Annotation:Jockie's Fu' and Jennie's Fain: Difference between revisions
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''Love alane can gie delight. ''<br> | ''Love alane can gie delight. ''<br> | ||
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Ramsay dropped the older stanzas after this (the more objectionable ones) and substituted ones of his own crafting. The song "The Reel of Tullochgorum" is said to have taken its subject from this older song. | Stenhouse notes that Ramsay dropped the older stanzas after this (the more objectionable ones) and substituted ones of his own crafting. The song "The Reel of Tullochgorum" is said to have taken its subject from this older song. | ||
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Revision as of 04:27, 24 February 2012
Tune properties and standard notation
JOCKIE'S FU' (DRUNK) AND JENNIE'S FAIN (EAGER). Scottish, Air (cut time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. The bawdy title, from the 18th century, appears in the ballad opera The Highland Fair (1731), in Craig's Select Tunes (1730) and in David Young's McFarlane MS. (vol. 3, No. 36), 1740. Words appear in Allen Ramsay's Tea Table Miscellany, and begin:
Jockie's fow and Jennie's fain,
Jenny was nae ill to gain;
She was couthy, he was kind,
And thus the wooer tell'd his mind.
Jenny, I'll nae mair be nice,
Gie me love at ony price;
I winna prig for red or whyt,
Love alane can gie delight.
Stenhouse notes that Ramsay dropped the older stanzas after this (the more objectionable ones) and substituted ones of his own crafting. The song "The Reel of Tullochgorum" is said to have taken its subject from this older song.
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Johnson (The Scots Musical Museum, vol. 4), 1792; p. 395.
Recorded sources: