Annotation:Madam Neruda

Find traditional instrumental music
Revision as of 20:37, 6 April 2013 by Andrew (talk | contribs)

Back to Madam Neruda


MADAM NERUDA. Scottish, Hornpipe. E Flat Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Composed by J. Scott Skinner (1843-1927) in honor of Wilhelmina Neruda [1] (1838-1911), Lady Hallé, a celebrated concert violinist of the Victorian era who made her first public appearance as a violinist in Vienna at the age of seven, playing one of Bach's Violin Sonatas. The Moravian-born Neruda became Lady Halle when she married Sir Charles Halle, founder of the famous English orchestra. Upon her husband's death, she moved to Italy to be near her son, a renowned Aplinist, and after his death while climbing in the the Dolomites, she moved to Berlin, where she died. Skinner recorded the tune in the 1920's as part of his "Celebrated Hornpipes" medley. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote of Sherlock Holmes attending one of her concerts in his story "A Study in Scarlet".

Madame Neruda



Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Hardie (Caledonian Companion), 1992; pg. 127. Skinner (The Logie Collection), .

Recorded sources: Flying Fish FF 70572, Frank Ferrel - "Yankee Dreams: Wicked Good Fiddling from New England" (1991). Great Meadow Music GMM 2002, Rodney Miller & David Surette - "New Leaf" (2000).




Back to Madam Neruda