Annotation:Trip to Windsor (1)
X:1 T:Trip to Windsor [1] M:4/4 L:1/8 R:Reel K:A A/2A/2A (AB) Ace=g| f/2f/2f (fg) fef^g| agfe fgaf|1 ecBc AFEF:|2 ecBd cAA2||! c| efec efae| ((3fga) (ec) BAcB| AFEC EFAE| ((3FGA) (EC) B,A,CB,| A,2 (CE) FECE|AEcB Aceg| agfe fgaf|1 ecBd (cA) A :|2 ecBc ~ A4||
TRIP TO WINDSOR [1]. Canadian, Reel (whole time). Canada; Cape Breton, Prince Edward Island. A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB (Cameron, Hinds, Messer): AABB’ (Perlman): AA’BB’ (Martin & Hughes). Named for the city of Windsor, Ontario, the tune is one of the most famous compositions of fiddler and composer Dan R. MacDonald (1911-1976, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia), who penned it in 1947. There is a large Cape Breton community in Windsor, which at one time included one of MacDonald’s brothers, and, for seven years, Dan R. himself who found work at the Ford car manufacturing company. There MacDonald became a leading figure in among the transplanted Cape Breton musical community there, where he gave concerts and played for house parties in the Detroit-Windsor area along with the occasional dance.
Prince Edward Island fiddlers play "Trip to Windsor" in a medley following "St. Kilda Wedding (The)," in homage to Cape Breton fiddler Winston Fitzgerald's recording of the two tunes. American bluegrass fiddler Joe Greene composed a very similar tune he called “Road to Jenkins”, recorded in 1969.