Annotation:Shepherd's Hey (1)
X:1 T:Shepherd’s Hey [1] L:1/8 M:2/2 S:Headington version K:G B2d2c2c2|BcdB A2A2|BcdB ccBc|d2A2G3A| B2d2c2c2|BcdB A2A2|BcdB ccBc|d2A2G3|| A|B2G2c3A|B2G2A4|BcdB cBcA|d2A2G3A| B2G2c3A|B2G2A4|BcdB cBcA|d2A2 G4||
SHEPHERD'S HEY [1]. AKA - "Shepherds' Aid." English, Morris Dance Tune (4/4 time). F Major (Bacon Adderbury): G Major (most versions). Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Bacon Bidford, Bucknell, Longborough, Wheatley): AAB (Mallinson Headington): AABB (Barnes, Mallinson Adderbury, Fieldtown & Lichfield; Bacon Ascot, Adderbury, Brackley, Fieldtown, Headington): AABBBBBB (Bacon Ilmington): AABBAAABBBAAABBB (Bacon Lichfield). A (x12), BBB, AABBB, AABBB, AA (Bacon & Mallinson Bampton): AABBAACCAABBAACC (Bacon Bledington). The Shepherd's Hey is the name of several variations of a dance popular among Cotswold morris for full teams or as a morris jig for three men; in fact, it is probably the most famous morris dance melody and can be found in various forms throughout England. During the dance the dancer keeps patting himself on the cheeks, breast and legs “in a most curious way.” As one of the most widespread of the Cotswold morris melodies it was collected, with some variation, from the villages of Ascot Under Wychwood (Oxfordshire), Adderbury (Oxfordshire), Badby (Northamptonshire), Bampton-in-the-Bush (Oxfordshire), Bidford (Warwickshire), Bledington (Gloucestershire), Brackley (Northamptonshire): Bucknell (Oxfordshire), Fieldtown (Cecil Sharpe's name for the village of Leafield, Oxfordshire), Headington (Oxfordshire), Ilmington (Warwickshire), Lichfield (Staffordshire), Longborough (Gloucestershire), and Wheatley (Oxfordshire). The following ditties were sung during the dance, the first at Adderbury:
Shepherds' Hey, clover too,
Rye grass seeds and turnips too.
and at Bucknell:
One can whistle, two can play,
Three can dance the Shepherds' Hey.
Bayard (1981) points out that this tune resembles the first part of his Pennsylvania collected "Chase the Squirrel." The melody appears under the generic title "Scotch Reel" in the c. 1837-1840 MS of Shropshire musician John Moore [Ashman], where it was probably employed as a country dance tune. See also note for "annotation:Hay."