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'''AWA' WHIGS AWA''''. Scottish, Slow Air (whole time). G Major (Oswald): E Dorian (Aird). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The tune was played by a Highland piper in Claverhouse's army at the Battle of Bothwell Bridge in an attempt to rally his fellow troops.  'In brave Highland style', as the story goes, he paraded along the banks of the Clyde until he finally fell in the river, mortally wounded, and drowned.
'''AWA' WHIGS AWA''''. Scottish, Slow Air (whole time). G Major (Oswald): E Dorian (Aird). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. "Away Whigs Away" was a song that was a great favorite of the Stuart kings. It appears in Johnson's '''Scots Musical Museum, vol. 1''' (No. 272) and the first series of Hogg's '''Jacobite Relics''' (pp. 76-77). Hogg remarks:
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''There is a tradition, that, at the battle of Bothwell Bridge, the piper to''
''Clavers' own troop of horse stood on the brink of the Clyde, playing it with''
''great glee; but beign struck by a bullet, either by chance, or in''
''consequence of an aim taken, as is generally reported, he rolled down the''
''bank in the agonies of death; and always as he rolled over the bag, so''
''intent was he on this old party tune, that, with determined firmness of''
''fingering, he made the pipes to yell out two or three notes more of it,''
''till at last he plunged into the river, and was carried peaceably down''
''the stream among a great number of floating Whigs.''
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Revision as of 04:54, 7 January 2016

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AWA' WHIGS AWA'. Scottish, Slow Air (whole time). G Major (Oswald): E Dorian (Aird). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. "Away Whigs Away" was a song that was a great favorite of the Stuart kings. It appears in Johnson's Scots Musical Museum, vol. 1 (No. 272) and the first series of Hogg's Jacobite Relics (pp. 76-77). Hogg remarks:

There is a tradition, that, at the battle of Bothwell Bridge, the piper to Clavers' own troop of horse stood on the brink of the Clyde, playing it with great glee; but beign struck by a bullet, either by chance, or in consequence of an aim taken, as is generally reported, he rolled down the bank in the agonies of death; and always as he rolled over the bag, so intent was he on this old party tune, that, with determined firmness of fingering, he made the pipes to yell out two or three notes more of it, till at last he plunged into the river, and was carried peaceably down the stream among a great number of floating Whigs.

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Aird (Selection of Scotch, English, Irish, and Foreign Airs, vol. 3), 1788; No. 511, p. 196. Oswald (Caledonian Pocket Companion, Book 6), 1760; p. 19.

Recorded sources:




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