Annotation:John Marshall: Difference between revisions
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''On some labels he used the inscription:<br> | ''On some labels he used the inscription:<br> | ||
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Made of the garner’d relics of a tree<br> | |||
In which, of old, a dryad of the lea<br> | |||
Did live and die.<br> | |||
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''He had a shop in Belmont Street from 1889-1903. Thereafter he occupied premises in Rosemount Viaduct and Woolmanhill before moving'' ''to 88 Schoolhill in 1914 where he remained until his death. Marshall employed an assistant/apprentice by the name of William'' ''Glennie whose hand can be seen in the very distinctive scrolls found on some of Marshall’s instruments.'' | ''He had a shop in Belmont Street from 1889-1903. Thereafter he occupied premises in Rosemount Viaduct and Woolmanhill before moving'' ''to 88 Schoolhill in 1914 where he remained until his death. Marshall employed an assistant/apprentice by the name of William'' ''Glennie whose hand can be seen in the very distinctive scrolls found on some of Marshall’s instruments.'' |
Revision as of 05:13, 11 March 2012
Tune properties and standard notation
JOHN MARSHALL. Scottish, Strathspey. E Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. Composed by Scots fiddler-composer J. Scott Skinner (1843-1927), in honor of an Aberdeen violin maker who restored Skinner's violin. Alan Sim, in his article entitled "200 years of making North-east fiddles" (Leopard: The Magazine for North-East Scotland, June, 2005), writes:
John Marshall was born the son of a farmer in Methlick on 15 January 1844, and died unmarried in Aberdeen on 16 March 1919. Prior to becoming a full-time maker he worked as a hammerman at Broadford Works for 14 years. He was a close friend of Scott Skinner and was a maker of fine quality instruments. He was also a repairer of note and undertook work for Hill & Sons of London, who were the leading dealers and restorers of the day.
On some labels he used the inscription:
Made of the garner’d relics of a tree
In which, of old, a dryad of the lea
Did live and die.
He had a shop in Belmont Street from 1889-1903. Thereafter he occupied premises in Rosemount Viaduct and Woolmanhill before moving to 88 Schoolhill in 1914 where he remained until his death. Marshall employed an assistant/apprentice by the name of William Glennie whose hand can be seen in the very distinctive scrolls found on some of Marshall’s instruments.
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Skinner (Harp and Claymore), 1904; p. 67.
Recorded sources: