Kate Van Winkle Keller, 
                the author of this book, is a well known 
                expert in early dance and music, with 
                a long and distinguished career as a 
                consultant for many organisations and 
                individuals such as composers, archivists, 
                scholars and collectors. She specialised 
                in early American music and dance manuscripts; 
                has written and published numerous articles 
                and books on these and related subjects, 
                and was a contributor to various high 
                profile publications, as, for example, 
                The American National Biography 
                and the Encyclopedia of the North 
                American Colonies. Her name is also 
                connected with important scholarly organisations, 
                like the Society for American Music 
                and projects such as The Performing 
                Arts in Colonial American Newspapers, 
                1690-1783, published in 1997 and 
                supported by the National Endowment 
                for the Humanities.
              
              The present book, Dance 
                and its Music in America, 1528-1789, 
                comes therefore as no surprise and fits 
                well into Ms Van Winkle Keller’s distinguished 
                curriculum. This is a study of dance 
                and its music in America, beginning 
                in the early years of colonisation of 
                the New World and ending with the birth 
                and independence of the United States 
                of America in 1789. Before I began reading 
                the book, I mistakenly believed it dealt 
                with dance as an art-form but this is 
                not the case. This is, in fact, a very 
                well researched study of dance as a 
                social feature of everyday life, detailing 
                the various European influences, as 
                well as the dances of the Natives and 
                the traditions of the African slaves 
                and how it all came together.
              
              The book is organised 
                geographically, first by region and 
                then by state, in chronological order 
                of discovery and settlement, which means 
                that once in a region the reader will 
                follow the history of each state up 
                to 1789, thus forming a true picture 
                of how dance and its music developed 
                locally, relevant to its various roots. 
                For example the first chapter is about 
                the Spanish Exploration and Settlement, 
                starting with Florida and then the Southwest, 
                i.e. New Mexico, Northern Arizona, Texas, 
                Louisiana and California.
              
              The study begins with 
                a rather extensive introduction that 
                explains the purpose of the book, as 
                well as the reasons for its structure 
                and organisation and why it was written. 
                The narrative is fluent and pleasant 
                to read, even for a non-scholar who 
                might be interested in the early history 
                of the USA in general and of dance and 
                its music in particular. It explains 
                well the influences from the various 
                European nations that created the majority 
                of settlements and had the biggest impact 
                in the shaping of the nation, meaning 
                of course Spain, France and England, 
                and it successfully demonstrates the 
                link between social/cultural events 
                and historical developments. It clearly 
                brings across the point on how dance 
                was used (one may be tempted to say 
                "abused"!) to deliberately 
                eradicate the traditions of the natives 
                and to force their integration. All 
                European settlers recognised the psychological 
                power of dance and its music in religious 
                services, the Spanish in particular, 
                to help "educate" and convert 
                the natives. The native population was 
                always taught to play and sing European 
                music and brain-washed that their culture 
                was "uncivilised". Each European 
                nation carefully and consciously used 
                dance and its music as a form of recreation 
                for the people, in social gatherings, 
                but also as a powerful tool for political 
                purposes, to wipe out one culture in 
                favour of the supposedly superiority 
                of another and to impose Christianity 
                on natives and slaves. This makes fascinating 
                reading and will be of interest for 
                scholars as well as people who simply 
                have a desire to learn. What I mean 
                is that, to my mind, Kate Van Winkle 
                Keller’s brilliantly investigated, well 
                written study is aimed as a reference 
                book for researchers and historians 
                but it also makes an interesting, pleasant 
                reading for the amateur person of letters 
                or for the general reader, looking for 
                more than entertainment. The narrative 
                suitably finishes with a short epilogue, 
                stating the birth of the United States 
                as a nation, several crucial dates, 
                as for example the inauguration of George 
                Washington on 30th April 
                1789, and a brief summary of how dance 
                and music further developed in the country 
                from then on.
              
              The objectives of the 
                book, as mentioned above, are well supported 
                by text extracts from historical documents, 
                local newspapers of the time, letters 
                from readers of these papers, dance 
                teachers’ pamphlets and brochures advertising 
                their skills, as well as facsimiles 
                of music sheets with the scores for 
                the various dances, which were published 
                during the years comprised in the study. 
                The many illustrations, drawings and 
                sheets with the dance steps, circulated 
                in those years, are also reproduced 
                in the book and contribute to a better 
                understanding of the importance of dance 
                and its music as social forces in the 
                daily life of the colonies and how they 
                impacted and shaped the various states.
              
              The historical information 
                concerning the various European nations 
                is accurate and detailed, perhaps, in 
                my personal view, with one minor fault, 
                i.e. the naming of the Iberian Peninsula, 
                on page 42, as Spanish Peninsula. I 
                am not sure if this is the way that 
                it is generally referred to in America 
                or if the author called it "Spanish" 
                because she was writing about the influence 
                of the settlers from Spain, however, 
                she was also referring to an event on 
                the Peninsula and bearing in mind that 
                it is formed (and was already so in 
                the period dealt with in the book) of 
                two distinct countries (Spain and Portugal), 
                with different languages and culture, 
                I would have preferred to see it designated 
                as Iberian Peninsula or Iberia, rather 
                than Spanish Peninsula.
              
              A very good feature 
                of the book is the wise and enlightened 
                idea of keeping all notes, as footnotes, 
                at the bottom of each page instead of 
                having them all numbered and then listed 
                at the end of the book. Personally, 
                I find very distracting, annoying even, 
                to have to go back and forward continuously 
                if I want to read the notes and understand 
                the text in full, which often causes 
                me to ignore the notes altogether. In 
                this manner, as simple footnotes, one 
                immediately refers to them, as one does 
                not lose the plot, or in this case, 
                the natural flow of the narrative. 
              
              To summarise, I found 
                this a very interesting, enriching historical 
                study, proving various important aspects 
                of the use of dance and its music as 
                a political and social weapon, well 
                documented and supported by original 
                images and texts of the period it details, 
                as well as making for enjoyable, fascinating 
                reading.
              
              Margarida Mota-Bull