Annotation:Prince William
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PRINCE WILLIAM. English, March or Country Dance Tune (4/4 time). USA. D Major (Brody): A Major (Barnes, Johnson, Miller & Perron, Sweet). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The title commemorates Prince William Augustus, the Duke of Cumberland, son of King George II. William was the ‘hero of Culloden’ in 1745, or ‘Bloody Cumberland’ depending on who you sympathized with. The tune and dance instructions first appeared in print in London music publisher John Walsh's Complete Country Dancing Master in 1731, when the prince would have been but ten years old. It also appeared in rival publisher John Johnson's Wright's Complete Collection of Celebrated Country Dances of c. 1740, edited by dancing master Daniel Wright. Johnson also prints a country dance to the tune for a three couple set.
"Prince William" was given new life in the 1970's when it was employed as a march for New England (and then North American) contra-dancing. It was quite popular for a time and appears on numerous recordings of contra dance music of the period, and was published in several collections. The English traditional music band Brass Monkey heard the tune played by contra dance musicians while on a tour in America, brought it home with with them and recorded it in 1986, reintroducing it to English audiences.
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Barnes (English Country Dance Tunes), 1986. Brody (Fiddler’s Fakebook), 1983; pg. 222. Callaghan (Hardcore English), 2—7; p. 46. Johnson (Twenty-Eight Country Dances as Done at the New Boston Fair, vol. 8), 1988; p. 8. Miller & Perron (New England Fiddlers Repertoire), 1983; No. 70. Pat Shaw (Holland As Seen in the English Country Dance), 1960. Sweet (Fifer’s Delight), 1965/1981; p. 75.
Recorded sources: Biograph 6009, Bottle Hill - "Light Our Way Along the Highway." F&W Records 3, "Canterbury Country Dance Orchestra." Front Hall 01, Fennigs All Stars - "The Hammered Dulcimer." Front Hall 017, Michael and McCreesh - "Dance Like a Wave of the Sea" (1978). Topic 12TS442, Brass Monkey - "See How it Runs" (1986. Learned from the Canterbury Dance Orchestra recording via musicians in Minneapolis in 1983).
See also listing at:
Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [1]