Annotation:Country Attorney (The): Difference between revisions
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The tune is in 2/4 time in the London publications from Longman, Lukey & Broderip and the Thompsons. It was converted to 6/8 time in the mid-19th century music manuscript collection of Manchester, England, musician [[biography:John Roose]], with the title "Country Assembly"<ref>The title "Country Assembly" is probably a mishearing of "Country Assembly", or a misreading of the handwritten title in the manuscript. </ref> | The tune is in 2/4 time in the London publications from Longman, Lukey & Broderip and the Thompsons. It was converted to 6/8 time in the mid-19th century music manuscript collection of Manchester, England, musician [[biography:John Roose]], with the title "Country Assembly"<ref>The title "Country Assembly" is probably a mishearing of "Country Assembly", or a misreading of the handwritten title in the manuscript. The tune is also contained in the mid-19th century music manuscript of William Winter (1774-1861), a shoemaker and violin player who lived in West Bagborough in Somerset, southwest England.</ref> | ||
|f_source_for_notated_version= | |f_source_for_notated_version= | ||
|f_printed_sources=Longman, Lukey & Broderip ('''Bride's Favourite Collection of 200 Select Country Dances, Cotillons'''), c. 1776; Part 3, p. 85. Samuel, Ann & Peter Thompson ('''Compleat Collection of 200 Favourite Country Dances, vol. 5'''), 1788; p. 2. | |f_printed_sources=Longman, Lukey & Broderip ('''Bride's Favourite Collection of 200 Select Country Dances, Cotillons'''), c. 1776; Part 3, p. 85. Samuel, Ann & Peter Thompson ('''Compleat Collection of 200 Favourite Country Dances, vol. 5'''), 1788; p. 2. Geoff Woolfe ('''William Winter’s Quantocks Tune Book'''), 2007; No. 274, p. 101 (ms. originally dated 1850). | ||
|f_recorded_sources= | |f_recorded_sources= | ||
|f_see_also_listing= | |f_see_also_listing= | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 00:17, 25 July 2023
X:1 T:Country Attorney, The M:2/4 L:1/8 R:Country Dance B:Samuel, Ann & Peter Thompson -- Compleat Collection of 200 Favourite Country Dances, vol. 5 (1788, p. 2) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:G G>G (3BAG|F>G A2|B>B (3dcB|(3ABG (3FED| G>G (3BAG|F>G A2|(3BcB (3AGF|G2 G,2:| |:g>ee>g|f>d (3dcB|e>cc>e|d>B (3BAG| c>AA>c|(3Bdc (3BAG|(3AcB (3AGF|G2 G,2:|]
COUNTRY ATTORNEY, THE. English, Country Dance (2/4 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The Country Attorney was a comic play by Richard Cumberland (1732-1811), staged at London's Theatre Royal in the Hay-Market, July 7th, 1787. Unfortunately, it was not well received and ran only a half-dozen nights. Cumberland reworked much of the same material a few years later for his The School for Widows (1789). He was not regarded in the first rank of playwrights, even by his peers.
Thomas Davis acerbically dismissed him:
Mr. Cumberland is unquestionably a man of very great abilities; it is his misfortune to rate them greatly above their value.
Country dance directions appear in Nancy Shepley's Book, a small copybook of dance figures compiled by Nancy Shepley of Pepperell, Massachusetts, c. 1794.
The tune is in 2/4 time in the London publications from Longman, Lukey & Broderip and the Thompsons. It was converted to 6/8 time in the mid-19th century music manuscript collection of Manchester, England, musician biography:John Roose, with the title "Country Assembly"[1]
- ↑ The title "Country Assembly" is probably a mishearing of "Country Assembly", or a misreading of the handwritten title in the manuscript. The tune is also contained in the mid-19th century music manuscript of William Winter (1774-1861), a shoemaker and violin player who lived in West Bagborough in Somerset, southwest England.