Annotation:Shapron (The): Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{TuneAnnotation | {{TuneAnnotation | ||
|f_annotation='''SHAPRON, THE.''' AKA - "Chaperone (The)." English, Country Dance Tune (cut time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. "The Shapron" (i.e. "The Chaperone") was entered in the mid-19th century music manuscript of William Winter (1774-1861), a shoemaker and violin player who lived in West Bagborough in Somerset, southwest England. Geoff Woolfe notes that title was unclear in the ms. copy. | |f_annotation='''SHAPRON, THE.''' AKA - "Chaperone (The)." English, Country Dance Tune (cut time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. "The Shapron" (i.e. "The Chaperone") was entered in the mid-19th century music manuscript of William Winter (1774-1861), a shoemaker and violin player who lived in West Bagborough in Somerset, southwest England. Geoff Woolfe notes that title was unclear in the ms. copy. Compare with "[[Russe (1) (La)]]," a similar tune, probably cognate in the first strain. | ||
|f_printed_sources=Geoff Woolfe ('''William Winter’s Quantocks Tune Book'''), 2007; No. 262, p. 98 (ms. originally dated 1850). | |f_printed_sources=Geoff Woolfe ('''William Winter’s Quantocks Tune Book'''), 2007; No. 262, p. 98 (ms. originally dated 1850). | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 21:48, 12 August 2023
X:1 T: Shapron, The M: 4/4 L: 1/8 R: reel K: Dmaj |:FE|D2 F2 F2 AG|A2 d2 d2 c2| B2 A2 G2 F2|ED EF E2 FE| D2 F2 F2 AG| A2 d2 d2 e2|fa fd eg ec| d2 d2 d2:| |:fg|a2 f2 b2 ag|a2 d2 d2 ef|g2 e2 f2 d2|ed cB A2 fg| a2 f2 b2 ag|a2 d2 d2 e2|fa fd eg ec|d2 d2 d2:|
SHAPRON, THE. AKA - "Chaperone (The)." English, Country Dance Tune (cut time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. "The Shapron" (i.e. "The Chaperone") was entered in the mid-19th century music manuscript of William Winter (1774-1861), a shoemaker and violin player who lived in West Bagborough in Somerset, southwest England. Geoff Woolfe notes that title was unclear in the ms. copy. Compare with "Russe (1) (La)," a similar tune, probably cognate in the first strain.