Cumha Iarla Wigton: Difference between revisions
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|f_year=1983 | |f_year=1983 | ||
|f_page=No. 55, pp. 132-133 | |f_page=No. 55, pp. 132-133 | ||
|f_player=Bonnie Rideout, | |f_theme_code_index=11L3L5L 6L123 | ||
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|f_album=Scotland`s Fiddle Piobaireachd vol. 1 | |f_album=Scotland`s Fiddle Piobaireachd vol. 1 | ||
|f_label=Tulloch TM504 | |f_label=Tulloch TM504 | ||
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CUMHA IARLA WIGTON (Lament for the Earl of Wigton). Scottish, Pibroch. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCCDDEE. The first and last strains are in duple time, the middle three in triple. The air appeared in Donald Dow's '''Ancient Scots Music''' (1776), although Johnson (1983) dates it on stylistic terms to c. 1720, and thinks it may have originally been composed for the harp. The Earl was probably the third Earl of Wigton who died in 1665, according to Bruford. | '''CUMHA IARLA WIGTON''' (Lament for the Earl of Wigton). Scottish, Pibroch. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCCDDEE. The first and last strains are in duple time, the middle three in triple. The air appeared in Donald Dow's '''Ancient Scots Music''' (1776), although Johnson (1983) dates it on stylistic terms to c. 1720, and thinks it may have originally been composed for the harp. The Earl was probably the third Earl of Wigton who died in 1665, according to Bruford. | ||
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''Printed source:'' Johnson ("Scottish Fiddle Music in the 18th Century"), 1983; No. 55, pp. 132-133.' | ''Printed source:'' Johnson ("'Scottish Fiddle Music in the 18th Century"'), 1983; No. 55, pp. 132-133.' | ||
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Revision as of 01:12, 10 August 2010
CUMHA IARLA WIGTON (Lament for the Earl of Wigton). Scottish, Pibroch. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCCDDEE. The first and last strains are in duple time, the middle three in triple. The air appeared in Donald Dow's Ancient Scots Music (1776), although Johnson (1983) dates it on stylistic terms to c. 1720, and thinks it may have originally been composed for the harp. The Earl was probably the third Earl of Wigton who died in 1665, according to Bruford.
Printed source: Johnson ("'Scottish Fiddle Music in the 18th Century"'), 1983; No. 55, pp. 132-133.'
Recorded sources: Ann Heymann - "Cruit go nÓr." Alison Kinnaird - "The Silver String."
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