Annotation:Doc Boyd's Jig: Difference between revisions
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'''DOC BOYD'S JIG'''. Canadian, Jig. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Credited to one John Burt (copyright 1933) by Harry Jarman. Samuel Bayard (1981, '''Dance to the Fiddle''') considers it a set of a tune also known as "[[Republican Set (The)]]" and "[[Old Jubiter]]," but also | '''DOC BOYD'S JIG'''. Canadian, Jig. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Credited to one John Burt (copyright 1933) by Harry Jarman. Samuel Bayard (1981, '''Dance to the Fiddle''') considers it a set of a tune also known as "[[Republican Set (The)]]" and "[[Old Jubiter]]," but also concedes that these kinds of tunes are representative of tunes formed by swapping, adapting and shifting of familiar strains or sections of other tunes. As "[[Old Jubiter]]" the jig was printed in Ira Ford's '''Traditional Music in America''' (1940), where it is described as a "dance and play-party tune." See also Joseph Allard's closely related "[[Gigue du Forgeron]]," recorded in 1936, which may have been based on Burt's tune. | ||
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Revision as of 03:03, 27 October 2014
Back to Doc Boyd's Jig
DOC BOYD'S JIG. Canadian, Jig. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Credited to one John Burt (copyright 1933) by Harry Jarman. Samuel Bayard (1981, Dance to the Fiddle) considers it a set of a tune also known as "Republican Set (The)" and "Old Jubiter," but also concedes that these kinds of tunes are representative of tunes formed by swapping, adapting and shifting of familiar strains or sections of other tunes. As "Old Jubiter" the jig was printed in Ira Ford's Traditional Music in America (1940), where it is described as a "dance and play-party tune." See also Joseph Allard's closely related "Gigue du Forgeron," recorded in 1936, which may have been based on Burt's tune.
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Jarman (Cornhuskers Book of Square Dance Tunes), 1944; p. 24.
Recorded sources: