Annotation:Woodicock

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X:1 T:Woodicock L:1/8 M:6/8 S:William Chappell K:Dmin d2 d f>ed|^cAA A>=Bc|d2d f>ed|^cAA A3| c2d c2A|BGG G>AB|A2A A>=B^c|dDD D3||



WOODICOCK. AKA and see "Green Man (The)," "Whirligig." English, Country Dance Tune (6/8 time). D Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB'. The melody appears in the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book (1609, pp. 138-45, as "Wooddy-cock") where it was set by Giles Farnaby. Set with directions for a country dance, it was printed in John Playford’s English Dancing Master of 1651 and was retained (with some spelling variants) in subsequent editions through the eighth edition of 1690, after which it was dropped from the long-running Dancing Master series. Beginning with the 4th edition of 1670 "The Green Man" was added as an alternate title. Samuel Bayard (in his article “Miscellany of Tune Notes”) says it was a reputed to be a Welsh harp and perhaps dance tune, known in England since the 16th century by its appearance in the Fitzwilliam. Chappell (1859) says the Welsh version was known as “Delight of the Men of Dovey,” although on the whole he believes it is “an inferior copy of ‘Greensleeves’.” Five 17th century Dutch sets appear, under the title “Wooddicock”, in van Duyse Oude Nederl. Lied, II (1905), and a set appears in Adriaen Valerius’ Nederlandtsche Gedenck-Clanck (1626) under the title “Engels Woddecot,” confirming the tune’s popularity in England. Bayard concludes from a comparison of these variants that the Welsh forms are examples of secondary lengthening, and are borrowings from the English or Dutch traditions.

Additional notes

Source for notated version: -

Printed sources : -

Recorded sources: - Familiar Records FAM 47, Pyewackett "7 to Midnight" (1985).



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