Annotation:Dornoch Links: Difference between revisions
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'''DORNOCH LINKS'''. Scottish, Pipe March or Quickstep (2/4 time). A | '''DORNOCH LINKS'''. AKA and see "[[Joe Bane's]]." Scottish, Pipe March or Quickstep (2/4 time). A Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB (Gunn): AABB (Kerr, Martin). Dornoch Links is one of the earliest locations where the game of golf is recorded to have been played, in 1616. Dornoch is about an hour north of Inverness, in the Scottish Highlands. The tune appeared to musicologist Samuel Bayard (1981) to be a set of the one he collected in southwestern Pennsylvania as "[[Hazel Dean]]." "[[Fill the Stoup]]" has a similar harmonic and melodic pattern, but is a different melody. | ||
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A version of the tune is played in East County Clare as a barndance or schottische under the title "[[Joe Bane's]]." | |||
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''Printed sources'': Kerr ('''Merry Melodies'''), | ''Printed sources'': William Gunn ('''The Caledonian Repository of Music Adapted for the Bagpipes'''), Glasgow, 1848; p. 80. Kerr ('''Merry Melodies, vol. 1'''), c. 1880; No. 11, p. 48. Martin ('''Ceol na Fidhle''', vol. 3), 1988; p. 14. | ||
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Revision as of 18:54, 25 July 2018
Back to Dornoch Links
DORNOCH LINKS. AKA and see "Joe Bane's." Scottish, Pipe March or Quickstep (2/4 time). A Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB (Gunn): AABB (Kerr, Martin). Dornoch Links is one of the earliest locations where the game of golf is recorded to have been played, in 1616. Dornoch is about an hour north of Inverness, in the Scottish Highlands. The tune appeared to musicologist Samuel Bayard (1981) to be a set of the one he collected in southwestern Pennsylvania as "Hazel Dean." "Fill the Stoup" has a similar harmonic and melodic pattern, but is a different melody.
A version of the tune is played in East County Clare as a barndance or schottische under the title "Joe Bane's."
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: William Gunn (The Caledonian Repository of Music Adapted for the Bagpipes), Glasgow, 1848; p. 80. Kerr (Merry Melodies, vol. 1), c. 1880; No. 11, p. 48. Martin (Ceol na Fidhle, vol. 3), 1988; p. 14.
Recorded sources: Parlophone E3724 (78 RPM), Robert Kirk (2nd in set with "Oh Nannie" and "Miss Rattray").
See also listing at:
Hear fiddler Robert Kirk's 78 RPM recording at the Internet Archive [1] [2]