Annotation:Scant of Siller
X:1 T:Scant of Siller M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel B:William Vicker’s 1770 music manuscript collection (Northumberland) F: http://www.farnearchive.com/show_images.asp?id=R0315501&image=1 Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:D Adde dfdf|Acce cece|Addf dfdf|g2f2 ecce:| |:d/e/f/g/ a2 fddf|d/e/f/g/ a2 ecce|d/e/f/g/ a2 fdfa|g2 f2 ecce:|
SCANT OF SILLER. AKA - "Scant of Silver." AKA and see "Poor of Purse but Routh o' Credit." English, Reel (whole time). England, Northumberland. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The tune appears in the music manuscript collections of William Vickers (1770), a musician from Northumberland, and William Irwin, a Lake District musician who entered it into his copybook some eighty years later. The similarly-titled "Scant of Money" is a different tune, but similar. Vickers researcher Matt Settle links the tune with James Aird's "Poor a Purse and Routh o' Credit," and says "there are enough similarities to connect the two, especially bearing in mind the similar meetings of the titles [1]. He also begs comparison with Vickers own "Little Benton" or "Cuddy Splutter" although he also says that tune may have more in common with "Scant of Money."
- ↑ Matt Seattle, Great Northern Tune Book, 2008, p. 200.