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'''FILL THE STOUP'''. Scottish, Reel. A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Surenne): ABB (Kerr): AABBCCDD (Athole, Gow). There are two versions of this reel, differing in the first strains. John Glen (1891) finds the earliest appearance of this tune in print in Robert Ross's 1780 collection (p. 36). It was included by Kirkmichael, Perthshire, fiddler and composer Robert Petrie in his Second Collection of Strathspey Reels and Country Dances (1796). "[[Dornoch Links]]" follows a similar harmonic and melodic pattern, but is a different tune. A stoup is a drinking vessel, as this excerpt from Hunter's '''Biggar and the House of Fleming''' (1867, p. 427) illustrates: | '''FILL THE STOUP'''. Scottish, Reel. A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Surenne): ABB (Kerr): AABBCCDD (Athole, Gow, Ross). There are two versions of this reel, differing in the first strains. John Glen (1891) finds the earliest appearance of this tune in print in Robert Ross's 1780 collection (p. 36). It was included by Kirkmichael, Perthshire, fiddler and composer Robert Petrie in his Second Collection of Strathspey Reels and Country Dances (1796). "[[Dornoch Links]]" follows a similar harmonic and melodic pattern, but is a different tune. A stoup is a drinking vessel, as this excerpt from Hunter's '''Biggar and the House of Fleming''' (1867, p. 427) illustrates: | ||
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''Abernathy had great fondness for a glass of good spirits, and sometimes partook of considerable quantities without apparent'' ''injury. One day he entered a grocer's shop in Biggar, and said to the shopkeeper, "Tammas, draw me a gill of whisky oot o' yer'' ''best barrel; there's a good King's coin to pay for it; and let me hae a bit parliament cake to taste it wi'." The grocer filled'' ''the stoup and set it down on the counter, and then turning round to obtain a parliament, Abernathy with singular dexterity lifted'' ''the measure, drank off its contents, and placed it on the counter, wholly unobserved. Abernathy appearing in no hurry to taste the'' ''liquor, the grocer inquired the cause. "I'm waitin' 'till ye fill the stoup." "Fill the stoup! the stoup is filled already. If it'' ''is no fou, I'll gie ye a gill for naething." "Done," said Abernathy, and turning the stoup upside down, showed that it was'' ''entirely empty. The bewildered grocer drew another gill and set it down. Abernathy, though a beggar, was a man of honour. He'' ''explained how the first gill had disappeared, drank the second, and paid for both. '' | ''Abernathy had great fondness for a glass of good spirits, and sometimes partook of considerable quantities without apparent'' ''injury. One day he entered a grocer's shop in Biggar, and said to the shopkeeper, "Tammas, draw me a gill of whisky oot o' yer'' ''best barrel; there's a good King's coin to pay for it; and let me hae a bit parliament cake to taste it wi'." The grocer filled'' ''the stoup and set it down on the counter, and then turning round to obtain a parliament, Abernathy with singular dexterity lifted'' ''the measure, drank off its contents, and placed it on the counter, wholly unobserved. Abernathy appearing in no hurry to taste the'' ''liquor, the grocer inquired the cause. "I'm waitin' 'till ye fill the stoup." "Fill the stoup! the stoup is filled already. If it'' ''is no fou, I'll gie ye a gill for naething." "Done," said Abernathy, and turning the stoup upside down, showed that it was'' ''entirely empty. The bewildered grocer drew another gill and set it down. Abernathy, though a beggar, was a man of honour. He'' ''explained how the first gill had disappeared, drank the second, and paid for both. '' |
Revision as of 02:53, 20 October 2016
Back to Fill the Stoup
FILL THE STOUP. Scottish, Reel. A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Surenne): ABB (Kerr): AABBCCDD (Athole, Gow, Ross). There are two versions of this reel, differing in the first strains. John Glen (1891) finds the earliest appearance of this tune in print in Robert Ross's 1780 collection (p. 36). It was included by Kirkmichael, Perthshire, fiddler and composer Robert Petrie in his Second Collection of Strathspey Reels and Country Dances (1796). "Dornoch Links" follows a similar harmonic and melodic pattern, but is a different tune. A stoup is a drinking vessel, as this excerpt from Hunter's Biggar and the House of Fleming (1867, p. 427) illustrates:
Abernathy had great fondness for a glass of good spirits, and sometimes partook of considerable quantities without apparent injury. One day he entered a grocer's shop in Biggar, and said to the shopkeeper, "Tammas, draw me a gill of whisky oot o' yer best barrel; there's a good King's coin to pay for it; and let me hae a bit parliament cake to taste it wi'." The grocer filled the stoup and set it down on the counter, and then turning round to obtain a parliament, Abernathy with singular dexterity lifted the measure, drank off its contents, and placed it on the counter, wholly unobserved. Abernathy appearing in no hurry to taste the liquor, the grocer inquired the cause. "I'm waitin' 'till ye fill the stoup." "Fill the stoup! the stoup is filled already. If it is no fou, I'll gie ye a gill for naething." "Done," said Abernathy, and turning the stoup upside down, showed that it was entirely empty. The bewildered grocer drew another gill and set it down. Abernathy, though a beggar, was a man of honour. He explained how the first gill had disappeared, drank the second, and paid for both.
The melody also appears in the 1280 music manuscript collection of Highland piper Robert Millar (1789-1861), inscribed "Forfar Reg. and Piper to the Aberdeen Highland Society, 1820," and in multi-instrumentalist John Rook's manuscript collection (1840, p. 111, Wigton, Cumbria).
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Aird (Selection of Scotch, English, Irish and Foreign Airs, vol. 4), 1796; No. 59, p. 24. Gow (Complete Repository, Part 1), 1799; p. 25. Kerr (Merry Melodies, vol. 2), c. 1880's; No. 28, p. 6. McGlashan (A Collection of Reels), c. 1786; pp. 14-15. Robert Ross (Choice Collection of Scots Reels or Country Dances & Strathspeys), Edinburgh, 1780; p. 36. Stewart-Robertson (The Athole Collection), 1884; p. 27. Surenne (Dance Music of Scotland), 1852; p. 50.
Recorded sources: