Annotation:Royal Irish Quadrille No. 1: Difference between revisions
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The first quadrille figure was fashioned from "[[Black Joke (1) (The)]]", the second figure was "[[Brighton Camp]]," and the fourth "[[Irish Washerwoman (1)]]." "Royal Irish Quadrille No. 4" (Irish Washerwoman) | The first quadrille figure was fashioned from "[[Black Joke (1) (The)]]", the second figure was "[[Brighton Camp]]," and the fourth "[[Irish Washerwoman (1)]]." "Royal Irish Quadrille No. 1" (Black Joke) and "Royal Irish Quadrille No. 4" (Irish Washerwoman) were entered into the 1850 music manuscript (p. 93) of shoemaker and fiddler William Winter, of Bagborough, Somerset, southwest England, who elsewhere in his ms. also had the 4th quadrille entered as "Irish Washerwoman". | ||
|f_source_for_notated_version= | |f_source_for_notated_version= | ||
|f_printed_sources=Geoff Woolfe ('''William Winter's Quantocks Tune Book'''), 2007; No. 17, p. 20 (No. 4 only). | |f_printed_sources=Geoff Woolfe ('''William Winter's Quantocks Tune Book'''), 2007; No. 17, p. 20 (No. 4 only). |
Revision as of 02:27, 30 June 2023
X:1 T:Royal Irish Quadrille No. 1. Le4.177 T:Black Joke,aka. Le4.177 Q:3/8=100 L:1/8 B:L.Leadley MS#4 c1850 Z:vmp.Mike Hicken 2016 www.village-music-project.org.uk N: * This is not shown as a semi-quaver but has been changed to match the preceeding dotted quaver. N: ** In the original there is a bar here containing 2 quaver rests which has been omitted. M:6/8 K:C G|Gcc cBc|d>"*"ed dcB|ceg gfe|dfe dcB| c>de A>Bc|G>cB cde|c>de A>Bc|GcB c !fermata!|| gf|ece geg |afa g2 f/e/|ece geg|afa g2e| ceg gfe|dfe dcB|c>de A>Bc|GcB c2G|| "**"|A2z c2z|Bfe dcB|c>Bc c>Bc|B^GB e2z | A2z c2z|Bfe dcB|c>BA B>A^G|ABA A=GG "_Decapo"|]
The first quadrille figure was fashioned from "Black Joke (1) (The)", the second figure was "Brighton Camp," and the fourth "Irish Washerwoman (1)." "Royal Irish Quadrille No. 1" (Black Joke) and "Royal Irish Quadrille No. 4" (Irish Washerwoman) were entered into the 1850 music manuscript (p. 93) of shoemaker and fiddler William Winter, of Bagborough, Somerset, southwest England, who elsewhere in his ms. also had the 4th quadrille entered as "Irish Washerwoman".