Annotation:'A', 'E' and 'D' Quadrille: Difference between revisions

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{{Annotation|
[[{{BASEPAGENAME}}|ABC Notation and Properties]]
"'A', 'E' and 'D' Quadrille" is the first change (part) of the Blue Bird Quadrille, published in 1899 by E.T. Root (Chicago), and was named (quite obviously) after the key change in each of its three parts.  
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<p><font face="sans-serif" size="4">
''' 'A', 'E' and 'D' Quadrille ''' is the first change (part) of the Blue Bird Quadrille, published in 1899 by E.T. Root (Chicago), and was named (quite obviously) after the key change in each of its three parts.  
<br>
<br>
It was collected by R.P. Christeson from the playing of Nebraska fiddler "Uncle" Bob Walters in Nov., 1949. Christeson notes that quadrille parts had largely been divorced from the original sets, so that in popular usage in the Midwest a quadrille refers to a single piece in 6/8 tempo.
It was collected by R.P. Christeson from the playing of Nebraska fiddler "Uncle" Bob Walters in Nov., 1949. Christeson notes that quadrille parts had largely been divorced from the original sets, so that in popular usage in the Midwest a quadrille refers to a single piece in 6/8 tempo.
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X:1
''Source for notated version'':
T:A, E and D Quadrille
<br>
M:6/8
<br>
L:1/8
''Printed sources'':  
R:Quadrille
<br>
K:A
<br>
e|eac eAB|cea c'ae|Beg bge|baf e2e|
''Recorded sources'': <font color=teal></font>
eac eAB|cea c'ae|Beg bge|aga a2:|
</font></p>
K:E
<br>
|:B|BGB Beg|Beg bge|Bdf agf|egf edc|
<br>
BGB Beg|Beg bge|Bdf afd|e2 e'e'2:|
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|:A|f2 f fed|AFB AFA|g2g gfe|BGc BGB|
'''Back to [[{{BASEPAGENAME}}]]'''
g2g gfe|a2a agf|eBb gec|d3 d2:|

Latest revision as of 10:59, 6 May 2019

ABC Notation and Properties


'A', 'E' and 'D' Quadrille is the first change (part) of the Blue Bird Quadrille, published in 1899 by E.T. Root (Chicago), and was named (quite obviously) after the key change in each of its three parts.
It was collected by R.P. Christeson from the playing of Nebraska fiddler "Uncle" Bob Walters in Nov., 1949. Christeson notes that quadrille parts had largely been divorced from the original sets, so that in popular usage in the Midwest a quadrille refers to a single piece in 6/8 tempo.

Source for notated version:

Printed sources:

Recorded sources:




Back to 'A', 'E' and 'D' Quadrille