Maple Sugar Gal - Tod Whittemore
Creator: Tod Whittemore (January 15, 2011)
Singing square, called by Tod Whittemore at the 24th annual Ralph Page Dance Legacy Weekend in Durham, NH.
The musicians are Bob McQuillen, piano; Randy Miller, fiddle; Peter Siegel, mandolin. The late Rod Linnell is the caller credited with setting this choreography to the tune; you can listen to his recording of the dance.
Named in honor of the great New England caller of contra and square dances, the RPDLW celebrates the traditions of New England style dancing, including dances and music that are centuries old and those that have been composed more recently.
Collection: Northern squares
Subjects: Northern / Singing
Tags: Bob McQuillen, Peter Siegel, Ralph Page Dance Legacy Weekend, Randy Miller, Rod Linnell, singing square, Tod Whittemore
Subjects: Northern / Singing
Tags: Bob McQuillen, Peter Siegel, Ralph Page Dance Legacy Weekend, Randy Miller, Rod Linnell, singing square, Tod Whittemore
Item Relations
Item: Maple Sugar - Don Messer and His Islanders | is related to | This Item |
Item: Two singing squares - Tod Whittemore, 1986 | is related to | This Item |
Citation
Tod Whittemore, “Maple Sugar Gal - Tod Whittemore,” Square Dance History Project, accessed February 23, 2025, https://squaredancehistory.org/items/show/747.
Dublin Core
Title
Maple Sugar Gal - Tod Whittemore
Subject
Description
Singing square, called by Tod Whittemore at the 24th annual Ralph Page Dance Legacy Weekend in Durham, NH.
The musicians are Bob McQuillen, piano; Randy Miller, fiddle; Peter Siegel, mandolin. The late Rod Linnell is the caller credited with setting this choreography to the tune; you can listen to his recording of the dance.
Named in honor of the great New England caller of contra and square dances, the RPDLW celebrates the traditions of New England style dancing, including dances and music that are centuries old and those that have been composed more recently.
The musicians are Bob McQuillen, piano; Randy Miller, fiddle; Peter Siegel, mandolin. The late Rod Linnell is the caller credited with setting this choreography to the tune; you can listen to his recording of the dance.
Named in honor of the great New England caller of contra and square dances, the RPDLW celebrates the traditions of New England style dancing, including dances and music that are centuries old and those that have been composed more recently.
Creator
Date Created
January 15, 2011
Contributor
Spatial Coverage
Temporal Coverage
Moving Image Item Type Metadata
Embed code
Duration
3:53