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'''CROWDIE'''. AKA and see "[[Crowdie Ever Mair]]," "[[Three Times Crowdie in One Day]]," "[[Wayward Wife (The)]]," "[[Bide Ye Yet (2)]]," "[[O That I Had Ne'er Been Married]]." Scottish, Air (2/4 time). C Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. The song was printed in Johnson's '''Scots Musical Museum''' (1803) as "Crowdie Ever Mair." It begins: | '''CROWDIE'''. AKA and see "[[Crowdie Ever Mair]]," "[[Three Times Crowdie in One Day]]," "[[Wayward Wife (The)]]," "[[Bide Ye Yet (2)]]," "[[O That I Had Ne'er Been Married]]." Scottish, Air (2/4 time). C Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. The song (adapted by Robert Burns from an older song) was printed in Johnson's '''Scots Musical Museum''' (1803) as "Crowdie Ever Mair." It begins: | ||
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''O that I had ne'er been married,''<br> | ''O that I had ne'er been married,''<br> |
Revision as of 06:08, 3 November 2013
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CROWDIE. AKA and see "Crowdie Ever Mair," "Three Times Crowdie in One Day," "Wayward Wife (The)," "Bide Ye Yet (2)," "O That I Had Ne'er Been Married." Scottish, Air (2/4 time). C Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. The song (adapted by Robert Burns from an older song) was printed in Johnson's Scots Musical Museum (1803) as "Crowdie Ever Mair." It begins:
O that I had ne'er been married,
I wad never had nae care,
Now I've gotten wife an' weans,
An' the cry "Crowdie" evermair.
Chorus:
Ance crowdie, twice crowdie,
Three times crowdie in a day;
Gin ye "crowdie" ony mair,
Ye'll crowdie a' my meal away.
Crowdie was a dish of oatmeal made with cold water, not boiled, in the strict sense, but in usage it referred to any oatmeal dish, the staple of the common people in Scotland in the 18th century.
Samuel Bayard says the first strain of his "Lost Indian (7) was derived from the opening of "Crowdie."
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Johnson (Scots Musical Museum), 1803.
Recorded sources: