Annotation:Room for a Rover: Difference between revisions

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'''ROOM FOR A ROVER.''' English, ‘Old’ or Triple Hornpipe (3/2 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. The song "Room for a Rover" was printed in Thomas D’Urfy’s '''Wit and Mirth; or, Pills to Purge Melancholy, vol. 2''', around the year 1719. The words were by D'Urfey, but the tune was set to "a Tune of Mr. Peasable's call'd ye new Dance."  
'''ROOM FOR A ROVER.''' AKA - "The Blackbird." English, ‘Old’ or Triple Hornpipe (3/2 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. The song "Room for a Rover" was printed in Thomas D’Urfy’s '''Wit and Mirth; or, Pills to Purge Melancholy, vol. 2''', around the year 1705. The words were by D'Urfey, but the tune was set to "a Tune of Mr. Peasable's call'd ye new Dance." A later edition of '''Pills''' (1719) gives the title as "The Blackbird: A New Song", the first two stanzas of which go:
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''Room, room, room for a Rover,''<br>
''Yonder Town's so hot;''<br>
''I a Country Lover''<br>
''Bless my Freedom got:''<br>
''This Celestial Weather''<br>
''Such enjoymnent gives,''<br>
''We like Birds flock hither,''<br>
''Browzing on green leaves:''<br>
''Some who late sate Scowling,''<br>
''Publick Cheats to mend;''<br>
''Study now with Bowling,''<br>
''Each to Cheat his Friend:''<br>
<br>
Cho:<br>
''Wilst on the Hawthorn Tree, Terry rerry, rerry, rerry, rerry,''<br>
''rerry, rerry, sings the Blackbird, Oh what a World have we.''<br>
<br>
''In the Easter Regions,''<br>
''Cannibals abound;''<br>
''Eas'd of all Religions,''<br>
''Man does Man confound:''<br>
''But our worser Natives,''<br>
''Here Church-Rules obey;''<br>
''Yet like Barb'rous Castiffs,''<br>
''Gorge up more than they:''<br>
''In the Town, hot Follies,''<br>
''Fools to Faction draw;''<br>
''Nonsence, Noise and Malice,''<br>
''Passes too for Law:''<br>
</blockquote>
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Revision as of 00:35, 7 January 2018


X:1 % T:Room for a Rover T:Blackbird, The C:James Peasable M:3/2 L:1/8 B:D'Rufey - Pills to Purge Melancholy, vol. 2 (1719) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:G G2d4cB A2G2 | G2d2e2 f2g4 | A2a4 gf e2d2 | A2d4^c2d4 :|B2e4^d2e2B2 | B2e4^d2e4 | A2d4^c2d2A2 | G2 d4 ^c2 d4|G2c4 B2c2 BA| GA Bc defd f2G2|g2 fe defd g2G2|g2 fed c2 BA G4||



ROOM FOR A ROVER. AKA - "The Blackbird." English, ‘Old’ or Triple Hornpipe (3/2 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. The song "Room for a Rover" was printed in Thomas D’Urfy’s Wit and Mirth; or, Pills to Purge Melancholy, vol. 2, around the year 1705. The words were by D'Urfey, but the tune was set to "a Tune of Mr. Peasable's call'd ye new Dance." A later edition of Pills (1719) gives the title as "The Blackbird: A New Song", the first two stanzas of which go:

Room, room, room for a Rover,
Yonder Town's so hot;
I a Country Lover
Bless my Freedom got:
This Celestial Weather
Such enjoymnent gives,
We like Birds flock hither,
Browzing on green leaves:
Some who late sate Scowling,
Publick Cheats to mend;
Study now with Bowling,
Each to Cheat his Friend:

Cho:
Wilst on the Hawthorn Tree, Terry rerry, rerry, rerry, rerry,
rerry, rerry, sings the Blackbird, Oh what a World have we.

In the Easter Regions,
Cannibals abound;
Eas'd of all Religions,
Man does Man confound:
But our worser Natives,
Here Church-Rules obey;
Yet like Barb'rous Castiffs,
Gorge up more than they:
In the Town, hot Follies,
Fools to Faction draw;
Nonsence, Noise and Malice,
Passes too for Law:


Additional notes

Source for notated version: -

Printed sources : - Doyle (Plain Brown Tune Book), 1997; p. 37.

Recorded sources: -



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