["Clarinet Polka"]

 

- It's at our festivals.

 

Our sporting events.

 

Our churches.

 

It's even
our official state dance.

 

- What is this music?

 

- It's polka!

 

- Happy music.
Polka music, right?

 

- Polka is the soundtrack
of Wisconsin.

 

- Polka is Wisconsin!

 

- And it has a special way
of bringing people together.

 

- My wife and I danced
every week for 60 years.

 

- It's music
that's made for dancing;

 

begging you to clap your hands,
tap your feet,

 

and get out onto the floor.

 

- Why did you
start dancing, dear?

 

- For the women.

 

- [Squeezebox plays
"Let's Have a Party"]

 

♪ Let's have a party

 

- I'm Mollie Busta.

 

And I've been playing
and dancing the polka

 

since I was a little kid.

 

- [Squeezebox plays
"Pulling Around the Floor"]

 

- I've been able to turn
my passion into my career,

 

recording and playing
polka music across America.

 

Over the next hour,
I'm going to take a look

 

at how polka
got so big in Wisconsin

 

and why we continue to love it.

 

- ["Pod Krakowem Czarna Rola"
(The Black Soil of Krakow)]

 

- I'll discover
its scandalous beginnings.

 

- Queen Victoria
forbad the polka

 

to be danced in her presence.

 

- Visit some of Wisconsin's
great polka festivals.

 

- I call this
a Polish Woodstock.

 

- And talk to some of the people

 

keeping this
folk tradition alive.

 

- We're just having fun.
- Yeah, having fun.

 

- And most people
don't like that much fun.

 

[laughing]

 

["Pod Krakowem Czarna Rola"
(The Black Soil of Krakow)]

 

- Join me, Mollie B,
for a celebration of

 

- crowd: Polka!

 

♪ ♪

 

[cheers and applause]

 

- Polka! is funded in part by

 

Stanley J. Cottrill Fund,

 

International Polka Association

 

Wisconsin Dells Polka Fest

 

and Friends of
Wisconsin Public Television.

 

[indistinct conversation]

 

♪ ♪

 

- It would be really strange

 

if there were
this music and dance tradition

 

that literally millions
of people participate in,

 

and nothing has been studied
or written about it.

 

Well, truth is stranger
than fiction.

 

That's polka.

 

[The Polka Family Band plays
"Mocilnikar's Polka"]

 

- The happiest people
on the planet

 

are at a polka dance.

 

I've been playing polka

 

since I was, probably,
seven years old.

 

I'm fifty-three,
and I've never seen a fight.

 

- It's happy music.

 

You don't see many fights
or anything at the polka music.

 

- We fight after!

 

- In polka music, you don't
sing about your troubles,

 

you forget your troubles.

 

[Hey Baba Reba plays
"Ee eye ee eye ee eye oh!"]

 

- crowd:
♪ Ee eye ee eye ee eye oh

 

- ♪ Ee eye ee eye ee eye oh

 

- crowd:
♪ Ee eye ee eye ee eye oh

 

- The catharsis that goes on

 

within a polka festival,

 

a dance, or listening
to the music

 

is peace.

 

It brings you peace,
it brings you joy,

 

it brings you happiness.

 

- Band: ♪Ee eye ee eye ee eye oh
-crowd: ♪Ee eye ee eye ee eye oh

 

- Whoo!

 

- It's a folk tradition

 

like no other in Wisconsin.

 

When we celebrate life,
chances are

 

we're dancing
and playing the polka.

 

It's part of our heritage.

 

It's something
we share with family.

 

It's a connection
to our community.

 

The polka story

 

is the story of Wisconsin.

 

["Iron Range Polka"]

 

- If you want to look
at a dance form

 

that distinguishes Wisconsin
from other places--

 

not only in the nation,

 

but also in the world--

 

it's polka music.

 

And so it's fitting that
it's our official state dance.

 

[cheers and applause]

 

♪ ♪

 

- Polka emerged in
central Europe around the 1840s.

 

Exactly how
is something of a mystery,

 

but its name can be traced
to a pair of Slavic words.

 

The world "Polka" essentially
means Polish woman,

 

like "Polák" is a Polish man.

 

Although there's a Czech word

 

"pulka" that means sort of half,

 

and there is kind of
a half step in the polka

 

when you're dancing it.

 

["Oh Suzanna Schottische"]

 

- Like the word
itself,

 

the story of
how polka began
is murky.

 

But most common

 

is the legend about
a peasant girl in Bohemia

 

who spontaneously invented
the dance in front of her boss.

 

- She's usually
a Czech or a Polish girl

 

and her boss is usually
a German or Austrian,

 

and he notes it down some way

 

and spreads it all around.

 

- There isn't much
historical evidence

 

to support this origin story.

 

It's more likely

 

that polka emerged
out of another couples' dance.

 

- I say it came from the waltz.

 

[waltz music]

 

- To Europe's cultured society,

 

the waltz was scandalous.

 

It was shocking
for a man and a woman

 

to wrap arms around each other.

 

But after a while,

 

the waltz lost that shock value,

 

paving the way
for a new dance.

 

- Pop culture loves to outrage

 

the previous generation's norms.

 

Along around the 1840s,
they just upped the ante.

 

Let's do it in 2/4 time and
hop up and down frenetically!

 

["Tritsch-Tratsch Polka"
by Johann Strauss II]

 

- Well, predictably, the polka

 

was condemned
as licentious and horrible.

 

In the 1850s,

 

Queen Victoria
forbad the polka

 

to be danced in her presence.

 

- But this new dance
was a huge hit.

 

Polka spread through Europe
like wildfire.

 

And it was at this time

 

that thousands of people
were immigrating to America.

 

["Oj Maricka Pegla"
(Marie is Ironing)]

 

- You had Germans and Swiss,
and Luxembourgers,

 

and Dutch people, and you had
French-speaking Belgians,

 

you had Polish and Czechs
and Slovenians,

 

you had Finns,
and Norwegians and Swedes,

 

and all of them
had some form of polka.

 

- Polka turned out
to be a fad in Europe

 

and would eventually subside.

 

But the immigrants
headed to America

 

had polka ringing in their ears.

 

- Because it was
the music and dance that

 

was popular in their homeland
at the time they emigrated,

 

it became their heritage here.

 

["Goin' Home from Symphony
No. 9" (alphorn song)]

 

- Today, Wisconsin's identity
is closely tied

 

to the cultures
of its European immigrants.

 

Sometimes in
wonderfully apparent ways.

 

One of Wisconsin's
most charming small towns

 

is New Glarus.

 

Founded by Swiss immigrants
in the 1840s,

 

New Glarus not only
looks like the old world,

 

it celebrates
the old traditions.

 

One of those, of course,
is polka.

 

["Pop N' John's Polka"]

 

- Every year, The Roger Bright
Memorial Polka Fest

 

in New Glarus
attracts thousands of people.

 

For some, the event is personal.

 

- Polka, Swiss music,

 

makes me think
of my mom and my dad

 

and my heritage.

 

My mother was from Switzerland.

 

She lived to be 101,
eight months and 28 days.

 

She had a great spirit,
and she loved to dance,

 

and my father.

 

["My Ann Waltz"]

 

- My father is Swiss.

 

At an event like this,

 

you can't help but think
of your old family members

 

and family fun times, really.

 

- I come here every year.

 

Sit and enjoy, and meet people,

 

and drink beer
and listen to the music.

 

- 95 year-old New Glarus
resident Herman Pfund

 

is a true polka lover.

 

For over half a century,

 

dancing was
one his great passions.

 

- Oh, boy.

 

I miss it now because
my legs won't let me.

 

I really miss it.

 

So I come and listen to it.

 

It's my background, Swiss.

 

And I love it.

 

- [laughing]
Hey!

 

- The polka festival is a link

 

to New Glarus's Swiss heritage.

 

People can sample
local-made cheese,

 

beer,

 

and bacon.

 

Half a block from the main tent,

 

Puempel's Olde Tavern
is also a part of the festival.

 

["Baby Doll Polka"]

 

Puempel's was established
in 1893,

 

and has hardly changed
in all that time.

 

On a floor
that's over a century old,

 

there isn't much room
for dancing.

 

But that doesn't stop
these polka lovers

 

from making the most of it.

 

The culture
of the Swiss immigrants

 

is alive and well in New Glarus,

 

and a vital part of their
tradition is polka.

 

♪ ♪

 

[cheers and applause]

 

But New Glarus
certainly isn't the only place

 

you can experience
a great polka festival.

 

They happen throughout the year
in every corner of the state.

 

One of the most popular
polka festivals in Wisconsin,

 

and possibly the country, takes
place right here in Pulaski.

 

♪ ♪

 

Pulaski was settled
by Polish immigrants,

 

who transformed its rocky soil

 

into the vibrant farmlands
surrounding the town today.

 

But Poles brought more than
agricultural skill to this area.

 

They also brought their music.

 

And in 1978,
a festival was launched

 

that has become an institution.

 

Pulaski Polka Days
is a four-day event

 

that attracts
thousands of people.

 

Folks come here
from across Wisconsin,

 

and across the country.

 

- I call this
a Polish Woodstock.

 

["Polish Boyfriend"]

 

♪ ♪

 

♪ I've got a Polish boyfriend

 

♪ He looks a lot like you

 

♪ Oh he's kind of nice

 

♪ Pretty dark eyes

 

♪ I love him

 

What are you grilling?

 

- Polish sausage.

 

- At Pulaski,
you can have tasty Polish fare,

 

like a pierogi
and a cabbage roll.

 

[drummer strikes cymbal]

 

- Yeah!
- [cheers and applause]

 

- But what brings in
the big crowds is polka.

 

["Old Time Polka Dance"]

 

♪ ♪

 

- LeAnn and her Aunt Sue

 

are from a Polish family.

 

They've traveled
to every Pulaski Polka Days

 

for over ten years.

 

- I initially came up here
with a bunch of friends.

 

And then I told my family,
told my aunt, my mom and dad.

 

And they said, "Oh! We're gonna
have to go next year."

 

Well now, they've ruined
my fun every year!

 

[laughing]

 

But then again, I have
a dancing partner every year.

 

So it's all good!
[laughing]

 

["Pod Krakowem Czarna Rola"
(The Black Soil of Krakow)]

 

♪ Pod Krakowem czarna rola
♪ Ja jej oral nie bede

 

- Sue and LeAnn enjoy dancing

 

to the festival's
Polish style bands,

 

which attract a new audience.

 

- The Polish style has

 

a much more syncopated beat,

 

big amps, electric bass guitars,
and loud drumming.

 

A loud sound.

 

It has a lot more
in common with rock

 

than the other polka styles.

 

There's kind of
a generation gap sometimes

 

with the people who don't like
the music to be that loud.

 

It's one of the reasons
that the Polish style

 

has kept a younger audience.

 

♪ ♪

 

- Many of the young people
dance in the hop style,

 

which came out of
the Polish community.

 

- You dance in double time
to the music.

 

One,two,three, hop!
One,two,three, hop!

 

- This new generation of dancers
is one reason

 

Pulaski Polka Days is so unique.

 

- Harold, I know
you're a polka fan.

 

I'm a polka fan.

 

Why do you think this festival

 

is so important
to the polka industry?

 

- If you come to Pulaski,

 

you're gonna see the
younger generation coming out.

 

And that means a lot
because a lot of our old friends

 

are now 70, 80 years old.

 

And we've got the younger
generation involved in it.

 

And I tell you, it's a great
honor to see that here.

 

- Pulaski's famous festival
is a joyful reflection

 

of its Polish pedigree.

 

- People are

 

just very uninhibited

 

in terms of enjoying themselves,

 

enjoying one another,
and just having a great time.

 

- Once you're here once,
you'll come back every year.

 

- You'll come back.
You will.

 

[cheers and applause]

 

- Hello, Pulaski!

 

- crowd: Whoo!

 

["Ein Prosit"]

 

- ♪ Ein Prosit, ein Prosit

 

♪ Der Gemütlichkeit...

 

- Germans were the largest
European immigrant group

 

to settle in America.

 

And today, over 40 percent
of Wisconsin residents

 

have German ancestry.

 

- ♪ Der Gemütlichkeit

 

- Oktoberfests
are beer celebrations

 

held throughout Wisconsin
and the nation.

 

They're inspired
by the annual Oktoberfest

 

held in Munich, Germany.

 

♪ ♪

 

This Oktoberfest is hosted
by German restaurant Essen Haus

 

in Madison.

 

People come dressed
for the occasion,

 

whether they have
German ancestry or not.

 

- This place is nothing
but German culture here.

 

Most people
have something German on.

 

Or they're carrying
something German...

 

in a glass.

 

- Zicke, zacke, zicke, zacke

 

- crowd: Hoi, hoi, hoi!
- Ernie: I can't hear you.

 

Zicke, zacke, zicke, zacke

 

- crowd: Hoi, hoi, hoi!

 

["Fest Polka"]

 

- So they may be Irish as can
be, but today they're German.

 

- Mannerchor Guys call out:
Oans! Zwoa! G'suffa!

 

- European immigrants
didn't just bring

 

their languages, cultures,
and love of polka to America.

 

They also brought
their favorite beverage.

 

["In Heaven,
There is No Beer"]

 

♪ Well in Heaven
there is no beer

 

♪ That's why we drink it here

 

- Beer!

 

- Gotta have beer.

 

Beer has everything in it,
right?

 

- In Milwaukee, breweries
like Miller and Schlitz

 

were founded in the 1850s
by German immigrants.

 

Beer has been part of
our state identity ever since.

 

- Wisconsin is rightly known as
the party state.

 

People like to work hard,
they like to play hard,

 

they like to have their beer
and they like to dance.

 

- It's a beverage associated
with community and celebration,

 

just like polka.

 

And you'll find beer served
at most polka dances.

 

- This is the heart
of the Midwest,

 

where these hard-working people,

 

like to have a good time.

 

And they like to go hear music
that's happy, you know?

 

They want to hear music
that makes them feel good.

 

- Hey! Woo hoo!

 

Ah, we're getting' goin' now.

 

["Dorf Kapelle"]

 

- Because European immigrants
cherished their polka tradition,

 

they passed it along.

 

Generations have
grown up with it

 

and then shared it
with their children.

 

It's a link from the past

 

that has carried polka
all the way up to the present.

 

Luckily, the polka tradition

 

is something
kids take to naturally.

 

["A Polka Celebration"]

 

♪ We're gonna have
a polka celebration

 

♪ You bring your friends out

 

♪ And I'll bring mine

 

- I grew up with my grandmother

 

teaching me how to polka,

 

and I stood on her feet
as she taught me how to polka.

 

- ♪ We're gonna party
and have a good time

 

- The polka is
a multi-generational dance.

 

It's grandma and grandpa,

 

and their kids,
and the little kids.

 

- There are a lot of parents
who are carrying around

 

a baby or toddler,

 

bouncing them along,

 

as they are inculcating
that feel for the polka.

 

♪ ♪

 

- Whoooooooooooo!

 

♪ ♪

 

♪ We're gonna have
a polka celebration

 

♪ You bring your friends out

 

- Well, you know what?

 

Put a polka record on for a kid.

 

Watch what happens.

 

["Gornick's Polka"]

 

- I don't care
what nationality they are,

 

you put on music
that's going

 

[singing bass line]
♪ Oompah oompah

 

♪ ♪

 

Once you hear that,

 

it's just the beat,

 

and then you just
start doing this,

 

even if you
don't know what you're doing.

 

- Band: Weee-hoooooooo!

 

- [cheers and applause]

 

["Poor Boy
Lookin' for a Home"]

 

- One of his first words
was polka:

 

"Polka, polka!"
towards the radio.

 

He always has to have it on.

 

They both always
have to have it on.

 

It's on at the house
when we left.

 

- ♪ Well-a old Mister fox

 

♪ Done found him a home
He got a place to sleep

 

♪ Well, the fox got a place
to call his own

 

- I have a video of him
from six months old

 

standing on the back
of the stage at Polka Days

 

watching his Uncle Chris
play drums,

 

and he's just a-jumpin'
on my lap and jumpin'.

 

["Root Beer Rag"]

 

- Zander and his family
seem to have polka

 

running through their veins.

 

But they're not alone.

 

["The Tinker Polka"]

 

- When I perform at dances,
I don't see

 

kids and parents
looking at their phones.

 

I see them sharing
an experience together.

 

I think it's neat to see the
families that come to the event.

 

Not only do we then see
the polka music being carried on

 

but it's a very family-friendly
environment.

 

Do you feel the same way?

 

- Oh, yeah.

 

There's many times
when we'll go to a dance,

 

and someone will be like,
"Oh, I'll watch them,"

 

or "Oh, you guys go dance.

 

We'll take care of them."

 

And it's just like
everybody's just a big family.

 

["New Ulm Waltz"]

 

- And you see a lot
of other parents, too,

 

teaching their kids.

 

And you know that
they're in that moment

 

like we get with our kids.

 

As parents, we're just proud

 

that we're passing it on
to the next generation,

 

and we can share something
that we all enjoy together.

 

["Saturday Night Waltz"]

 

- I come from a polka family.

 

That's me right there.

 

Growing up, I loved dancing
and playing the polka,

 

especially with my dad.

 

Now, I'm a polka performer
and recording artist.

 

Is everybody happy?

 

And on occasion, I still
get to play along with dad.

 

- I grew up on a farm
in northeast Iowa.

 

And I can't ever remember a time
that I didn't like polka music.

 

So it was something
I grew up liking an awful lot.

 

- Playing polka music
is something

 

dad passed on to us kids.

 

My brother Chad plays drums.

 

Multigenerational musicians like
us are common in polka music.

 

- One of the things

 

I think is that polka is

 

a genetically-transmitted trait.

 

There are so many
wonderful family bands,

 

you can go two, three
generations

 

where everybody plays polka.

 

♪ ♪

 

[Box On plays
"Karolenka" (Karen)]

 

- Box On is a Polish style
polka band from Michigan.

 

Mom and dad are joined on the
stage by seven of their kids.

 

At first,
parents Rick and Alicia

 

were reluctant
to form a family polka band.

 

- My wife and myself
have always played in polkas,

 

since I was eight years old

 

and her also.

 

And we said we'd never want
our kids to get into polkas

 

just because we know
the travel and stuff.

 

It's a lot of work.

 

- But the Vinecki family
started playing polka music

 

at local nursing homes,
and people loved them.

 

Things snowballed from there,

 

and now they're playing
around the country.

 

["You're Why God Made Me"]
♪ You're why God made me

 

- But what do the kids
think of all this?

 

- Since we grew up
on polka music

 

that has been our thing.

 

And plus with just my dad
playing accordion,

 

it just all worked out.

 

- It's fun to
just do it as a family

 

and interact with each other.

 

It's not stressful.
- No, it's not stressful at all.

 

- It's not like,
"Ugh, mom and dad are with us."

 

It's like,
"Oh, these are my cool parents

 

who play and still look young!"

 

- Yeah, they're young
and awesome looking

 

so it's like,
"Yeah, you can tag along!"

 

- I love it, I do.

 

I mean a lot of people
are kind of questioning us like,

 

"How do you guys travel so much?

 

How is it, all of you
being together 24/7?"

 

But we have a good time.

 

I mean, we're making memories
everywhere we go.

 

["Karolenka" (Karen)]

 

♪ Karolenka don't you cry

 

♪ I will never say goodbye

 

- Every time
we go out and we play,

 

it's a little bit better,
it's a little bit better.

 

I'm proud, as a father, to know
that these are my children.

 

- All right, Pulaski,
come on everybody.

 

Here we go: Box! On!
Box! On!

 

- Rick and Alicia
have a talented polka family.

 

Alicia comes from one herself.

 

- Her family formed
a Mexican band in the early 70s.

 

Alicia's mom
was of Mexican descent,

 

her dad of Polish.

 

Her brother Hank remembers

 

grandmother's
fateful suggestion.

 

- Hey, you guys are learning
all this Mexican stuff.

 

Hey, remember,
you are hunkies, too.

 

You're from the old country.
You're Polish.

 

You gotta learn
some Polish songs.

 

So we started to learn
a couple Polish tunes for her.

 

[singing "Hosa Dyna" in Polish]

 

♪ Oj od krakowa jade

 

♪ Z dalekiej obcej strony

 

♪ Bo mi nie cheilei dac

 

- The Guzevich family
switched to polka music,

 

calling themselves
The Polka Family Band.

 

But their appearance
threw audiences for a loop.

 

- We have moustaches, long hair,

 

and we'd get up there,
and we start singing.

 

[singing in Polish]

 

♪ Oj Boze Boze
♪ Moj Boze

 

And all these
Polish people are like,

 

"What in the heck is going on?

 

That's a bunch of Mexicans
singing in Polish!"

 

♪ Graj Chlopcy Graj
I na wodke mi dac

 

♪ Graj Chlopcy Graj
I wodke popijac

 

♪ Graj Chlopcy Graj

 

- After nearly 40 years,

 

multiple Grammy-nominated
Hank Guzevich

 

is the only original
Polka Family Band member.

 

- [singing in Polish
"We Are Family Polka"]

 

♪ We are family
♪ Polka family

 

- Hank's sister Alicia
is now with Box On.

 

You might notice
Uncle Hank's influence

 

on this new young band.

 

Hank and his sister Alicia
learned polka

 

from their parents.

 

Alicia and Rick passed it along
to their kids.

 

It's a musical circle of life

 

that you'll find
in many polka bands.

 

- ["Nobody's Lonesome for Me"]

 

- The Goodtime Dutchmen

 

are a popular
multi-generational polka band

 

from Kewaskum, Wisconsin.

 

Ralph Thull used to play
in his father's band.

 

Now, Ralph's kids
join him on the stage.

 

The Goodtime Dutchmen
formed in the 90s,

 

with all five of Ralph's kids.

 

Could you see talent in them
at an early age?

 

- Oh, yeah.

 

Feet were always tapping, and

 

as soon as they could find the
instrument, they picked it up

 

and went and practiced
and practiced.

 

- We practiced anywhere.

 

And I can remember, you know,

 

"Oh, well now Randy's
coming down to the basement,

 

"and he's practicing,

 

so he's driving me nuts."

 

So I would take my saxophone
and go and play to the cows.

 

- Ah, I love it!
And their reaction was?

 

- They'd move away from me.

 

[laughing]

 

["Southern Belle" by Copper Box]

 

- Ralph Thull's daughter,
Michelle,

 

is now married to Danny Jerabek.

 

Danny comes from
a polka family, too:

 

the Tuba Dan Band.

 

- When I was a kid,

 

my grandfather gave me
his little button box accordion,

 

and says, "Hey, Danny,
can you learn a couple songs?"

 

And I'm like, "No."

 

And my dad's like, "Yeah.

 

Yeah he will, Grandpa."

 

- Today, Danny and Michelle have
their own band: Copper Box.

 

And while they play
many genres of music,

 

polka is a tradition
they will always cherish.

 

- Having both my side
of the family

 

and my husband's
side of the family

 

deeply rooted in polka music,

 

we try to pass down
the tradition

 

because it's been around
in our family for generations.

 

- Everybody, now.

 

♪ I love to polka

 

♪ When I'm dancing
with my sweetheart

 

- The Thull family's
polka legacy continues.

 

Ralph's grandson looks like

 

he's ready to take up
on grandpa's instrument,

 

the good old polka mainstay:

 

the accordion.

 

[cheers and applause]

 

♪ ♪

 

- Squeezeboxes like
accordions and concertinas

 

play a big role in polka music.

 

This is a button accordion.

 

Confuse it with a concertina
at your own risk.

 

- And a one, two...
[accordions bellow opening note]

 

- The big divide
among squeezebox players

 

is between concertina players
and accordion players.

 

- What's the difference between
a concertina and an accordion?

 

♪ ♪

 

It takes longer
to burn an accordion!

 

[laughing]

 

♪ ♪

 

- There's the cartoon

 

of a fella dying
and going up to Heaven.

 

There, St. Peter has a harp.

 

He said, "Welcome to Heaven,
here's your harp."

 

And there's a guy
going down the other way

 

and there's the Devil

 

saying, "Welcome to Hell,
here's your accordion."

 

[laughing]
♪ ♪

 

- The joke is:
a guy goes to the store and

 

takes his accordion to the mall
and leaves it in the car,

 

goes in shopping,

 

and he comes back and
there's seven more in his car.

 

- When I was 10,
my accordion was stolen

 

out of the back
of dad's station wagon

 

after they'd just packed up.

 

And that's all they took
was my accordion.

 

Did it ever get returned?
- No. [laughing]

 

Speaking of accordion jokes,
it's an honest to God truth.

 

Someone actually
stole an accordion,

 

they didn't put one in.

 

♪ ♪

 

- Perhaps more than
any other instrument,

 

the accordion is associated
with polka music.

 

- They don't call it the
"stomach Steinway" for nothing.

 

You can take an accordion,
play by yourself,

 

and sound like a whole band.

 

- It's the only instrument

 

that you can start a party
all by yourself.

 

I can't do it with a trumpet.

 

- But I can!

 

["Sneaky Pete"]

 

The accordion actually
is a classical instrument.

 

The United States is probably
the last country on earth

 

that considers an accordion

 

anything but classical

 

and has probably
the largest stereotypes.

 

Okay, if you play the accordion,
you're fat

 

and you've got to have
lederhosen.

 

♪ ♪

 

[whistles sharply]

 

- So how is an accordion
different

 

than a concertina?

 

- The word in German for chord,
a musical chord,

 

is Akkord.

 

And so an Akkordeon
is an instrument

 

where you can press one button
and get a chord.

 

[plays chords]

 

And on a concertina,

 

you just get
one note per button regardless.

 

So if you want to make a chord,

 

you have to press
two or more buttons.

 

- When they were first made,
they just had

 

relatively few buttons,
if you will, on each side.

 

When they added more octaves,

 

they left those existing buttons
where they were

 

and they filled in around that.

 

- Kind of like
the letters on a keyboard.

 

You know, they're not in
alphabetical order or anything,

 

they're just based on usage.

 

- Don't you think that the guy

 

that really put them together
had to be drinking a lot?

 

- I think so.
[laughing]

 

- There's really
no rhyme or reason

 

to what the pattern
on the things are.

 

I never could figure it out.

 

- No matter where the buttons
are, Karl Hartwich,

 

from Galesville, Wisconsin,
has certainly figured out

 

how to play the concertina.

 

- He is the best
concertina player that I know

 

on the face of this earth.

 

He plays so well.

 

- Aw, thank you, Jim.
- I oftentimes--

 

- Aw! [smooch]
- [chuckles good-naturedly]

 

♪ ♪

 

- Karl was attracted to
the instrument from a young age.

 

- I grew up with it
when I was a little kid,

 

and I've just always loved
the sound of the concertina.

 

It's got a nice
reedy sound to it.

 

When I was five, six years old,
I decided I wanted to play

 

either concertina or accordion,

 

and I decided to go
with the concertina.

 

And I'm glad I did.

 

Because they just seem like
they're more fun than accordion.

 

- Molly B: It's "Eddie's Waltz."

 

- Hey, hey!
- Mark on the clarinet.

 

Karl and Jim
on the concertinas.

 

- Just think:
three down!

 

- Polka players are easy-going
on the stage.

 

- I wish you "sto lat."

 

Sto lat, just like
the shirt says, sto lat.

 

That means "May you live
one hundred years!" in Polish.

 

- And they love
interacting with their crowd.

 

- How many people
paid to get in here today?

 

You were charged way too much!
[laughing]

 

- One of the things
about polka bands

 

is they have
a very close relationship

 

to their audience.

 

- Are you having fun, Bob?

 

Is everybody having fun?
- [audience cheers]

 

- There's a strong connection

 

between the musicians
and their audiences.

 

They're not haughty,

 

they're not up
on an elevated stage.

 

- You're a regular guy or gal.

 

You'll be out there

 

helping lug the amps
and hooking up the cords.

 

- Test one, two, check.

 

- Testing one, two, one, two.

 

- Just like everybody else.

 

- Musicians are
the heart and soul of polka.

 

But only a few
manage to do it full time.

 

And none of us
are driving Ferraris.

 

- Well, I gave up
on the first million,

 

I'm working on the third.
[laughing]

 

Never happen, will it?
- No.

 

- Not the way you pay!
[laughing]

 

- You cannot make millions
of dollars on polka music, no.

 

This is a hobby that we enjoy,

 

and everybody's
got regular jobs.

 

So we come back
to the real world on Monday.

 

Dragging your feet.

 

[sighing melodramatically]
Uggghh!

 

♪ ♪

 

- A lot of times,
we don't get home

 

'til 3 or 4 or 5 o'clock
in the morning

 

and go home, take a shower,
and go right to work.

 

- A typical gig,

 

you might spend
three, four hours

 

driving to it,
and longer sometimes.

 

- It usually turns
into a 16-hour day.

 

- Yeah.

 

- Travel is the hardest thing
'cause

 

not only are you
a full time musician,

 

but you're always,

 

you're also just like
a full time truck driver.

 

♪ ♪

 

- One of Wisconsin's
great polka players

 

is Steve Meisner
from Whitewater.

 

At the age of five,

 

his extraordinary
polka journey began

 

with a discovery
in his grandmother's house.

 

- Her attic was
always full of stuff.

 

My brother and I
came across a 12-bass accordion.

 

And I said to grandma,

 

"Do you think my dad would
teach me how to play this?"

 

And she said, "Well,
when he comes to pick you up,

 

we'll ask him."

 

And he gets there,
picks us up

 

and I said, "Dad, will you teach
me how to play this accordion?"

 

And he said, "Sure, if you
promise never to quit."

 

So that's it.

 

- So you never quit?

 

- I never quit.

 

- You started playing
when you were five.

 

When did you step foot on stage
and start playing?

 

- When I was six.

 

- Oh! So, very very soon.

 

- My goal when I was a kid

 

was to play with my dad.

 

So that's all
I really wanted to do.

 

- Hey, how about a little
father and son duet here?

 

♪ ♪

 

- Steve's dad
was the great Verne Meisner.

 

Hailed by the New York Times as
"one of the titans of polka,"

 

Verne began his career playing
in local bars at the age of 11.

 

- ♪ Oh my
She's making eyes at me

 

♪ Yeah

 

- He was a full time musician

 

his entire life,

 

a well-known bandleader
around the country.

 

You could walk into any tavern

 

and the jukebox
would have Verne Meisner on it.

 

- ♪ She wants to marry me

 

♪ And be my honey babe

 

- Verne and Steve Meisner

 

primarily play
Slovenian style polka,

 

a style that features
the accordion.

 

♪ ♪

 

- Slovenian style
has always been

 

kind of the jazz side
of polka music.

 

Most Slovenian-style bands,

 

they know
how the melody's going,

 

doesn't necessarily mean
we're gonna play

 

those exact notes tonight.

 

They're just feeling it
and playing it.

 

- Okay, has everybody got
their dancing shoes on?

 

Let me look around out there.

 

Okay, a one, and a two.

 

Polka time!

 

♪ ♪

 

- Steve's dream of playing
with his dad would come true.

 

In 1984, father and son

 

release the album Meisner Magic .

 

- That was so close to me,

 

because it was the first one I
got to play second accordion on.

 

I wrote some songs,
he wrote some songs.

 

And from that point on,
every album after that

 

I helped produce
and make all of his albums.

 

- Steve continued recording
and performing with his dad,

 

but he would go on

 

to establish himself
as an accordion virtuoso.

 

- His piano accordion playing
is amazing.

 

He's able to do the bass part
and totally counter melodies.

 

So he might be making
this fantastic run going up,

 

while his bass side
with his left hand

 

is coming down, doing a run.

 

It's like,
"That's mind blowing."

 

♪ ♪

 

- Steve gives all the credit
to his dad.

 

He never stopped learning
from the master.

 

- Just listening to his music

 

or just watching him,

 

he was the best teacher
I could ever have.

 

Even when he wasn't teaching me,
he was teaching me.

 

Kickin' his feet

 

or jumpin' around.

 

He would just light up the stage
when he played.

 

- Are y'all havin' a good time?

 

- Yeah!

 

- Verne Meisner passed away
in 2005 at the age of 66.

 

He's been inducted into
several polka Halls of Fame.

 

But perhaps Verne's biggest
legacy is what he gave his son.

 

♪ We don't want to go home

 

♪ We're having too much fun

 

♪ Yes we are

 

♪ We don't want to go home

 


♪ We don't want to go home

 

- To me there's only one guy.

 

It was Verne Meisner.

 

He truly was, from day one,
my inspiration.

 

- ♪ We don't want to go home

 

♪ We're having too much fun

 

- [cheers and applause]

 

- Hey!

 

- Polka music is
the soundtrack of Wisconsin.

 

♪ ♪

 

And it turns up in all sorts
of places in our state.

 

Festivals, bars, weddings,

 

and even sporting events
like Badger football games.

 

[crowd cheers excitedly]

 

[band plays
"You've Said It All"]

 

♪ ♪

 

- [crowd sings]
♪ When you say WIS-CON-SIN

 

♪ You've said it all

 

[band plays final notes]

 

But one of the most unusual
places you'll find polka...

 

- Welcome to
our polka worship service.

 

It is wonderful to be here.

 

- ...is at church.

 

- We're gonna use a few
of our band instruments

 

that we have here today.

 

- This is an ecumenical
polka church service.

 

It's based on a Roman Catholic
tradition in the Midwest,

 

dating back to the 1970s,
called a Polka Mass.

 

It's like other church services,

 

but instead of an organ
or choir, there's a polka band.

 

- ["Chapel in the Valley"]

 

♪ Oh La! Oh Lee Oh!

 

♪ Please take our troubles
for today

 

- The band plays religious songs

 

but with a polka beat.

 

♪ ♪

 

- People don't dance
at a Polka Mass.

 

They sing along to the music,
as usual.

 

- ♪ Great things happen
when God mixed with us

 

- A Polka Mass is commonly held
on Sunday mornings

 

at festivals like this one:

 

the Wisconsin State
Polka Festival in Oconomowoc.

 

Another place
you can attend a Polka Mass

 

is at a church picnic.

 

And one small town
in Wisconsin

 

throws a mighty big one.

 

Church picnics featuring
polka music are a summer staple

 

in communities across Wisconsin.

 

But the one in Bevent
has become an event .

 

[indistinct conversation]

 

- Bevent is
a small Polish community

 

about 20 miles north
of Stevens Point.

 

It's here

 

that Saint Ladislaus
Catholic Church

 

puts on a very popular picnic.

 

They've named it

 

"Event in Bevent."

 

- The main objective is
a fundraiser for the parish.

 

And it's a way of getting people
to come together.

 

The work it takes
to put something like this on

 

is unbelievable.

 

- The chicken dinner served at
Event in Bevent is very popular.

 

Bevent native Adeline Domask

 

oversees preparation
of all the food.

 

- Chicken and ham.

 

Sauerkraut and sausage.

 

Chicken soup
with the homemade noodles.

 

Potatoes, gravy, stuffing,

 

and about 300 pies, we make.

 

Everything homemade.

 

You better eat fast.
[laughing]

 

- The food is served by

 

a small army
of bustling volunteers.

 

The most experienced among them
is Mattie Wanta.

 

- Cutting the bars.

 

Cakes and bars
and all that stuff.

 

- Mattie's been a church
volunteer for a long time.

 

- Uh, 72 years.

 

- She's lived in Bevent
all of her 96 years,

 

and fondly remembers
dancing the polka

 

with anyone she could find.

 

- My sister and partners
and boys and whoever.

 

- You did not dance with boys!

 

- Yes I did.

 

- And Mattie's
favorite kind of music

 

probably won't surprise you.

 

- Polka!

 

♪ ♪

 

- Of course, polka is
the big draw at Event in Bevent.

 

♪ ♪

 

- Bevent's church picnic
attracts

 

a large and enthusiastic
dance crowd every summer.

 

This year, that includes

 

the extraordinary couple,
Ashley and Randy Thull.

 

They're award-winning dancers

 

who teach people
across the country how to polka.

 

They start with
the basic polka step.

 

- We teach a six-step pattern.

 

- Okay.

 

- And if you're the lead,

 

you'd start with your left foot.

 

If you're the follow, you'd
start with your right foot.

 

And it's pretty much
left-right-left,

 

right-left-right.

 

You just keep doing that
six-step pattern over and over.

 

And eventually things happen.

 

♪ ♪

 

♪ Yee-whoo

 

We just like to go out
and have fun,

 

like everybody else is
on the dance floor.

 

- The primary difference

 

is we do try to add
a little ballroom and swing

 

and some other dances.

 

- Whether it's polka or salsa

 

or any of the other
ballroom forms,

 

a lot of the stuff
just kind of intertwines,

 

and it's easy
to put into the polka.

 

♪ ♪

 

[Ashley laughs]

 

- You two are fabulous dancers.

 

Do you find that people

 

are embarrassed to go out
and try dancing,

 

or don't feel it's welcome to go
out there if they're a beginner?

 

- I don't think
polka's like that.

 

I just really want to see

 

people go out
and have a good time.

 

♪ It's enough
to set my feet a-dancing

 

♪ Dancing

 

♪ Dancing all the night away

 

- Even if you don't know
how to dance a polka,

 

you can get out there
and bounce around and have fun.

 

I mean, really,
no one's gonna to criticize you.

 

- It's true.

 

If you look around
the dance floor,

 

everybody's smiling
and having a good time.

 

♪ ♪

 

- John and Lynn
certainly have a good time.

 

They've both worked tirelessly
to promote polka

 

throughout their lives.

 

And what better way to promote
it than with dancing?

 

- I met her
at a dance hall.

 

She was there one night.
I was there.

 

We danced.

 

I said, "Wow,
we do a good job together!"

 

So, here we are.

 

- John and Lynn
have won many dance contests,

 

often placing higher
than much younger couples.

 

- A lot of the routines
that we do in polka,

 

we can incorporate in
other forms of dancing

 

like swing, South American.

 

We do them all.

 

- I've loved it from little on.

 

I truly think I came out
of the womb dancing the polka.

 

♪ ♪

 

- She's 80
and I'm older than her.

 

- Much older.

 

Much older.
- Eighty and a half.

 

- We just, we have a good time.

 

- John and Lynn may not be
typical dancers.

 

But they're in the most common
age group that likes to polka.

 

- One, two.
Check one, two.

 

Testing one, two.

 

Check one, two.

 

- For a regular dance,

 

it's basically an older crowd.

 

But some of them are out there,

 

they walk in the door with
a cane or whatever sometimes.

 

And as soon as

 

you start playing,
the canes are gone

 

and they're out there dancing,

 

and you're thinking
"How does this happen?"

 

- [counting out beat in German]
Eins, zwei, drei, vier.

 

♪ ♪

 

- The doctor said to my wife,

 

"What do you guys
do for exercise?

 

You should really do
an exercise program."

 

Well, we polka.

 

"Oh, that's it!

 

Don't worry about exercising."

 

So, polka definitely
keeps you young.

 

- It keeps us alive [laughs]
and moving!

 

♪ ♪

 

- I just tuned 82.

 

- I'll be 79 next week.

 

- We really have a good time.

 

- It's wonderful, we love it.

 

♪ ♪

 

- One of the things about
a real dancing crowd is

 

that the couples are on the
floor almost the whole evening.

 

- It's kind of unreal.

 

If you stick around here,
you'd see

 

that some of the same people
dancing, like, eight hours.

 

I mean it's like
they're about on the floor

 

about every time
there's music going on!

 

- They just have fun.

 

♪ ♪

 

- Polka has played matchmaker

 

for a lot of the couples you see

 

on a typical dance floor.

 

- We met at a polka dance.

 

- We'd go to
all the local festivals

 

and we'd meet up
once in a while,

 

and just stayed in contact.

 

- I'd send him an email,
"When's the next dance?

 

Is your dance card open
so I could have a dance?"

 

And he said,
"It's pretty full."

 

Because why did you
start dancing, dear?

 

- Oh, for the women.

 

♪ ♪

 

- I do a slide polka
and she was nuts about it.

 

- I love to do the slide polka.

 

- And we really go.

 

We kind of do that
while we're dancing.

 

And go like... Hell?
[laughs sheepishly]

 

Makes us feel good.

 

We care for each other.

 

- We love it!
- Yeah, it's great.

 

♪ ♪

 

- My wife and I
danced every week,

 

for 60 years.

 

Every dance hall
around this area

 

that had polka music.

 

- Herman Pfund met his wife,
Kathleen, in 1939.

 

They were married for 65 years
before she passed away.

 

Herman is now 95
and will never forget

 

finding Kathleen.

 

- I met her in New Glarus here

 

at the-- used to be--
the Wilhelm Tell Hotel.

 

Her and her girlfriend
were at a dance,

 

and I knew her girlfriend.

 

She introduced me to my wife
and after that...

 

Whoa!
That was it.

 

- Did you dance the polka
the first time you met?

 

- Oh, you bet we did!

 

And ever since after that.

 

- Thank you.
- Yeah.

 

- You guys know how to polka?

 

- I know how to polka.

 

- Perfect!
We wanna see you out there.

 

- Polka is also a way
we celebrate love.

 

- Just take that moment in.

 

Hold it right there.

 

Beautiful.

 

- We've been going out
to Madison, Wisconsin.

 

The Essen Haus.

 

That's actually the first time
we've polka-ed.

 

And had never really
done it before.

 

But when we went out there,

 

everyone was out there dancing

 

and we just had a great time.

 

- Hey, you look beautiful.

 

- Both of our families had polka
at their wedding, our parents.

 

Like, it's super fun.

 

- Well, Melinda and Justin,

 

congratulations to you both.

 

And thank you so much
for having us

 

be a part of your special day.

 

We really--
It is an honor for us.

 

And, of course,
this is a celebration.

 

And there's no better way
to celebrate

 

than with good
old-fashioned

 

polka music.

 

- Whoo!
♪ ♪

 

- You know, years ago,

 

all you had were polka bands
at weddings.

 

And things have changed.

 

But every now and then,

 

you'll still get a polka band
at a wedding

 

because they know what a wedding
needs to really liven things up.

 

♪ ♪

 

- Hey, hey!

 

- Hey!
Ho!

 

- There's a high
Polish community and German,

 

so it's great for this area.

 

I think polka's perfect.

 

- Polka is Wisconsin.

 

- Hey! Whoo!

 

- [cheers and applause]

 

- We're having fun now!
- [laughing]

 

♪ ♪

 

- Polka is a tradition
that bonds us together.

 

For many,
it evokes our fondest memories.

 

- There's something
special about polka

 

that makes it easy
to share with others.

 

It connects us to our history,
to our state,

 

and especially to our families.

 

- It was such an important part

 

of my grandparents' life.

 

On Sunday afternoons,

 

it was a big family dinner
at their place,

 

and we would dance
in the dining room

 

and dance in the living room.

 

We have a family
Christmas Eve party

 

that's been going on
for 70 years.

 

And I had a great uncle,

 

he played Christmas carols
playing accordion.

 

So that's a huge part of who
I am and where we come from.

 

- My mom will be 90 this year

 

and we were standing
right over here last year.

 

And she hasn't danced
in a while.

 

She's got bad hips
and all this and that.

 

So she agreed to dance with me
off of the dance floor.

 

And we spun around a few times
and we just had a great time.

 

It was a great memory.

 

- On his family's farm,

 

Ralph Thull has always
tuned the radio to polka.

 

His daughter Michelle
remembers one reason why.

 

- My dad thinks the cows
milk better to polka music.

 

- We always used to play it
in the barn all the time.

 

- I remember in the parlor,

 

he'd, of course,
have the polka music on.

 

And sometimes
if there was hired help,

 

they would come
and switch the station.

 

And I remember my dad saying,

 

"The cow's milk much better.

 

"They're more well-behaved.

 

"Everything just works better

 

if you just keep that dial
on polka music."

 

[Ralph laughing]
[cows mooing]

 

- ♪ We're going to have

 

♪ A polka celebration

 

- Wherever I play,

 

I see people
filled with happiness and joy.

 

Polka really is
the music and dance

 

of celebration.

 

- We are all in it for the fun.

 

And most people
don't like that much fun.

 

But we're not most people.

 

- Everybody's smiling.

 

Everybody's having a good time.

 

It's just such a joy to be here.

 

♪ ♪

 

[whistles invitingly]

 

- It's fun!

 

How can you not have fun
with polka music?

 

You hear it

 

and you just want to dance,

 

you want to
have a great time.

 

It's a beautiful thing.

 

- Lisa was selected to be
this year's Polka Queen

 

by the Wisconsin Polka Boosters.

 

They're dedicated to the
promotion the polka tradition.

 

- They're looking
to bring out folks

 

who also have an interest
and a love for music

 

who haven't been
exposed to this.

 

We talk about it.

 

We share on Facebook
and social media

 

events that we're going to.

 

So we get to expose this awesome
music to a whole new generation.

 

[Box On singing
"North Shore"]

 

♪ Gdzie mi sie

 

♪ Podzialy te siwe golebie

 

♪ Co mi podziubaly

 

♪ Dziewczynie po gebie

 

- This is not exclusively

 

a music for the retired.

 

It still is thriving today.

 

There are new
and creative artists.

 

There are wild young people,

 

there are older
senior polka bands,

 

and everything in between.

 

- We'll all stay in polkas
for the rest of our lives.

 

It's who we are,
it's in our blood.

 

I can't really see
how it could ever die.

 

♪ ♪

 

- People have been saying
that it's going to die

 

since the 50s
when it had its heyday,

 

but here we are

 

and it's still going.
[laughing]

 

- In Wisconsin,

 

we celebrate life
through polka.

 

- Whoo hoo!

 

- And what a wonderful life
that is.

 

- [cheers and applause]

 

- Yay,"Polish Boyfriend."

 

- [cheers and applause continue]

 

To purchase a DVD of Polka!

 

visit wpt.org

 

or call

 

800-422-9707

 

- Polka! is funded in part by

 

Stanley J. Cottrill Fund,

 

International Polka Association

 

Wisconsin Dells Polka Fest

 

and Friends of
Wisconsin Public Television.