Annotation:Mr. Charles Graham’s Welcome Home: Difference between revisions

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'''MR. CHARLES GRAHAM’S WELCOME HOME'''.  AKA and see "[[Welcome Home (2)]]." Scottish, Slow Air (6/8 time). A Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. Composed by [[biography:William Gow]] (1751-1791), eldest son of Perthshire fiddler-composer Niel Gow, and leader of the Edinburgh Assembly Orchestra until his death. The melody was employed by poet Robert Burns for his song “Out over the Forth &c.” in the '''Scots Musical Museum''' (vol. V, song 421, p. 434, 1787). It begins:
'''MR. CHARLES GRAHAM’S WELCOME HOME'''.  AKA and see "[[Darby the Driver]]," "[[Welcome Home (2)]]." Scottish, Slow Air (6/8 time). A Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. Composed by [[biography:William Gow]] (1751-1791), eldest son of Perthshire fiddler-composer Niel Gow, and leader of the Edinburgh Assembly Orchestra until his death. The melody was employed by poet Robert Burns for his song “Out over the Forth &c.” in the '''Scots Musical Museum''' (vol. V, song 421, p. 434, 1787). It begins:
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''Out over the Forth, I look to the North,''<br>
''Out over the Forth, I look to the North,''<br>
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''The far foreign land, or the wide rolling sea.''<br>
''The far foreign land, or the wide rolling sea.''<br>
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See also the Irish cognates tune family under the title "[[Darby the Driver]]" and others.
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Revision as of 06:48, 24 November 2015

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MR. CHARLES GRAHAM’S WELCOME HOME. AKA and see "Darby the Driver," "Welcome Home (2)." Scottish, Slow Air (6/8 time). A Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. Composed by biography:William Gow (1751-1791), eldest son of Perthshire fiddler-composer Niel Gow, and leader of the Edinburgh Assembly Orchestra until his death. The melody was employed by poet Robert Burns for his song “Out over the Forth &c.” in the Scots Musical Museum (vol. V, song 421, p. 434, 1787). It begins:

Out over the Forth, I look to the North,
But what is the North and its Highlands to me;
The South nor the East, gie ease to my breast,
The far foreign land, or the wide rolling sea.

See also the Irish cognates tune family under the title "Darby the Driver" and others.

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Gow (Second Collection of Niel Gow’s Reels), 1788; p. 20 (3rd edition).

Recorded sources:




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