Hi Frank!
I've been wanting to finish commenting on your recent postings so I'll do that here.
Thanks
SO much for posting O'Connor's "Bully Rag"!! I'd never heard of it, so was excited to see
and hear it. You were so right, it
IS a lot of fun! Thanks for sharing this rarity with us.
As for the other unknown piano rolls... they were all wonderful pieces--my wife really enjoyed them too

. I can't help but hope that copies of these rolls, with the titles
intact, still exist somewhere. I'll comment on them below in the order you posted them.
The Cremona A-428-14 sounds very song-like to me and reminds me a little of Henry Lodge. Very nice number.
The Cremona A-428-10 was our favorite!
SUCH a
cool, awesome rag! What an amazing find!!
The Ramey a-Mod 1-5 was a nice contrast to the previous two. It seems more dramatic. Really, really like it!
The Electrova 44N 429-1 reminded my wife of a rag that should be in a Tom & Jerry cartoon. Wonderful, and such fun!
The NTW Stylel. 2214-5 is the one in a minor key. Nice piece, well worthy of preservation. It doesn't grow old with repeated listenings.
The LINK-SMC 321-4 was the one you wrote was "Fantastic" and we'd have to agree! Definitely our second favorite of the batch! We've always liked Indian motifs and, if I recall correctly, they were popular around 1903-05--thereabouts, so perhaps this rag dates from around that time. The stop time part is phenomenal--a brilliant piece of writing.
If you have any more great unknown's we'd love to hear them!!
Thanks for writing about your trips to the LOC storage facility in the 1970's. You'd mentioned this before, but I always wanted to hear more detail and that wish was satisfied in your latest posting! About 15 years ago I was researching a rag written and copyrighted in Jan. of 1905 by a local composer, and found that he'd copyrighted another instrumental "March and Two-Step" the same day (it did turn out to be another rag!). I called the LOC and was connected to the friendliest, most helpful, person (probably then in his early 20's) I've ever talked to there (I really wish I'd thought to ask his name, because, unfortunately, I was never connected to him again). I'll always remember what he told me: "Sir, if you have the copyright number of that piece I can find it in 5 to 10 minutes. The music's all organized by copyright number. All I have to do is walk over and retrieve it." I gave him the number, waited on the line, and he came back and told me he had it in hand. Then he offered to send me a photocopy (no charge) if I gave him my address. When the envelope arrived I found he'd also sent me a copy of the original piece I was researching--a bonus I hadn't asked for! I was happy to receive that, because the ragtimer who'd kindly sent me a copy had inadvertently cut off the bottom of some low left hand octaves in the final bar. A few years later, when the family of the arranger of the second piece tried to get a color photocopy of the cover, the LOC couldn't find the music! However, when the family sent them a B & W photocopy of the cover the first gentleman had sent to me, they located it.
I've been transcribing Thomas' "Fish Tail Dance." It's not been easy (but well worth the effort). I've done about 30 bars (which is just a little under half of what needs transcribing, as the second half of the roll is pretty much, as far as I can hear, repeats of what's gone before). I've put the score in cut time. It has some difficult rhythms in the bass part (as you can hear). The first strain, which follows the 8 bar introduction, had an interesting, unexpected feature (at least unexpected to me). A 4 note chord is played, then the 2 middle notes are held, while the octave surrounding it is shifted. This gives the octave that follows a rich, full-bodied sound.
I have a great piece to post in "School of Syncopation," the best rarity I've found in a very long time. I'll sign off here and go to the that thread in a few minutes, after I prepare the file.
Best,
Rob