Annotation:Trip to the Jubilee (1) (A)
X:1 T:Country Dance at the Jubilee, A T:Trip to the Jubilee [1] M:9/4 L:1/8 R:Country Dance Tune S:Henry Atkinson’s music manuscript collection (1694-95, p. 112) Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:D D2|F2A4 A4 B2 (A2F2)D2|G2 B4 (B2c2) d2 E4 E2|F2 A4 A4 B2 (A2F2)D2| G2 B4 _c4 B2 (A2F2) D2:||A2d4 d3e fe d4 D2|FG A2A2 Bc d2F2 E4d2| ^c2e4 e3f gf e4 E2|G3 ABc d4 e2f2e2d2|B2 G4 Bc d2 e2 (dB) G2| A2F4A3B A2 E3 FGA|B6 A6 d6|F4 G2 A4 B2 (A2F2)||D2||
TRIP TO THE JUBILEE [1], A. AKA and see “Country Dance at the Jubilee,” "Edinburgh Castle (1),” "As 'Tis Danc'd at the Playhouse." English, Country Dance Tune (9/4 or 9/8 time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). One part (Raven): AAB (Barnes). The tune dates to the late 17thcentury when it was entered into the 1694-95 music manuscript copybook of Northumbrian musician Henry Atkinson [1], and was printed Henry Playford’s Dancing Master, Part II, 2nd edition (1698, as the vehicle for a longways dance). in 1721 a distanced variant of the tune was printed in the 17th edition of the Dancing Master by John Young, with the title "Edinburgh Castle (1)" or "Mother Dobney's trencher."