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{{TuneAnnotation
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|f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Gae_to_the_ky_wi_me_johnnie >
'''GAE TO THE KY WI' ME JOHNNIE/JOHNNY.''' Scottish, Air (9/8 time). F Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. ''Ky'' is Scots for 'cows'. John Glen thought the melody to be a Border tune. The song, claims Stenhouse, has some antiquity, "because he had been told by a respectable lady who was bornin 1738, that it was so reckoned even in her infancy" (Glen, '''Early Scots Melodies''', p. 105). The song was printed in Herd's second volume (1776) and Johnson's '''Scots Musical Museum''' (1787, song 135, p. 142), where it was "slightly touched" by Robert Burns. The first verse goes:
|f_annotation='''GAE TO THE KY WI' ME JOHNNIE/JOHNNY.''' Scottish, Air (9/8 time). F Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. ''Ky'' is Scots for 'cows'. John Glen thought the melody to be a Border tune. The song, claims Stenhouse, has some antiquity, "because he had been told by a respectable lady who was bornin 1738, that it was so reckoned even in her infancy" (Glen, '''Early Scottish Melodies''', 1900, p. 105). The song was printed in Herd's second volume (1776) and Johnson's '''Scots Musical Museum''' [http://digital.nls.uk/special-collections-of-printed-music/pageturner.cfm?id=87797135] (vol. 2, 1788, song 135, p. 142), where it was "slightly touched" by Robert Burns. The first verse goes:
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''O Gae to the ky wi' me, Johnny,''<br>
''O Gae to the ky wi' me, Johnny,''<br>
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''And I'll be merry wi' thee.''<br>
''And I'll be merry wi' thee.''<br>
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See also the variant "[[Gae to the kye wi' me Jamie]]."  
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''Source for notated version'':
|f_printed_sources=Dow ('''Ancient Scots Music'''), c. 1775; p. 42.  
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''Printed sources'': Dow ('''Ancient Scots Music'''), 1776; p. 42.  
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''Recorded sources'': <font color=teal></font>
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Latest revision as of 19:08, 13 August 2024




X:1 T:Gae to the ky wi me johnnie M:9/8 L:1/8 R:Air B:Dow - Ancient Scots Music (c. 1775, p. 42) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:F f|cAA A2G FDD|cAA A2c d2f|cAA TA2G FAc|TA>GF GAc ~d2:|| c|Acd Tf>gf edc|Acd f>ge f2c|Acd f>gf edc|dcA GAc Td2c| Acd f>gf edc|Acd fge f2c|Acd Tf>gf ecf|dcA GAc d2||



GAE TO THE KY WI' ME JOHNNIE/JOHNNY. Scottish, Air (9/8 time). F Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. Ky is Scots for 'cows'. John Glen thought the melody to be a Border tune. The song, claims Stenhouse, has some antiquity, "because he had been told by a respectable lady who was bornin 1738, that it was so reckoned even in her infancy" (Glen, Early Scottish Melodies, 1900, p. 105). The song was printed in Herd's second volume (1776) and Johnson's Scots Musical Museum [1] (vol. 2, 1788, song 135, p. 142), where it was "slightly touched" by Robert Burns. The first verse goes:

O Gae to the ky wi' me, Johnny,
Gae to the ky wi' me,
O Gae to the ky wi' me, Johnny,
And I'll be merry wi' thee.
And Was she na wordy of kisses,
And was she na wordy of three,
And was she na wordy of kisses,
That gaed to the ky wi' me?
O Gae to the ky wi' me, Johnny,
Gae to the ky wi' me;
O Gae to the ky wi' me, Johnny,
And I'll be merry wi' thee.

See also the variant "Gae to the kye wi' me Jamie."


Additional notes



Printed sources : - Dow (Ancient Scots Music), c. 1775; p. 42.






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