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{{SheetMusic
{{SheetMusic
|f_track=Morpeth Rant.mp3
|f_track=Leo Rowsome - St Patrick's Day.mp3
|f_pdf=Morpeth Rant.pdf
|f_pdf=St.Patricks Day.pdf
|f_artwork=Shield.jpg
|f_artwork=Irish brigade.jpg
|f_tune_name=Morpeth Rant
|f_tune_name=St. Patrick's Day
|f_track_title=Morpeth_Rant_(1)
|f_track_title=St. Patrick's Day
|f_section=X5
|f_section=X11
|f_played_by=[https://soundcloud.com/edric-ellis Edric Ellis]
|f_played_by=[https://open.spotify.com/artist/5ZIhbzIF7v2lYvU6Xoogn6?si=rKsfUZJNTBm2ULon6nJQOQ Leo Rowsome]
|f_notes= William Shield (1748–1829).
|f_notes=The Irish Brigade attached to the French forces which helped turn the tide of battle against the English troops at the battle of Fontenoy.
|f_caption=The Morpeth Rant was the name of a dance that has been performed for over almost two centuries, and numerous tunes and tune variants were played in accompaniment to it over many years; thus there are a number of tunes called "Morpeth Rant" or "Old Morpeth Rant" that have varying degrees of similarity.
|f_caption=This is the only occasion on which country dances are performed at the Irish court. The ball on Patrick’s night is always opened by the lively dance of “Patrick’s day.” The dowagers of both sexes then come into play; and “the Irish trot” of many a veteran belle, recalls the good old times of the Rutland Court: when French quadrilles were “undreamed of in philosophy” of the dancing of that noted epoch.
|f_source=[https://soundcloud.com/edric-ellis/morpeth-rant Soundcloud]  
|f_source=[https://open.spotify.com/track/1sCZEFYWr8558PJQy2Y9PH?si=54e4302356dd4aa3 Spotify]  
|f_pix=420  
|f_pix=420  
|f_picpix=200
|f_picpix=200
|f_article=[[Morpeth_Rant_(1) | '''Morpeth Rant''']]
|f_article=[[St. Patrick's Day | '''St. Patrick's Day''']]


The composition is often attributed to William Shield (1748–1829), a popular 18th century musician and composer originally from Swalwell, near Gateshead, Northumberland. However, as Barry Callaghan (2007) and others have pointed out, Shield often appropriated traditional or folk melodies, and "Morpeth Rant" may not be original to him.  
The first mention of the tune is that it was one of two tunes (with "The White Cockade") played by the pipers of the Irish Brigade attached to the French forces which helped turn the tide of battle against the English troops at the battle of Fontenoy on May 11, 1745.  


The town of Morpeth [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morpeth,_Northumberland] is in Northumberland, a market center on the River Wansbeck serving the surrounding rural areas and the villages of the Northumbrian coalfield (Graham Dixon). It evolved around a Norman fortress called Morpeth Castle, one of several guarding the east coast routes to Scotland.
Flood (1906) and O’Neill (1913) believe was probably the last appearance in battle of the Irish Piob mor (war pipes or great pipes, which survived only in Scotland) of which there is any mention.


It was one of the "missing tunes" from William Vickers' 1770 Northumbrian manuscript.
'''Rutherford's 200 Country Dances, volume 1''', 1756, contains the first country dance printing of the tune, which also appears in English collections as a jig by the name "[[Barbary Bell]]."


The older form of the tune can be found in the music manuscript collections of C.J. Surtees (Tyneside, 1819), Joshua Jackson (north Yorkshire, 1798), Rev. Robert Harrison (Brampton, Cumbria, c. 1815, as "[[Princess of Wales' Hornpipe]]"), John Moore (Shropshire, 1830, as "[[New Sailor's Hornpipe]]") and in a manuscript by an unknown hand in the Vaughn Williams Memorial Library (as "[[West's Hornpipe]]" with an added eight bars).  
Typically for popular melodies of the time, it also became the vehicle for many songs, including air 35, "A plague of these wenches," in the opera '''Love in a Village''' by T.A.  
Arne and I. Bickerstaffe (London, 1762). As song, country dance or quickstep it remained popular for many years. In later military tradition it was played on December 31, 1811 by the 87th Regiment band as a French attack became a rout at Tarifa, and Winstock (1970) remarks it was a favourite quickstep of the Napoleonic era Peninsular War in the British army.  


The tune and several variation sets was published by the Edinburgh music publishing firm of Nathaniel Gow and William Shepherd in a volume entitled '''A Collection of Entirely Original Strathspey Reels, Marches, Quick Steps &c.''', "by Ladies resident in a remote part of the Highlands of Scotland, as corrected by Nath. Gow."
Queen Victoria requested the melody from piper Thomas Mahon when she and the Prince Consort visited Ireland for the first time in 1849. Mahon was surprised to learn that she and the Prince were familiar “with the best gems in Irish music,” and he also played “The Royal Irish Quadrilles” and “Garryowen” at their behest.  


Unfortunately, the composers names are not given. The Leeds antiquarian Frank Kidson (1854–1926) penciled a note in his copy of the volume that the composers were, or included, “the Misses Whyte,and modern researcher Charles Gore thinks “the Misses Whyte” may possibly be a Miss White and a Miss Brocky, of Morayshire, east Highlands.
The Queen must have been impressed with his playing, for she directed that henceforth Mahon have the title “Professor of the Irish Union Bagpipers to Her Most Gracious Majesty, Queen Victoria” (O’Neill, 1913). English country dance versions appear several times in James Oswald’s '''Caledonian Pocket Companion''' (London, 1760), and James Aird printed it in Glasgow in his '''Selection of Scotch, English, Irish and Foreign Airs, vol. 1''' (1782). In fact, English printings of the tune by far predate Irish ones, and it may be the provenance is English, despite the Irish-sounding title.  
 
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Latest revision as of 15:53, 17 March 2024



This is the only occasion on which country dances are performed at the Irish court. The ball on Patrick’s night is always opened by the lively dance of “Patrick’s day.” The dowagers of both sexes then come into play; and “the Irish trot” of many a veteran belle, recalls the good old times of the Rutland Court: when French quadrilles were “undreamed of in philosophy” of the dancing of that noted epoch.
St. Patrick's Day

Played by: Leo Rowsome
Source: Spotify
Image: The Irish Brigade attached to the French forces which helped turn the tide of battle against the English troops at the battle of Fontenoy.

St. Patrick's Day

The first mention of the tune is that it was one of two tunes (with "The White Cockade") played by the pipers of the Irish Brigade attached to the French forces which helped turn the tide of battle against the English troops at the battle of Fontenoy on May 11, 1745.

Flood (1906) and O’Neill (1913) believe was probably the last appearance in battle of the Irish Piob mor (war pipes or great pipes, which survived only in Scotland) of which there is any mention.

Rutherford's 200 Country Dances, volume 1, 1756, contains the first country dance printing of the tune, which also appears in English collections as a jig by the name "Barbary Bell."

Typically for popular melodies of the time, it also became the vehicle for many songs, including air 35, "A plague of these wenches," in the opera Love in a Village by T.A. Arne and I. Bickerstaffe (London, 1762). As song, country dance or quickstep it remained popular for many years. In later military tradition it was played on December 31, 1811 by the 87th Regiment band as a French attack became a rout at Tarifa, and Winstock (1970) remarks it was a favourite quickstep of the Napoleonic era Peninsular War in the British army.

Queen Victoria requested the melody from piper Thomas Mahon when she and the Prince Consort visited Ireland for the first time in 1849. Mahon was surprised to learn that she and the Prince were familiar “with the best gems in Irish music,” and he also played “The Royal Irish Quadrilles” and “Garryowen” at their behest.

The Queen must have been impressed with his playing, for she directed that henceforth Mahon have the title “Professor of the Irish Union Bagpipers to Her Most Gracious Majesty, Queen Victoria” (O’Neill, 1913). English country dance versions appear several times in James Oswald’s Caledonian Pocket Companion (London, 1760), and James Aird printed it in Glasgow in his Selection of Scotch, English, Irish and Foreign Airs, vol. 1 (1782). In fact, English printings of the tune by far predate Irish ones, and it may be the provenance is English, despite the Irish-sounding title.

...more at: St. Patrick's Day - full Score(s) and Annotations


X:11 T:Patrick's Day in the Morning with Variations M:6/8 L:1/8 R:Jig S:Philip Carolan music manuscript collection N:Philip Carolan (c. 1839-1910, Crossmolina, County Mayo), a musically literate N:farmer and fiddler who compiled his ms. probably during 1863-1873. S:Angela Buckley, thesis, “A Critical Edition of the Irish Music Manuscripts of S:Philip Carolan c. 1839-1910, vol. 2”, Waterford Institute of Technology, S:2007, p. 118. Carolan ms. 2, No. 34. K:G V:1 clef=treble name="11." [V:1] D|GAG GAB|ded dcB|AcB AGF|EFE E2D| GAG GBd|gfe dcB|AcB AGF|1 E2F G2:|2 E2F G3|| |:def gag|fed edB|def gag|fed e3| def gag |fed efg|gdB ecA|1 dBG AGF:|2 dBG AGD|| |:(G/F/)G/A/G (G/F/)G/A/(B/c/)|(d/c/)d/e/d (e/d/)c/B/(A/G/)|(B/A/)B/c/(B/A/) GED| E/F/(GF) .E.Dz| |:(G/F/)G/A/G (G/F/)G/A/(B/c/)|(d/c/)d/e/d (e/d/)c/B/(A/G/)|(B/A/)B/c/(B/A/) GED|E2-F G2z:| |:def (g/a/)g/f/e|(f/g/)f/e/d e2B|def (g/a/)g/f/e|(f/g/)f/e/d e2-f| def (g/a/)g/f/e|(d/e/)f/e/d e2B|def (g/a/)g/f/e|(f/g/)f/e/d efg| (G/F/)G/A/G (G/F/)G/A/(B/c/)|(d/c/)d/e/d (e/d/)c/B/(A/G/)|(B/A/)B/c/(B/A/) GED|E/F/(GF) EDz| (G/F/)G/A/G (G/F/)G/A/(B/c/)|(d/c/)d/e/d (e/d/)c/B/(A/G/)|(B/A/)B/c/(B/A/) GED|(E2F) G2z:| |:.G/.A/.B/.c/.d/.e/ .B/.c/.d/.e/.f/.g/|ded dBG|.B/.A/.B/.c/.d/.c/ .B/.A/.G/.F/.E/.D/|.E/.F/GF EDz| .G/.A/.B/.c/.d/.e/ .B/.c/.d/.e/.f/.g/|ded dBG|.B/.A/.B/.c/.d/.c/ .B/.A/.G/.F/.E/.D/|E2F G2:|]