Annotation:My King has Landed at Moidart: Difference between revisions
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'''MY KING HAS LANDED AT MOIDART''' (Thainig mo Righ air tìr am Mùideart). Scottish, Pipe Pibroch (whole time). A Dorian. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB'. The clan march of the Stewarts, or was at one time. This pipe pibroch commemorates the spot where Bonnie Prince Charlie first stepped foot on Scottish soil during the Jacobite rising of 1745. It is said to have been composed on the spot at the time of the landing (although this is disputed) by a member of the piping family of MacIntyres from Rannoch, one John MacIntyre (Collinson, 1975). See note for "[[Annotation:Eight Men of Muidart (1)]] | '''MY KING HAS LANDED AT MOIDART''' (Thainig mo Righ air tìr am Mùideart). Scottish, Pipe Pibroch (whole time). A Dorian. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB'. The clan march of the Stewarts, or was at one time. This pipe pibroch commemorates the spot where Bonnie Prince Charlie first stepped foot on Scottish soil during the Jacobite rising of 1745. It is said to have been composed on the spot at the time of the landing (although this is disputed) by a member of the piping family of MacIntyres from Rannoch, one John MacIntyre (Collinson, 1975). See note for "[[Annotation:Eight Men of Muidart (1)]]" for more information on the event and associated tales. | ||
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''Printed sources'': David Glen ('''A Collection | ''Printed sources'': David Glen ('''A Collection of Ancient Piobaireachd'''), 1890; No. 30, p. 70. '''Mackay's Collection of Ancient Piobairachd''', 1835. | ||
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Revision as of 22:06, 3 February 2017
Back to My King has Landed at Moidart
MY KING HAS LANDED AT MOIDART (Thainig mo Righ air tìr am Mùideart). Scottish, Pipe Pibroch (whole time). A Dorian. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB'. The clan march of the Stewarts, or was at one time. This pipe pibroch commemorates the spot where Bonnie Prince Charlie first stepped foot on Scottish soil during the Jacobite rising of 1745. It is said to have been composed on the spot at the time of the landing (although this is disputed) by a member of the piping family of MacIntyres from Rannoch, one John MacIntyre (Collinson, 1975). See note for "Annotation:Eight Men of Muidart (1)" for more information on the event and associated tales.
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: David Glen (A Collection of Ancient Piobaireachd), 1890; No. 30, p. 70. Mackay's Collection of Ancient Piobairachd, 1835.
Recorded sources: