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'''LEWIS GORDAN'''. AKA - "[[Lewie Gordon]]." Scottish, "Very Slow" Strathspey or Air. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). One part (ten bars). Glen traces the tune to 1783 and believes it to have been borrowed from "[[Tarry Woo]].'" Oh, send Lewis Gordon hame
'''LEWIS GORDAN'''. AKA - "[[Lewie Gordon]]." Scottish, "Very Slow" Strathspey or Air. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). One part (ten bars). Glen traces the tune to 1783 and believes it to have been borrowed from "[[Tarry Woo]]'," repeating the thoughts of Joseph Ritson and James Hogg, who said it was the "original or northern set of 'Tarry Woo'." The later (in his '''Jacobite Relics of Scotland''', 1821), identified the air as a having "always been a popular ditty: reportedly "supposed to have been made by a Mr. Geddes, (a Roman Catholic) priest at Shenval in the Enzie (Banffshire), on the Lord Lewis Gordon."
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Hogg then gives this sketch: "Lord Lewis Gordon, third son to Alexander, second Duke of Gordon, being bred to sea service, was a lieutenant on board a ship of war; but, on the rising in 1745, declared for prince Charles; raised a regiment of two battalions; defeated the adherents of George, under the laird of McLeod, near Inverury, 23d September that year, and then marched to Perth; after the battle of Culloden he escaped abroad ; was attainted by act of parliament, 1746; and died at Montreuil, in France, on the 15th of June, 1754."
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Revision as of 01:43, 12 October 2012

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LEWIS GORDAN. AKA - "Lewie Gordon." Scottish, "Very Slow" Strathspey or Air. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). One part (ten bars). Glen traces the tune to 1783 and believes it to have been borrowed from "Tarry Woo'," repeating the thoughts of Joseph Ritson and James Hogg, who said it was the "original or northern set of 'Tarry Woo'." The later (in his Jacobite Relics of Scotland, 1821), identified the air as a having "always been a popular ditty: reportedly "supposed to have been made by a Mr. Geddes, (a Roman Catholic) priest at Shenval in the Enzie (Banffshire), on the Lord Lewis Gordon."

Hogg then gives this sketch: "Lord Lewis Gordon, third son to Alexander, second Duke of Gordon, being bred to sea service, was a lieutenant on board a ship of war; but, on the rising in 1745, declared for prince Charles; raised a regiment of two battalions; defeated the adherents of George, under the laird of McLeod, near Inverury, 23d September that year, and then marched to Perth; after the battle of Culloden he escaped abroad ; was attainted by act of parliament, 1746; and died at Montreuil, in France, on the 15th of June, 1754."

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Glen Collection, 1900; p. 84. Gow (Complete Repository), 1799; vol. 1, p. 2. Howe (1000 Jigs and Reels), c. 1867; p. 126 (appears as "Lewie Gordon"). Johnson (Scots Musical Museum), 1783-1803; vol. 1, No. 86. Smith (Scottish Minstrel), 1820-24, vol. 1; p. 44.

Recorded sources:




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