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'''FOUR AND TWENTY HIGHLANDMEN'''. AKA and see "[[When You Go to the Hill Take Your Gun]]." Scottish, Reel. The melody appears in the '''Drummond Castle Manuscript''', 1734, inscribed "A Collection of the best Highland Reels written by David Young, W.M. & Accomptant." The MS, in the possession of the Earl of Ancaster at Drummond Castle, is sometimes called the "Duke of Perth MS."
'''FOUR AND TWENTY HIGHLANDMEN [1]'''. Scottish, Reel. The melody appears in the '''Drummond Castle Manuscript''', 1734, inscribed "A Collection of the best Highland Reels written by David Young, W.M. & Accomptant." The MS, in the possession of the Earl of Ancaster at Drummond Castle, is sometimes called the "Duke of Perth MS." There are a few tunes by the name of "Four and Twenty Highlandmen." One such was the vehicle for a song in the ballad opera '''Devil to Pay''' (1731).
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Revision as of 04:04, 27 March 2016

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FOUR AND TWENTY HIGHLANDMEN [1]. Scottish, Reel. The melody appears in the Drummond Castle Manuscript, 1734, inscribed "A Collection of the best Highland Reels written by David Young, W.M. & Accomptant." The MS, in the possession of the Earl of Ancaster at Drummond Castle, is sometimes called the "Duke of Perth MS." There are a few tunes by the name of "Four and Twenty Highlandmen." One such was the vehicle for a song in the ballad opera Devil to Pay (1731).

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