Annotation:Mulchard's Dream: Difference between revisions
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|f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Mulchard's_Dream > | |||
'''MULCHARD'S DREAM.''' AKA and see "[[Will You Go and Marry Ketty?]]". Scottish; Strathspey or Reel (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. John Glen (1891) finds the earliest appearance of this tune in print in [[biography:Angus Cumming]]'s | |f_annotation='''MULCHARD'S DREAM.''' AKA - "Bruadar Fear Mullach Àrd." AKA and see "[[Will You Go and Marry Ketty?]]". Scottish; Strathspey or Reel (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. John Glen (1891) finds the earliest appearance of this tune in print in [[biography:Angus Cumming]]'s 1782 manuscript (p. 17) where it appears as "Mulchard's Dream" with the Gaelic title "Bruadar Fear Mullach Àrd" (The Dream of the Man of the 'High Peak). Cumming (c. 1750-c. 1800) was from a long line of Speyside musicians. However, as William Lamb<ref>William Lamb, "Reeling in the Strathspey: The Origins of Scotland's National Music", '''Scottish Studies''', vol. 36, pp 66-102, Jun 2013. </ref> points out, the word ''strathspey'' only appears in the title of his collection, and not with any of the tunes themselves; "the tunes were simply all 'Old Highland reels' to him." The boundary between what we think of as reels versus the syncopated strathspey was much more permeable to Cumming. | ||
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|f_printed_sources= Cumming ('''Collection of Strathspey or Old Highland Reels'''), 1782; No. 52, p. 17. | |||
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Revision as of 23:26, 17 July 2022
X:1 T:Mulchard's Dream T:Bruarthar Feare Mulachaird M:C| L:1/8 B:Cumming - Collection of Strathpsey or Old Highland Reels (1780, No. 52, p. 17) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:G A|BG G/G/G B>A Bg|BG G/G/G B>d Ac|BG G/G/G (B>A) B>d|eg de Bg A:| |:Bded gdec|Bdd>e g>B A2|Bdde gdec|TB>AB>d gb A2:|]
MULCHARD'S DREAM. AKA - "Bruadar Fear Mullach Àrd." AKA and see "Will You Go and Marry Ketty?". Scottish; Strathspey or Reel (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. John Glen (1891) finds the earliest appearance of this tune in print in biography:Angus Cumming's 1782 manuscript (p. 17) where it appears as "Mulchard's Dream" with the Gaelic title "Bruadar Fear Mullach Àrd" (The Dream of the Man of the 'High Peak). Cumming (c. 1750-c. 1800) was from a long line of Speyside musicians. However, as William Lamb[1] points out, the word strathspey only appears in the title of his collection, and not with any of the tunes themselves; "the tunes were simply all 'Old Highland reels' to him." The boundary between what we think of as reels versus the syncopated strathspey was much more permeable to Cumming.
- ↑ William Lamb, "Reeling in the Strathspey: The Origins of Scotland's National Music", Scottish Studies, vol. 36, pp 66-102, Jun 2013.