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|f_annotation='''PAS SEUL [1].''' Scottish, Country Dance Tune (2/4 time). C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB.  A ''pas seul'' refers to a solo dance. Montrose and Aberdeen dancing master and musician [[biography:Archibald Duff]]'s title includes that it was "Danced by Miss Margaret Burnett of Leys."  She was perhaps Margaret Burnett of Leys (1796-1828), who would have been aged about sixteen when Duff's collection was printed. She was the daughter of Robert Burnett, laird of Leys, and Margaret Dalrymple-Horn-Elphinstone, and married Captain Thomas Ramsay in 1826 in Banchory, Aberdeenshire.  She died only two years after her marriage, which often means a childbirth death. Speculatively, it may be that the adolescent Miss Burnett was one of dancing master Duff's pupils, for whom he choreographed and arranged this dance.  Duff used the popular forms of the day--airs, strathspeys, reels, country dances, etc.--for several Pas Seul's in his collection, all perhaps to showcase his well-to-do students' skills.  
|f_annotation='''PAS SEUL [1].''' Scottish, Country Dance Tune (2/4 time). C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB.  A ''pas seul'' refers to a solo dance. Montrose and Aberdeen dancing master and musician [[biography:Archibald Duff]]'s title includes that it was "Danced by Miss Margaret Burnett of Leys."  She was perhaps Margaret Burnett of Leys (1796-1828), who would have been aged about sixteen when Duff's collection was printed. She was the daughter of Sir Robert Burnett of Leys, 7th Baronet of Crathes, and Margaret Dalrymple-Horn-Elphinstone, and married her cousin, Captain Thomas Ramsay in 1826 in Banchory, Aberdeenshire.  She died only two years after her marriage, which often means a death from childbirth; their son, Thomas, was born in 1828, making this a likely conseequnce. Speculatively, it may be that the adolescent Miss Burnett was one of dancing master Duff's pupils, for whom he choreographed and arranged this dance.  Duff used the popular forms of the day--airs, strathspeys, reels, country dances, etc.--for several Pas Seul's in his collection, all perhaps to showcase his well-to-do students' skills.
 
The Burnetts of Leys were one of the oldest land-owning families in Scotland, of Norman descent.  
|f_printed_sources=Archibald Duff ('''A Choice Collection of Minuets, Favourite Airs, Hornpipes, Waltzs &c., Book First'''), Edinburgh, c. 1812; p. 8.
|f_printed_sources=Archibald Duff ('''A Choice Collection of Minuets, Favourite Airs, Hornpipes, Waltzs &c., Book First'''), Edinburgh, c. 1812; p. 8.
}}
}}

Revision as of 05:51, 29 December 2020


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X:1 T:Pas Seul [1] N:”Danced by Miss Margaret Burnett of Leys” M:2/4 L:1/8 B:Archibald Duff – A Choice Selection of Minuets, Favourite Airs, Hornpipes, Waltzs &c. B:Book First (Edinburgh, c. 1812, p. 8) B: https://digital.nls.uk/special-collections-of-printed-music/archive/105810922 N:Archibald Duff (c. 1770-c. 1840?) was a musician (along with his brother Charles) and dancing N:master, of Montrose and Aberdeen, and is recorded as being a Professor of Music residing at N:Clayills Cottage, Aberdeen in 1837. N:The volume is dedicated to Lady Mary Ramsay of Balmain Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:C cc {d}c/>B/c/>e/|d- g>.f.e/.d/| cc {d}c/>B/c/>e/|d/>c/B/>A/ G/>G/A/>B/|cc {d}c/>B/c/>e/| d- g>.f.e/.d/| cc {e}d/>c/d/>e/|cecz:|B/>g/ {a}(g/^f/4g/4) d/>g/ {a}g/(f/4g/4)|(e/f/).g/.a/ (g/e/).d/.c/| B/>g/ {a}(g/^f/4g/4) d/>g/ {a}(g/f/4f/4)|(e/f/).g/.a/ .g/(e/d/c/)|a/>f/c' .g.e|a/>f/c' .g/.c| a/>f/c'/>a/ g/>e/d/>c/|B/>c/f/>e/ d/>G/A/>B/|cc {d}c/>B/c/>e/|(d g>)f.e/.d/|cc {d}c/>B/c/>e/| d/>c/B/>A/ G/>G/A/>B/|cc {d}c/>B/c/>e/|(d g>)f.e/.d/|cc {e}d/>c/d/>e/|cec z||



PAS SEUL [1]. Scottish, Country Dance Tune (2/4 time). C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. A pas seul refers to a solo dance. Montrose and Aberdeen dancing master and musician biography:Archibald Duff's title includes that it was "Danced by Miss Margaret Burnett of Leys." She was perhaps Margaret Burnett of Leys (1796-1828), who would have been aged about sixteen when Duff's collection was printed. She was the daughter of Sir Robert Burnett of Leys, 7th Baronet of Crathes, and Margaret Dalrymple-Horn-Elphinstone, and married her cousin, Captain Thomas Ramsay in 1826 in Banchory, Aberdeenshire. She died only two years after her marriage, which often means a death from childbirth; their son, Thomas, was born in 1828, making this a likely conseequnce. Speculatively, it may be that the adolescent Miss Burnett was one of dancing master Duff's pupils, for whom he choreographed and arranged this dance. Duff used the popular forms of the day--airs, strathspeys, reels, country dances, etc.--for several Pas Seul's in his collection, all perhaps to showcase his well-to-do students' skills.

The Burnetts of Leys were one of the oldest land-owning families in Scotland, of Norman descent.


Additional notes



Printed sources : - Archibald Duff (A Choice Collection of Minuets, Favourite Airs, Hornpipes, Waltzs &c., Book First), Edinburgh, c. 1812; p. 8.






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