Annotation:Jeannet and Jeannot
X: 1 T:Jeannet and Jeannot C:Michael Turner's MS N:As per STB but I think something's wrong with the accidentals I:abc2nwc M:2/4 L:1/16 K:D F2FE DEFG|A2d2 A4|F2A2 D2F2|E^DEF E2A2| FGFE DEFG|A2d2 A4|F2A2 D2F2|E^DEF =D4|| F2FF F2F2|D2F2 D4|A2AA A2A2|F2A2 F4| [F2B2][FB][FB] [F2B2][F2B2] |[F2B2][FB][FB] [F2B2][F2B2] |[F2c2]dc B2cB|A2A,B, CDE^E|| F2FE DEFG|A2d2 A4|F2A2 D2F2|E^DEF E2A2| FGFE DEFG|A2d2 A4|F2A2 D2F2|E^DEF "Fine"=D2|| K:G D2|G3G A2A2|[G3d3]B [D2G2]BG|E2 c4AF|GFGA G2DD| G3G A2A2|d3B G2BG|E2 c4AF|G6"D.C. al Fine"AG|]
JEANNET AND JEANNOT. English, Country Dance Tune and March (cut time). D Major (Turner ms.): G Major (Barber). Standard tuning (fiddle). ABCA. "Jeannot and Jeannot" can be found in the c. 1842-1852 music manuscript collection of Sussex musician Michael Turner. The third strain is a quotation from the French "La Marseillaise."
You are going far away,
Far away from poor Jeannette,
There is no one left to love me now,
And you, too, may forget;
But my heart will be with you,
Wherever you may go,
Can you look me in the face,
And say the name....Jeannot?
However, Glover's tune is different than the one Michael Turner entered in his music manuscript collection. Glover incorporated the title song into ‘The Jeannette and Jeannot Quadrille’, a dance music routine, and Edward Stirling (1807-1894) produced ‘Jeannette and Jeannot’, a musical drama in two acts, also known as ‘The village pride’. Perhaps Turner's melody reflects another piece from either longer work.