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'''LITTLE CASCADE, THE.''' Scottish, Reel. E Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BBCC'DDEEFF. A challenging pipe tune composed by Pipe Major George S. McLennan (1883-1927), a revered piper in Highland circles. There are | '''LITTLE CASCADE, THE.''' Scottish, Reel. E Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BBCC'DDEEFF. A challenging pipe tune composed by Pipe Major George S. McLennan (1883-1927), a revered piper in Highland circles. There are various explanaitons of the title, most involving a dripping tap in one location or another. One notion is that he composed the tune when a prisoner of war in Germany (or, in some versions, in a hospital) during the First World War 1, his inspiration being a dripping tap that interrupted his sleep. A similar story has the dripping tap located in a barracks, interrupting McLennan's sleep after returning from leave in town. A version attributed to McLennan's half-brother, D.S. MacLennan, has it that their father pointed to the rhythm of the dripping tap during a bagpipe lesson. Yet another thought is that it described his having of necessity to relieve himself against a nearby wall (although he is said to have been dissuaded from offering that explanation for the title). The explanation that seems to have the most veracity was related by McLennan's son in a BBC Radio Scotland interview in 1994. The son said that the location of the dripping tap was the kitchen of the McLennan home in Aberdeen, and hearing it inspired the tune. | ||
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Revision as of 06:25, 12 November 2012
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LITTLE CASCADE, THE. Scottish, Reel. E Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BBCC'DDEEFF. A challenging pipe tune composed by Pipe Major George S. McLennan (1883-1927), a revered piper in Highland circles. There are various explanaitons of the title, most involving a dripping tap in one location or another. One notion is that he composed the tune when a prisoner of war in Germany (or, in some versions, in a hospital) during the First World War 1, his inspiration being a dripping tap that interrupted his sleep. A similar story has the dripping tap located in a barracks, interrupting McLennan's sleep after returning from leave in town. A version attributed to McLennan's half-brother, D.S. MacLennan, has it that their father pointed to the rhythm of the dripping tap during a bagpipe lesson. Yet another thought is that it described his having of necessity to relieve himself against a nearby wall (although he is said to have been dissuaded from offering that explanation for the title). The explanation that seems to have the most veracity was related by McLennan's son in a BBC Radio Scotland interview in 1994. The son said that the location of the dripping tap was the kitchen of the McLennan home in Aberdeen, and hearing it inspired the tune.
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Martin (Ceol na Fidhle), vol. 4, 1991; p. 7. McLennan (Highland Bagpipe Music).
Recorded sources: Rounder 3067, Alan Stivell - "Renaissance of the Celtic Harp" (1982).
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