Annotation:Lancashire Hornpipe (4): Difference between revisions

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|f_annotation='''LANCASHIRE HORNPIPE [4].''' AKA - "Lankesheire Hornpipe." English, Triple Hornpipe (3/2 time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABCD. The tune was printed by London music seller and publisher [[biography:Daniel Wright]] in his '''Extraordinary Collection of Pleasant and Merry Humours'''  (1713, No. 18). John M. Ward calls it a "true" Lancashire hornpipe <ref>John M. Ward, "The Lancashire Hornpipe", '''Essays in Musicology: A Tribute to Alvin Johnson''', 1990, pp. 140-173</ref>, making a distinction between other hornpipes called Lancashire Hornpipes that are in reality country dances.  He equates the true Lancashire hornpipe with a rather more free form of folk dancing, rather than the proscribed dance figures in country dance collections that accompany some other "Lancashire" hornpipes (often barred in 6/4 rather than 3/2). Triple hornpipes, Ward notes, are "without exception....cast in the same four-bar variation form, one of the most distinctive and restricting in British instrumental music." Lancashire Hornpipes are more strictly defined:
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''...as variations on implied "double-tonic" four-bar grounds whose notes are the roots of the two chords elaborated in the descant''  
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''variations. These two notes (and hence the chords they support) are always a whole step apart; and, as David Johnson has''  
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''observed of such grounds, "the higher (or upper) of the two chords may be either major or minor, but the lower level chord''
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''is always major.''  
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'''LANCASHIRE HORNPIPE [4].''' AKA - "Lankesheire Hornpipe." English, Triple Hornpipe (3/2 time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABCD. The tune was printed by London music seller and publisher [[biography:Daniel Wright]] in his '''Extraordinary Collection of Pleasant and Merry Humours'''  (1713, No. 18). John M. Ward calls it a "true" Lancashire hornpipe <ref>John M. Ward, "The Lancashire Hornpipe", '''Essays in Musicology: A Tribute to Alvin Johnson''', 1990, pp. 140-173</ref>, making a distinction between other hornpipes called Lancashire Hornpipes that are in reality country dances.  He equates the true Lancashire hornpipe with a rather more free form of folk dancing, rather than the proscribed dance figures in country dance collections that accompany some other "Lancashire" hornpipes (often barred in 6/4 rather than 3/2). <br>
|f_printed_sources=Offord ('''John of the Green: Ye Cheshire Way'''), 1985; p. 52.
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<p><font face="Century Gothic" size="2"> '''Additional notes''' </font></p>
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<font color=red>''Printed sources''</font> : -
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<font color=red>''Recorded sources'': </font> <font color=teal> -  </font>
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Latest revision as of 03:42, 10 April 2022




X:1 T:Lankesheire Hornpipe (A) T:Lancashire Hornpipe [4] M:3/2 L:1/8 R:Triple Hornpipe B:Wright- Extraordinary Collection of Pleasant and Merry Humours (1713, No. 17) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:D g2b2f2a2 e4|e2a2 a2 gfed|g2b2f2a2 e4|d2d'4 a2 gfed|| d2 cBcB AG F4|E2e4 d2 dcBA|d2 cBcB AG F4|D2d4 A2 GFED|| fgag efed c4|B2 e4 d2 edcB|a2 gfgf ed c4|A2 d4 A2 GFED|| dcBA BABA GFGF|E2e4 d2c2 BA|d2 cB A2 GFEFGE|D2 Bc d2A2 GFED||



LANCASHIRE HORNPIPE [4]. AKA - "Lankesheire Hornpipe." English, Triple Hornpipe (3/2 time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABCD. The tune was printed by London music seller and publisher biography:Daniel Wright in his Extraordinary Collection of Pleasant and Merry Humours (1713, No. 18). John M. Ward calls it a "true" Lancashire hornpipe [1], making a distinction between other hornpipes called Lancashire Hornpipes that are in reality country dances. He equates the true Lancashire hornpipe with a rather more free form of folk dancing, rather than the proscribed dance figures in country dance collections that accompany some other "Lancashire" hornpipes (often barred in 6/4 rather than 3/2). Triple hornpipes, Ward notes, are "without exception....cast in the same four-bar variation form, one of the most distinctive and restricting in British instrumental music." Lancashire Hornpipes are more strictly defined:

...as variations on implied "double-tonic" four-bar grounds whose notes are the roots of the two chords elaborated in the descant variations. These two notes (and hence the chords they support) are always a whole step apart; and, as David Johnson has observed of such grounds, "the higher (or upper) of the two chords may be either major or minor, but the lower level chord is always major.


Additional notes



Printed sources : - Offord (John of the Green: Ye Cheshire Way), 1985; p. 52.






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  1. John M. Ward, "The Lancashire Hornpipe", Essays in Musicology: A Tribute to Alvin Johnson, 1990, pp. 140-173