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== Additional notes ==
== Additional notes ==
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<font color=red>''Source for notated version''</font>: -  
<font color=red>''Source for notated version''</font>: -  
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<font color=red>''Printed sources''</font> : - Kennedy ('''Fiddlers Tune Book, vol. 1'''), 1951; No. 49, p. 24. Raven ('''English Country Dance Tunes'''), 1984; p. 170.
<font color=red>''Printed sources''</font> : - Kennedy ('''Fiddlers Tune Book, vol. 1'''), 1951; No. 49, p. 24. Raven ('''English Country Dance Tunes'''), 1984; p. 170.
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<font color=red>''Recorded sources'': </font> <font color=teal> -  </font>
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Latest revision as of 20:08, 6 May 2019

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X:1 % T:Rifleman, The M:C| L:1/8 K:D dc | B2 cA BAFA | BdcA d2 cd | B2 cA BAFA | afef d2 :| |: de | f2 fe fddb | afef d2 de | fgfe fddb | afef d2 :|



RIFLEMAN, THE. Scottish, English; Country Dance Tune and Reel (cut time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A country dance called The Rifleman was danced in the Scottish Border counties as late as 1926, report Flett & Flett (1964). The longways set dance was quick, often to a rant or schottische, and incorporated the whole first figure of The First Set of Quadrilles; it was performed to the tune "The Rifleman" or sometimes to "White Cockade (1) (The)." The dance itself was earlier known as the Galopade; James Scott Skinner's The People's Ballroom Guide (1905) gives it as the Galopade County Dance.

Additional notes

Source for notated version: -

Printed sources : - Kennedy (Fiddlers Tune Book, vol. 1), 1951; No. 49, p. 24. Raven (English Country Dance Tunes), 1984; p. 170.

Recorded sources: -



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