Cluny Water

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 Theme code Index    3565 2H3H66
 Also known as    
 Composer/Core Source    Alexander Walker
 Region    Scotland
 Genre/Style    Scottish
 Meter/Rhythm    Strathspey
 Key/Tonic of    C
 Accidental    NONE
 Mode    Ionian (Major)
 Time signature    4/4
 History    
 Structure    AAB
 Editor/Compiler    Alexander Walker
 Book/Manuscript title    Book:Collection of Strathspeys Reels Marches &c. (A)
 Tune and/or Page number    No. 66, p. 24
 Year of publication/Date of MS    1866
 Artist    
 Title of recording    
 Record label/Catalogue nr.    
 Year recorded    
 Media    
 Score   ()   


CLUNY WATER. Scottish, Strathspey. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. Composed by Alexander Walker, born in Rhynie, Strathbogie, Aberdeenshire in 1819. Walker was an inventor (of surveying instruments, for example), agriculturalist, fiddler and composer of works collected in a volume published in Aberdeen in 1866. He was employed as a gardener for Sir Charles Forbes at Castle Newe, who was also his patron. While in Scotland he took a wife, Jean (11 years his junior), and at age 40 became father of a daughter, Maggie, followed by three sons (Charles, Alexander and George—Charles perhaps named after Sir Charles Forbes), After the American Civil War, probably around 1870, Walker emigrated to the United States, and settled near Williamstown, Massachusetts, where family (parents) had previously settled, and established a prosperous farm of his own. He and Jean had a daughter in America, Jeosie, born in New York in 1872. In the 1880 census for Williamstown his occupation is listed as a “surveyor and gardener,” while Jean “kept house” and “farmed”. Alexander also continued to compose music (according to Paul Cranford, who has found evidence he mailed compositions home to Aberdeenshire) although his American output is now lost. He is recorded as having helped survey areas of Williamstown in 1892 (at age 73), where it was noted that he was “a Scotch surveyor of some attainments and reputation”, and he must have died sometime around the end of the century. This passage (from Arthur Latham Perry's Origins in Williamstown: A History, 1894, p. 28 ) is thought to refer to him:

...but the Berlin road goes past pretty good farms, and the last one (the old toll-gate farm) became noted for its productiveness under the ownership of Alexander Walker and his family, canny Scotch people from Aberdeenshire; the parents married there Aug. 6, 1856. Mr. Walker could handle the fiddle bow and the surveyor's instruments with about equal facility; but as the lines fell to him in this country in prosy times and non-piping localities, the Scotch reels and strathspeys, of which he was a master and even a successful composer and publisher, slumbered for the most part on the bridge of his fiddles, of which he invented and perhaps patented a prized improvement. Nevertheless, his residence at the head of the gorge, where the Fosters had lived for three generations, threw a sort of halo of music and good cheer up and down the valley, and proved to many persons a kind of subtle attraction not only for the Pass by Mount Hopkins beyond it.

Printed source: Walker (A Collection of Strathspeys, Reels, Marches, &c.), 1866; No. 66, p. 24.


X: 1
T: Cluny Water
C:Alexander Walker
R:Strathspey
Q: 128
Z: http://www.math.mun.ca/~bshawyer/straths/ClunyWater.abc 
K:C
M:4/4
L:1/16
|:C2|EG3 G3c A3c G3c|d3c e3c AAA2 A3F|EG3 G3c d3c de3|c3A G3E CCC2 C2C2|
EG3 G3c A3c G3c|d3c e3c AAA2 A3F|EG3 G3c d3c de3|c3A G3E CCC2 C2a2|
g3c agfe gc3 c'3a|g3c e3c d4-d3a|g3c agfe gc3 e3d|c3A G2E2 CCC2 C3a|
g3c agfe gc3 c'3a|g3c e3c AAA2 A3G|Ac3 G3A c3d e2a2|gc3 e3d c4-c2:|