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'''FROG GALLIARD, THE'''. AKA - "[[Now O Now I Needs Must Part]]." English, Country Dance Tune (3/2 or 6/4 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. This 16th century air appears in Morley's '''Consort Lessons''' (1597), Robinson's '''New Cithren Lessons''' (1609), '''Nederlantsche Gedenck-Clanck''' (1626), '''Stichtelycke Rymen''' (1647), and a lute MSS. in the Cambridge University library. John Dowland published it as "Now, o now I needs must part" in his '''First Booke of Songes or Ayres''' (1597). The tune was published in 1649 in the Netherlands in a volume called '''Der Fluyten Lust-Hof''' (The Flute's Garden of Delights) by Jacob van Eyck (c. 1590-1657), a recorder player, carillonneur of the Utrecht Dom Cathedral, and director of all the bells and clock-chimes of the city. He called it "Harte Diefje, Waerom Zoo Stil" (Little Thief of My Heart; Why so Still?). Chappell (1859) says several ballads were written to the tune.  
'''FROG GALLIARD, THE'''. AKA - "[[Now o now I needs must part]]." English, Country Dance Tune (3/2 or 6/4 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. This 16th century air appears in Morley's '''Consort Lessons''' (1597), Robinson's '''New Cithren Lessons''' (1609), '''Nederlantsche Gedenck-Clanck''' (1626), '''Stichtelycke Rymen''' (1647), and a lute MSS. in the Cambridge University library. John Dowland published it as "Now, o now I needs must part" in his '''First Booke of Songes or Ayres''' (1597). The tune was published in 1649 in the Netherlands in a volume called '''Der Fluyten Lust-Hof''' (The Flute's Garden of Delights) by Jacob van Eyck (c. 1590-1657), a recorder player, carillonneur of the Utrecht Dom Cathedral, and director of all the bells and clock-chimes of the city. He called it "Harte Diefje, Waerom Zoo Stil" (Little Thief of My Heart; Why so Still?). Chappell (1859) says several ballads were written to the tune.  
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Revision as of 04:03, 30 June 2014

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FROG GALLIARD, THE. AKA - "Now o now I needs must part." English, Country Dance Tune (3/2 or 6/4 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. This 16th century air appears in Morley's Consort Lessons (1597), Robinson's New Cithren Lessons (1609), Nederlantsche Gedenck-Clanck (1626), Stichtelycke Rymen (1647), and a lute MSS. in the Cambridge University library. John Dowland published it as "Now, o now I needs must part" in his First Booke of Songes or Ayres (1597). The tune was published in 1649 in the Netherlands in a volume called Der Fluyten Lust-Hof (The Flute's Garden of Delights) by Jacob van Eyck (c. 1590-1657), a recorder player, carillonneur of the Utrecht Dom Cathedral, and director of all the bells and clock-chimes of the city. He called it "Harte Diefje, Waerom Zoo Stil" (Little Thief of My Heart; Why so Still?). Chappell (1859) says several ballads were written to the tune.

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Chappell (Popular Music of the Olden Time), vol. 1, 1859; pp. 274-275.

Recorded sources:




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