Annotation:Drumdelgie: Difference between revisions

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'''DRUMDELGIE'''. AKA - "The Hash o' Drumdelgie." Scottish, Jig and Air. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB. Drumdelgie is a farm  near Huntly, on the Banff-Aberdeenshire border, and is mentioned as early as 1642 (in extracts from the Presbytory book of Strathbogie). By the mid 19th Century Drumdelgie was one of the largest 'Farm Touns' in the North East of Scotland, with more than 30 children attending the local school, from the farm community. Bothy Ballads, part of the North East folk lore, were composed as a source of entertainment. One of the best known 'The Hash O'Drumdelgie tells of the hurry of work on the farm on a cold winter's morning.
'''DRUMDELGIE'''. AKA - "The Hash o' Drumdelgie." Scottish, Jig and Air. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB. Drumdelgie is a farm  near Huntly, on the Banff-Aberdeenshire border, and is mentioned as early as 1642 (in extracts from the Presbytory book of Strathbogie). It grew, and by the mid-19th century it employed scores of workers and was one of the largest 'Farm Touns' in the North East of Scotland. Some 30 children from the farm attended the local school. The melody is from a "bothy" (bunkhouse) ballad, as it was called in the North East of Scotland, a genre composed as a source of entertainment. Various sets of lyrics have been set to the tune, and one of the best known ("The Hash o' Drumdelgie") tells of the hurry of work on the farm on a cold winter's morning. Another Scottish version begins:
The tune was a "bothy" (bunkhouse) ballad, known throughout the British Isles and in Ireland. Various lyrics have been set to the tune. A Scottish version begins:
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''Fare ye will Drumdelgie, for I maun gang awa,''<br>
''Fare ye will Drumdelgie, for I maun gang awa,''<br>

Revision as of 01:42, 19 February 2011

Tune properties and standard notation


DRUMDELGIE. AKA - "The Hash o' Drumdelgie." Scottish, Jig and Air. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB. Drumdelgie is a farm near Huntly, on the Banff-Aberdeenshire border, and is mentioned as early as 1642 (in extracts from the Presbytory book of Strathbogie). It grew, and by the mid-19th century it employed scores of workers and was one of the largest 'Farm Touns' in the North East of Scotland. Some 30 children from the farm attended the local school. The melody is from a "bothy" (bunkhouse) ballad, as it was called in the North East of Scotland, a genre composed as a source of entertainment. Various sets of lyrics have been set to the tune, and one of the best known ("The Hash o' Drumdelgie") tells of the hurry of work on the farm on a cold winter's morning. Another Scottish version begins:

Fare ye will Drumdelgie, for I maun gang awa,
Fare ye weel Drundelgie, yer weetie weather an a';
Fare ye weel drumdelgie, I bid ye a' adieu,
I leave ye as I foond ye, a damned unceevil crew.

An Irish version, sung by Clare tin whistle player and singer Micho Russell (d. 1994), begins:

Come all ye jolly plooman lads,
An' hearken untae me;
An' I'll sing ye Drumdelgie,
Wi' muckle mirth an' glee.

There is a toon in Cyarnie,
It's kent baith far an' wide;
Tae be the hash o' Drumdelgie,
Upon sweet Deveronside.

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Williamson (English, Welsh, Scottish and Irish Fiddle Tunes), 1976; p. 48.

Recorded sources:




Tune properties and standard notation