...and I would NEVER assault any of those people with all of this, but - since you peeps are obviously bored...A patron at an Oktoberfest gig might wrote:...so when did you begin playing this type of music?
As a mid-teen, I had been playing quite a few guitar and bass guitar jobs - many of which didn't involve actually reading music, and which either involved, "playing by ear", learning tunes on the fly (at gigs), or reading chord changes (with some occasional "notes on staves" when specific pitches needed to be played").
Unlike parts of the country such as South Texas, Wisconsin, and Minnesota, there is no strong tradition of central European ethnic music in the Mid-South (mostly three-chord "county" and "R&B").
In the 1950's into the early 1960's, sending children off accordion lessons (nationwide - actually an entire accordion store/school in Memphis, called "Central Academy of Music" - which was soon to be replaced with guitar lessons) was a big thing, but - later - the best and most-interested of those young accordion players became (pop/rock/jazz) adult pianists - yet never lost their accordion skills.
As Oktoberfest (again, in this part of the country) was only an excuse for society folks' "theme parties" - and there were no formally -formulated 12 - 20 piece "German bands" (with no folders of printed sheet music) in this part of the country, those latent accordion players dusted off their instruments, pulled melodies and chord changes from old scratchy public library l.p.'s onto pieces of typing paper (plus, a few polkas/waltzes that they had learned as childhood students), pulled in a good jazz multi-horn player, a good jazz drummer (singing with a boom mike definitely being a plus), a bass player (bass and TUBA - all the mucho-better), a pretty singer, a couple of wives stitched up some fake lederhosen, and -thus - seasonal Mid-Southern regional "polka gigs" (again: referred to by the musicians as GIGS, but not as BANDS) became yet another dependable income stream.
Actually - for a year - in 1980 (when the Memphis music scene was booming enough for it to be a no-brainer for me to walk away from a university teaching job and return home) - there was an amazingly elaborately-decorated German bar built in downtown Memphis, called "Wolfgang's". The band featured an accordion, bass/tuba, multi-woodwind, trumpet, drummer, and female vocalist. That having been said, traditional central European music (wrinkled lead sheets stuffed into an onstage portfolio, but no music stands) was mixed about 55%:45% with rock, pop, country, R&B, etc. This place was a huge flash of light for about a year (with the band playing four hours a night, seven nights a week, was wildly popular for seven or eight months) and then - as the college crowd grew weary of it - went down in flames, and was closed. However (though we're dying off) that left Memphis with perhaps twelve to fifteen jazz musicians who also (then) possessed an "extemporaneous" central European folk music (polkas, waltzes, schottisches, etc.) repertoire. We had a bunch of fun, and the singer (a statuesque German singer with a sultry Marlene Dietrich type of voice, who also had been part of the cast of the early/mid-1960's national TV show, *"Hootenanny") could do (yeah...and usually not before 9:30 P.M.) amazing renditions of the Janis Joplin rep.
...so "polka/German" music - around this part of the country - is not quite like it is in heavily-German-populated parts of the country (where - again - there are formal bands with quite a few players, and written out music...but if you might be interested in hearing four guys who can play all the verses of several Strauss waltzes - without looking at pieces of paper, and a multi-horn (mostly: pop/jazz) player who can pick up a flute and ad lib 12-to-the-bar on any of the strains of any of those waltzes - you might view "what we do around here" as a bit of a curiosity.
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* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hootenanny_(TV_series)
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