example of how country music worked before Nashville
and radio and even recordings mattered much. They played mostly
rags and waltzes and two steps, dance music for moving in a circle,
a counter-clockwise circle around a floor where the rugs had been
lifted up and a lot of loose pine sawdust spread all around. This
wasn’t Western Swing; it’s what Western Swing was
before Western Swing was. And it was only after the recorded fact
that Michelle Shocked realized “Woody’s Rag”
from Arkansas Traveler, recorded in a pine-floored dentist’s
office in Mineola, Texas, sounds like it could have been one of
their own numbers. East Texas music has that kind of magic in
it still.
Give
them their names; say them once, quietly, into our early Twenty-First
Century sky: Henry Bogan; Cloet Hamman; John Munnerlyn; Huggins
Williams; Henry Lester; Shorty Lester, from in and around Minneola.
They’re dead now. The music they made hangs in the air,
and will ring fresh again next week. Listen for it.