Annotation:Teviot Brig
X:1 T:Tiviot Bridge M:6/8 L:1/8 R:Jig B:Calvert Collection - Page 11 N:Now known as Teviot Brig. The Teviot flows into the Tweed just West of N:Kelso. This bridge is almost certainly the one over the Teviot, a N:mile out of Kelso. Z:P Whittaker K:A f | ecA E2 A | F2A E2A | ABA A2c | {ABc}d2cB2A | ABA E2 A | F2A E2c| {c}[d2f2]b ecA | ~B2 A/2B/2 [C2A2]|| f | ece ece | fdf fga | ece ecA | BGE EGf | ece fdf |{fg}agf edc| [d2f2]b ecA | ~B2 A/2B/2 [C2A2]||
TEVIOT BRIDGE/BRIG. AKA and see “Boys of Ballinafad (The).” AKA – "Paddy Mullin's," “Pivot Brig (The),” “Tiviot Brig,” "Teviot/Tiviot Jig." Scottish (originally), Canadian; Jig (6/8 time). Canada; Cape Breton, Prince Edward Island. G Major (Skye): A Major (Athole, Gow, Hunter, Kerr, Neil, Perlman, Phillips, Sweet). Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Neil): AAB (Athole, Gow, Hunter): ABB (Skye): AABB (Kerr, Phillips, Sweet): AA’BB (Cranford/Fitzgerald): AA’BB’ (Perlman). Composed by Alexander Givan (1752-1803) of Kelso, Scotland, where the Teviot Bridge is located. An early printing appears in Thomas Calvert’s 1799 collection. Calvert was a musician from Kelso and a note with his collection states that Calvert supplied “a variety of music and instruments, instruments lent out, tun’d and repaired.” The tune has been associated with a particular country dance. It was included in the 1840 music manuscript collection (p. 212) of Cumbrian musician John Rook (Waverly). The jig was esteemed by Cape Breton fiddler Winston “Scotty” Fitzgerald. See also the Irish “Father Hanley's Jig” which shares a similar second part (and which tune New York Irish fiddler Andy McGann used to pair “Teviot Bridge” with).