Annotation:Love in a Village (3): Difference between revisions

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|f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Love_in_a_Village_(3) >
'''LOVE IN A VILLAGE [3].''' AKA and see "[[Duke of Perth]]." English, Reel. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. There are several unrelated tunes called "Love in a Village," which takes its name from a 1762 ballad opera by Arne and Bickerstaff (see [[Annotation:Love in a Village (1)]]. The tune appears in a music manuscript by John Jackson, c. 1760. It has also been called "[[Lord Rockingham's Reel]]" and "[[Scamdens Cade]]," among other titles (see note for "[[Annotation:Duke of Perth]]"). Lord Rockingham was the builder and first occupier of Wentworth Woodhouse, an 18th century mansion in Sussex. The reel appears in the Hardy family manuscripts (Dorset, mid-19th century) as "Love in a Village," but a version can also be found in the same source under the title "Duke of Riff's Reel" (i.e. 'Duke of Perth's').  
|f_annotation='''LOVE IN A VILLAGE [3].''' AKA and see "[[Broom's Reel]]," "[[Duke of Perth]]." English, Reel. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. There are several unrelated tunes called "Love in a Village," which takes its name from a 1762 ballad opera by Arne and Bickerstaff (see [[Annotation:Love in a Village (1)]]. The tune appears in a music manuscript by John Jackson, c. 1760. It has also been called "[[Lord Rockingham's Reel]]" and "[[Scamdens Cade]]," among other titles (see note for "[[Annotation:Duke of Perth]]"). Lord Rockingham was the builder and first occupier of Wentworth Woodhouse, an 18th century mansion in Sussex. The reel appears in the Hardy family manuscripts (Dorset, mid-19th century) as "Love in a Village," but a version can also be found in the same source under the title "Duke of Riff's Reel" (i.e. 'Duke of Perth's').  
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|f_printed_sources=Trim et al ('''The Musical Heritage of Thomas Hardy, vol. 1'''), 1990; No. 23.
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|f_recorded_sources=Free Reed Records FRR 016, Flowers and Frolics - "Bees on Horseback: English Country Dance Music and Music Hall Songs" (1977, as "Broom's Reel").
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''Source for notated version'':
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''Printed sources'': Trim et al ('''The Musical Heritage of Thomas Hardy, vol. 1'''), 1990; No. 23.
Free Reed Records FRR 016, Flowers and Frolics - "Bees on Horseback: English Country Dance Music and Music Hall Songs" (1977).

Revision as of 23:37, 28 July 2024




X:1 T:Love in a Village [3] M:C| L:1/8 K:G G/A/B/c/ dB gBdB|gBdB aA A2|...



LOVE IN A VILLAGE [3]. AKA and see "Broom's Reel," "Duke of Perth." English, Reel. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. There are several unrelated tunes called "Love in a Village," which takes its name from a 1762 ballad opera by Arne and Bickerstaff (see Annotation:Love in a Village (1). The tune appears in a music manuscript by John Jackson, c. 1760. It has also been called "Lord Rockingham's Reel" and "Scamdens Cade," among other titles (see note for "Annotation:Duke of Perth"). Lord Rockingham was the builder and first occupier of Wentworth Woodhouse, an 18th century mansion in Sussex. The reel appears in the Hardy family manuscripts (Dorset, mid-19th century) as "Love in a Village," but a version can also be found in the same source under the title "Duke of Riff's Reel" (i.e. 'Duke of Perth's').


Additional notes



Printed sources : - Trim et al (The Musical Heritage of Thomas Hardy, vol. 1), 1990; No. 23.

Recorded sources : - Free Reed Records FRR 016, Flowers and Frolics - "Bees on Horseback: English Country Dance Music and Music Hall Songs" (1977, as "Broom's Reel").




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