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'''OPERA HAT, THE.''' English, Country Dance Tune (2/4 time). England, Shropshire. G Major: D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A country dance tune that appears in several early 19th century English musicians' music manuscript collections, including those of John Clare (1793-1864, Helpston, Northamptonshire), Thomas Sands (Lincolnshire, c. 1810), John Moore (1837-40, Shropshire), and William Calvert (Leyburn, Yorkshire, 1812). Editor Gordon Ashman points out the tune is almost identical with "A Russian Dance," also found in Moore's MS. See also the 6/8 time "[[New Opera Hat]]," a different tune that has also appeared as "Opera Hat" in a few manuscripts.
'''OPERA HAT, THE.''' English, Country Dance Tune (2/4 time). England, Shropshire. G Major: D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A country dance tune that appears in several early 19th century English musicians' music manuscript collections, including those of John Clare (1793-1864, Helpston, Northamptonshire), Thomas Sands (Lincolnshire, c. 1810), John Moore (1837-40, Shropshire), and William Calvert (Leyburn, Yorkshire, 1812). The tune is almost identical with "A Russian Dance," also found in the manuscripts of Moore, Calvert and Sands. The country dance is mentioned in Adam Waldie's "The Gurney Papers," published in '''The Select Circulating Library''' (1837, vol. 10, Part 2, p. 231):
<blockquote>
''...and into the house I came again, when to my horror I heard a sound certainly most unexpected''
''by me at such a moment--that of the tuning of a fiddle in the drawing-room next to my wife's''
''bedchamber. I stepped up the stairs, astounded at such a circumstance, and there beheld Mr.''
''Kittington, the dancing-master, just in the act of beginning the then popular country dance''
''of the "Opera Hat," that being fixed for the first practice of the before-breakfast lesson to''
''the young ladies.''
</blockquote>
See also the 6/8 time "[[New Opera Hat]]," a different tune that has also appeared as "Opera Hat" in a few manuscripts.
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Revision as of 16:33, 7 March 2015

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OPERA HAT, THE. English, Country Dance Tune (2/4 time). England, Shropshire. G Major: D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A country dance tune that appears in several early 19th century English musicians' music manuscript collections, including those of John Clare (1793-1864, Helpston, Northamptonshire), Thomas Sands (Lincolnshire, c. 1810), John Moore (1837-40, Shropshire), and William Calvert (Leyburn, Yorkshire, 1812). The tune is almost identical with "A Russian Dance," also found in the manuscripts of Moore, Calvert and Sands. The country dance is mentioned in Adam Waldie's "The Gurney Papers," published in The Select Circulating Library (1837, vol. 10, Part 2, p. 231):

...and into the house I came again, when to my horror I heard a sound certainly most unexpected by me at such a moment--that of the tuning of a fiddle in the drawing-room next to my wife's bedchamber. I stepped up the stairs, astounded at such a circumstance, and there beheld Mr. Kittington, the dancing-master, just in the act of beginning the then popular country dance of the "Opera Hat," that being fixed for the first practice of the before-breakfast lesson to the young ladies.

See also the 6/8 time "New Opera Hat," a different tune that has also appeared as "Opera Hat" in a few manuscripts.

Source for notated version: a c. 1837-1840 MS by Shropshire musician John Moore [Ashman].

Printed sources: Ashman (The Ironbridge Hornpipe), 1991; No. 13b, p. 2.

Recorded sources:




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