Annotation:Paysanne (La): Difference between revisions
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'''PAYSANNE, LA''' (The Peasant). French, English; Jig. D Major (‘A’ and ‘B’ parts), D Minor (‘C’ part). ABCAB. The first tune (of six) in " | |f_annotation='''PAYSANNE, LA''' (The Peasant). French, English; Jig. D Major (‘A’ and ‘B’ parts), D Minor (‘C’ part). ABCAB. The first tune (of six) in "Paine's First Set of Quadrilles," "as danced at Almack's." There were other "First Sets," with the original "First Set of Quadrilles" being the work of Jean-Baptiste Hullin, a successful choreographer and ballet dancer, who originated them in 1797. They were hugely popular. Paine was a London dancing master, either James Paine or Edward Payne, both contemporaries in London in the first decades of the 19th century, when the French dance took hold in England. However, it was James Paine's quadrilles that also became known as "the first set of quadrilles publicly danced at Almacks." The melody appears as the first tune in a quadrille set in the music manuscript copybook of fiddler John Burks, dated 1821. Unfortunately, nothing is known of Burks, although his ms. has an English provenance. | ||
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Latest revision as of 21:15, 9 September 2024
{{#seo:
|type=article
|author=https://www.tunearch.org/wiki/User:Andrew
|published_time=2024-09-09
|description=The Internet Archive of traditional Irish, Scottish, British and North American tunes with annotations and free sheet music in pdf
|keywords=fiddle tune finder, find recordings, irish traditional music, tune name finder, tunes in abc format, english country dance, old-time music
|image=TUC-160x120.png
|image_alt=tune name finder
}}
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PAYSANNE, LA (The Peasant). French, English; Jig. D Major (‘A’ and ‘B’ parts), D Minor (‘C’ part). ABCAB. The first tune (of six) in "Paine's First Set of Quadrilles," "as danced at Almack's." There were other "First Sets," with the original "First Set of Quadrilles" being the work of Jean-Baptiste Hullin, a successful choreographer and ballet dancer, who originated them in 1797. They were hugely popular. Paine was a London dancing master, either James Paine or Edward Payne, both contemporaries in London in the first decades of the 19th century, when the French dance took hold in England. However, it was James Paine's quadrilles that also became known as "the first set of quadrilles publicly danced at Almacks." The melody appears as the first tune in a quadrille set in the music manuscript copybook of fiddler John Burks, dated 1821. Unfortunately, nothing is known of Burks, although his ms. has an English provenance.
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