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'''DRUCKEN MOLL KNOX'''. AKA - "Drunken Moll Know." English, Reel or Strathspey (whole time). England, Northumberland. G Major (Bruce & Stokoe): A Major (Cocks). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Merriam-Webster gives that ''drucken'' is a Scottish variant of 'drunken'. The tune was contained in the music manuscript collection of John Smith, dated 1752, which unfortunately is now lost. According to Northumbrian piper and researcher Matt Seattle, John Stokoe copied tune from Smith's ms. in 1887, five years after the publication of his '''Northumbrian Minstrelsy'''.  
'''DRUCKEN MOLL KNOX'''. AKA - "Drunken Moll Knox." English, Reel or Strathspey (whole time). England, Northumberland. G Major (Bruce & Stokoe): A Major (Cocks). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Merriam-Webster gives that ''drucken'' is a Scottish variant of 'drunken'. The tune was contained in the music manuscript collection of John Smith, dated 1752, which unfortunately is now lost. According to Northumbrian piper and researcher Matt Seattle, John Stokoe copied tune from Smith's ms. in 1887, five years after the publication of his '''Northumbrian Minstrelsy'''. The title in Smith's ms. is "Drunken Moll Knox."
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Revision as of 02:58, 23 July 2018

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DRUCKEN MOLL KNOX. AKA - "Drunken Moll Knox." English, Reel or Strathspey (whole time). England, Northumberland. G Major (Bruce & Stokoe): A Major (Cocks). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Merriam-Webster gives that drucken is a Scottish variant of 'drunken'. The tune was contained in the music manuscript collection of John Smith, dated 1752, which unfortunately is now lost. According to Northumbrian piper and researcher Matt Seattle, John Stokoe copied tune from Smith's ms. in 1887, five years after the publication of his Northumbrian Minstrelsy. The title in Smith's ms. is "Drunken Moll Knox."

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Bruce & Stokoe (Northumbrian Minstrelsy), 1882; p. 172. Cocks (Tutor for the Northumbrian Half-Long Bagpipes), 1925; No. 36, p. 16.

Recorded sources: East Allen Recording EAR016-2, Keith Davidson and Neil Smith - "Big Men - Small Pipes: The Art Of Northumbrian Pipe Duets" (1995).




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