Annotation:Scarlet Clog (The): Difference between revisions
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|f_annotation='''SCARLET CLOG, THE.''' AKA - “[[Tom's E-Flat Clog]]," "[[Tommy's E Flat Clog]].” Canadian, Clog (cut time). Canada, Nova Scotia. E Flat Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The tune was recorded as “Tommy’s E Flat Clog” by the Irish group Moving Clouds, who learned it from Nova Scotia fiddler Tom Doucet's 1975 recording "The Down East Star." While Doucet claimed the composition as his own, it is said that Cape Breton fiddler Dave MacIsaac has found a similar melody in an old Cape Breton manuscript. Doucet emigrated to the Boston area where he became very active in the club and dance hall music scene in the 1920s and 1930s. His repertoire included jigs, reels, foxtrots and 'hot' tunes as well as clogs and hornpipes. | |f_annotation=[[File:Tomdoucet.jpg|left|400px|thumb|Tom Doucet]]'''SCARLET CLOG, THE.''' AKA - “[[Tom's E-Flat Clog]]," "[[Tommy's E Flat Clog]].” Canadian, Clog (cut time). Canada, Nova Scotia. E Flat Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The tune was recorded as “Tommy’s E Flat Clog” by the Irish group Moving Clouds, who learned it from Nova Scotia fiddler Tom Doucet's 1975 recording "The Down East Star." While Doucet claimed the composition as his own, it is said that Cape Breton fiddler Dave MacIsaac has found a similar melody in an old Cape Breton manuscript. Doucet emigrated to the Boston area where he became very active in the club and dance hall music scene in the 1920s and 1930s. His repertoire included jigs, reels, foxtrots and 'hot' tunes as well as clogs and hornpipes. | ||
|f_source_for_notated_version=Winston Fitzgerald (1914-1987, Cape Breton) who may have learned the tune from Tommy Doucet (1902 – c. 1992, Concession, Digby County, Nova Scotia, and Boston) [Cranford]. | |f_source_for_notated_version=Winston Fitzgerald (1914-1987, Cape Breton) who may have learned the tune from Tommy Doucet (1902 – c. 1992, Concession, Digby County, Nova Scotia, and Boston) [Cranford]. | ||
|f_printed_sources=Cranford ('''Winston Fitzgerald'''), 1997; No. 38, p. 14. | |f_printed_sources=Cranford ('''Winston Fitzgerald'''), 1997; No. 38, p. 14. |
Latest revision as of 00:06, 26 October 2020
X: 1 T: Scarlet Clog R: hornpipe M: 4/4 L: 1/8 F:https://thesession.org/tunes/13215 K: Fdor (3BAB|:c>B G>E B,>EF>G | A/D/ F3-F2 B<df | a>gf>e d>cB>A | G/B/ e4 B (3BAB | c>BG>E B,>ED>E | F>DF>B d>f (3bag | f>g (3fdB F>G (3FDB, |1 A,2F>A, B,>B (3BAB :|2 A,2F>A, A, B<df/|| |: a>B (3B=AB f>dB>_A | G>Be>c B>G E2 | D>FB>A G>Be>g | (3fgf (3edc B2 (3BAB | a>B (3B=AB f>dB>_A | G>Be>d c>BA>G | F>ED>C B,>AG>F |1 E2G2 EB<df/:|2 E2G2E2 ||
SCARLET CLOG, THE. AKA - “Tom's E-Flat Clog," "Tommy's E Flat Clog.” Canadian, Clog (cut time). Canada, Nova Scotia. E Flat Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The tune was recorded as “Tommy’s E Flat Clog” by the Irish group Moving Clouds, who learned it from Nova Scotia fiddler Tom Doucet's 1975 recording "The Down East Star." While Doucet claimed the composition as his own, it is said that Cape Breton fiddler Dave MacIsaac has found a similar melody in an old Cape Breton manuscript. Doucet emigrated to the Boston area where he became very active in the club and dance hall music scene in the 1920s and 1930s. His repertoire included jigs, reels, foxtrots and 'hot' tunes as well as clogs and hornpipes.