Biography:James Porteous: Difference between revisions

Find traditional instrumental music
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 12: Line 12:
----
----
<p><font face="garamond, serif" size="4">
<p><font face="garamond, serif" size="4">
"The Musical Miller" of Annandale, as he was a farmer and miller of Hoddam with a reputation as a violinist and composer. See his compositions "[[South of the Grampians]]" and "[[Parish of Dalmailing]]," published in his '''Strathspeys, Reels, Jigs, Hornpipes''' , Edinburgh, about 1821. The volume was dedicated to Lady Jardine of Applegarth. He spent his last years in Thomas Street, Annan, where he died on July 17th, 1847, aged 85. "His great-grandfather was Dunty the Ghost of Spedling Tower, near Lockerbie" (?? ancestry site).  
"The Musical Miller" of Annandale, as he was a farmer and miller of Knockhill Mill, Hoddam, with a reputation as a violinist and composer. He spent a year in Edinburgh where he received musical instruction from Nathaniel Gow, and he was friendly with Niel Gow (Sr.). See his compositions "[[South of the Grampians]]" and "[[Parish of Dalmailing]]," published in his '''Strathspeys, Reels, Jigs, Hornpipes''' , Edinburgh, about 1821. The volume was dedicated to Lady Jardine of Applegarth and contained his compositions, save one, which was composed by his son when aged 9. "Mysteriously, a second edition, published a year after the first, contains the same music but with an almost complete set of new titles, for which no explanation has so far been suggested. James Porteous made a speciality of writing silly, happy, little tunes about ghoulish subjects. He commemorated one Porteous who met a melodramatic end in “The Spedling Castle's Ghost's Dance” and also wrote the tune “The Porteous Mob” commemorating Captain John Porteous, who was the notoriously brutal commander of the Edinburgh Town Guard in 1736 and was lynched at the 'Porteous Riot' [http://www.thesundayclass.org.uk/OLD%20SPEDLING%20CASTLES%20GHOST.html]"
<br>
<br>
He spent his last years in Thomas Street, Annan, where he died on July 17th, 1847, aged 85. "His great-grandfather was Dunty the Ghost of Spedling Tower, near Lockerbie" (?? ancestry site).  
<br>
<br>
----
----

Revision as of 13:08, 20 August 2015


James Porteous


     
 Given name:     James
 Middle name:     
 Family name:     Porteous
 Place of birth:     Lammonbie, Applegarth, Dumfriesshire, Scotland
 Place of death:     Annan, Dumfriesshire, Scotland
 Year of birth:     1762
 Year of death:     1847
 Profile:     Composer, Musician
 Source of information:     
     

Biographical notes


"The Musical Miller" of Annandale, as he was a farmer and miller of Knockhill Mill, Hoddam, with a reputation as a violinist and composer. He spent a year in Edinburgh where he received musical instruction from Nathaniel Gow, and he was friendly with Niel Gow (Sr.). See his compositions "South of the Grampians" and "Parish of Dalmailing," published in his Strathspeys, Reels, Jigs, Hornpipes , Edinburgh, about 1821. The volume was dedicated to Lady Jardine of Applegarth and contained his compositions, save one, which was composed by his son when aged 9. "Mysteriously, a second edition, published a year after the first, contains the same music but with an almost complete set of new titles, for which no explanation has so far been suggested. James Porteous made a speciality of writing silly, happy, little tunes about ghoulish subjects. He commemorated one Porteous who met a melodramatic end in “The Spedling Castle's Ghost's Dance” and also wrote the tune “The Porteous Mob” commemorating Captain John Porteous, who was the notoriously brutal commander of the Edinburgh Town Guard in 1736 and was lynched at the 'Porteous Riot' [1]"

He spent his last years in Thomas Street, Annan, where he died on July 17th, 1847, aged 85. "His great-grandfather was Dunty the Ghost of Spedling Tower, near Lockerbie" (?? ancestry site).