Find traditional instrumental music
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| '''COME KISS WITH ME (COME CLAP WITH ME)'''. AKA and see "[[Newburn Lads]]," "[[Kail and Knockit Corn]]," "[[Bob of Fettercairn (The)]]." Scottish, Reel or Air. "The Bob of Fettercairn" is the title Neil Gow gave to the tune in his third collection, but it was known half a century earlier than that as the song "Come Kiss With Me, Come Clap With Me." It appears in William Thompson's '''Orpheus Caledoneus''',2nd Edition. vol 2 (London, 1733). In the Shetlands the same tune was known as "Kail and Knockit Corn" (kail and bruised oats) which was also a song still in oral tradition during the 1970's (Cooke, 1986). Bayard believes the tune to be a special development of "[[Boyne Water (1)]]."
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Revision as of 02:54, 6 August 2014
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