Annotation:Ratha Fair (1): Difference between revisions
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{{TuneAnnotation | {{TuneAnnotation | ||
|f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Ratha_Fair_(1) > | |f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Ratha_Fair_(1) > | ||
|f_annotation='''RATHA FAIR [1].''' AKA - "Ratho Fair." Scottish, Reel. D Minor/Dorian (Gow): E Minor (Aird). Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Surenne): ABB (Carlin/Gow, Gow): AABB (Aird, Bremner). John Glen (1891) finds the earliest appearance of this tune in Robert Bremner's 1757 collection. | |f_annotation='''RATHA FAIR [1].''' AKA - "Ratho Fair." Scottish, Reel. D Minor/Dorian (Gow): E Minor (Aird). Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Surenne): ABB (Carlin/Gow, Gow): AABB (Aird, Bremner). John Glen (1891) finds the earliest appearance of this tune in Robert Bremner's 1757 collection. There is no record of a 'Ratha Fair', rather, the title is thought to refer to [[wikipedia:Ratho]], at one time a Midlothian village but now part of Rural West Edinburgh. There must have been some kind of fair at Ratho, although information is difficult to find. However, Edinburgh poet William Liddle wrote a song called “Ratho Fair”<ref>William Liddle, '''Poems on different occasions, chiefly in the Scottish dialect''', 1825, pp. 224-225. </ref>, to be sung “To its ain tune.” The first few stanzas go: | ||
<blockquote> | |||
''Come will ye gang to Ratho Fair,''<br> | |||
''And see the lassies sporting there,''<br> | |||
''We’ll a’ away to Ratho Fairv | |||
''And see the landwart lasses.''<br> | |||
<br> | |||
''The morning it was gayin’ fair,''<br> | |||
''I left the bed when it was air,''<br> | |||
''Pat on my claise and trip’t away,''<br> | |||
''To Ratho Fair i’ the morning.''<br> | |||
<br> | |||
''Come, &c. | |||
<br> | |||
''But when I gat into the fair,''<br> | |||
''I saw but little sellin’ ware,''<br> | |||
''But lasses cam frae here an’ there''<br> | |||
''To get what they were wantin’.''<br> | |||
<br> | |||
''Come, &c. | |||
<br> | |||
''The lasses they were twa for ane,''<br> | |||
''For ilka lad that cou’d be seen,''<br> | |||
''For number they are ne’er a hin.''<br> | |||
''At neither Fair nor dancin’.''<br> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
|f_source_for_notated_version= | |f_source_for_notated_version= | ||
|f_printed_sources=Bremner ('''Scots Reels'''), 1757; p. 1. | |f_printed_sources=Bremner ('''Scots Reels'''), 1757; p. 1. | ||
Carlin ('''The Gow Collection'''), 1986; No. 513. | Carlin ('''The Gow Collection'''), 1986; No. 513. | ||
Gow ('''Complete Repository, Part 2'''), 1802; p. 33. | Gow ('''Complete Repository, Part 2'''), 1802; p. 33. | ||
Mackenzie ('''National Dance Music of Scotland, Book 2'''), 1889; p. 23 (as "Ratho Fair"). | |||
Seattle ('''Over the Hills & Far Away'''), No. 39 (as "Ratho Fair"). | |||
Surenne ('''Dance Music of Scotland'''), 1852; p. 4. | Surenne ('''Dance Music of Scotland'''), 1852; p. 4. | ||
|f_recorded_sources= | |f_recorded_sources=BRCD002, Blazin' Fiddles - "The Old Style." Discipline Global Mobile DGM9907, Matt Seattle - "Out of the Flames" (1997). | ||
|f_see_also_listing= | |f_see_also_listing= | ||
}} | }} | ||
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Revision as of 01:47, 20 September 2022
X:1
T:Ratha Fair [1]
M:C|
L:1/8
R:Reel
B:Robert Bremner - A Collection of Scots Reels or Country Dances
B:(London, 1757, p. 1)
Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion
K:Ddor
g|adag|ecge|adag|adag|adag|ecge|(f/g/a) ge d2d:|
|:e|cA-Ac GAcG|cA-AB cded|cA-Ac GAcG|(A/B/c) Ec D2d:|]
RATHA FAIR [1]. AKA - "Ratho Fair." Scottish, Reel. D Minor/Dorian (Gow): E Minor (Aird). Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Surenne): ABB (Carlin/Gow, Gow): AABB (Aird, Bremner). John Glen (1891) finds the earliest appearance of this tune in Robert Bremner's 1757 collection. There is no record of a 'Ratha Fair', rather, the title is thought to refer to wikipedia:Ratho, at one time a Midlothian village but now part of Rural West Edinburgh. There must have been some kind of fair at Ratho, although information is difficult to find. However, Edinburgh poet William Liddle wrote a song called “Ratho Fair”[1], to be sung “To its ain tune.” The first few stanzas go:
Come will ye gang to Ratho Fair,
And see the lassies sporting there,
We’ll a’ away to Ratho Fairv And see the landwart lasses.
The morning it was gayin’ fair,
I left the bed when it was air,
Pat on my claise and trip’t away,
To Ratho Fair i’ the morning.
Come, &c.
But when I gat into the fair,
I saw but little sellin’ ware,
But lasses cam frae here an’ there
To get what they were wantin’.
Come, &c.
The lasses they were twa for ane,
For ilka lad that cou’d be seen,
For number they are ne’er a hin.
At neither Fair nor dancin’.
- ↑ William Liddle, Poems on different occasions, chiefly in the Scottish dialect, 1825, pp. 224-225.