Annotation:When Daylight Shines
X: 1 T:When Daylight Shines,aka. GS.087 T:Uncle Jim's Jig(Bob Cann's),aka. GS.087 M:6/8 L:1/8 Q:110 S:George Spencer m/s, Leeds,1831 R:Jig O:England A:Leeds H:1831 Z:vmp.Cherri Graebe F:http://trillian.mit.edu/~jc/music/abc/mirror/atrilcoral.com/c.abc K:D major .a | (b2a)(g2f) | (a2ge2).e | (f2g) (b2a) | f3 d2 a | b2 a (ag).f | (a2ge2).e | (f2g)(b2a) | d3 d2 :|! |: .a | (ag).f (fe).d |(c2e) (b2a) | (^g2a)(=g2a) | (f3 d2) .a | (ag).f (fe).d | (c2e) (b2a) |(^g2a) (=g2e) | d3d2:||
WHEN DAYLIGHT SHINES. AKA and see "Carnival of Venice," "Carnival of Venices," "Three Meet (1)," "Uncle Jim’s Jig.” English, Jig. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. The alternate title "Three Meet" is the name of a dance to the tune "When Daylight Shines." A tune called "The Swedish Dance," a truncated version of "When Daylight Shines," was collected by English dance and music collector Cecil Sharp in 1909 from Thomas Swallow of Lower Guiting, Gloucestershire. The dance as well is a version of "Three Meet"; it was common in the area to refer to dances as 'Swedish' if the dancers were in groups of three, alternating men and women. Melodeon player Bob Cann (Dartmour, Devon), learned a version of the tune from one of his uncles and, not having a name, called it "Uncle Jim’s" (Barn Dance).