Annotation:Carlin is Your Daughter Ready?: Difference between revisions
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'''CARLIN, IS YOUR DAUGHTER READY?''' AKA and see "The Bob O'Dooly." AKA - "Port Nan Con." Scottish, Strathspey. A Mixolydian (Athole, Johnson): D Mixolydian (Mackintosh). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A ‘carlin’ is a Scots word meaning an old woman. There are several melodies with this title. One "Carle is Your Daughter Ready?" appears in David Rutherford's '''Compleat Collection of 200 country Dances, vol. 2''' (London, 1760), and a tune by that name appears in the 1790 music manuscript collection of American musician Edward Murphy (Newport, R.I.?). | '''CARLIN, IS YOUR DAUGHTER READY?''' AKA and see "The Bob O'Dooly." AKA - "Port Nan Con." Scottish, Strathspey. A Mixolydian (Athole, Johnson): D Mixolydian (Mackintosh). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A ‘carlin’ is a Scots word meaning an old woman. There are several melodies with this title. One "Carle is Your Daughter Ready?" appears in David Rutherford's '''Compleat Collection of 200 country Dances, vol. 2''' (London, 1760), and a tune by that name appears in the 1790 music manuscript collection of American musician Edward Murphy (Newport, R.I.?). There was also a song by the title: | ||
<br> | <blockquote> | ||
''I will buy a pound of woo',''<br> | |||
''I will wash't and mak a plaidy,''<br> | |||
''I'm guan ower the muir to woo',''<br> | |||
''Carlin, is your daughter ready?''<br> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<br> | <br> | ||
''Source for notated version'': | ''Source for notated version'': |
Revision as of 16:58, 2 December 2010
Tune properties and standard notation
CARLIN, IS YOUR DAUGHTER READY? AKA and see "The Bob O'Dooly." AKA - "Port Nan Con." Scottish, Strathspey. A Mixolydian (Athole, Johnson): D Mixolydian (Mackintosh). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A ‘carlin’ is a Scots word meaning an old woman. There are several melodies with this title. One "Carle is Your Daughter Ready?" appears in David Rutherford's Compleat Collection of 200 country Dances, vol. 2 (London, 1760), and a tune by that name appears in the 1790 music manuscript collection of American musician Edward Murphy (Newport, R.I.?). There was also a song by the title:
I will buy a pound of woo',
I will wash't and mak a plaidy,
I'm guan ower the muir to woo',
Carlin, is your daughter ready?
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Aird (Selection of Scotch, English, Irish and Foreign Airs), vol. 1, 1782; No. 24, p. 9. Johnson (The Kitchen Musician's No. 10: Airs & Melodies of Scotland's Past), vol. 10, 1992 (revised 2001); p. 3. Mackintosh, vol. 3, 1796; p. 39. Stewart-Robertson (The Athole Collection), 1884; p. 14.
Recorded sources: Queltic Q-104, Ten Strike - "Neuantics."