Annotation:Lady Collingwood's Favorite

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X:0 T: Lady Collingwood's Favorite C: Abraham Mackintosh M: C K: Amin Q:"Slow and expressive" L: 1/16 S: A. Mackintosh: Three Favorite Tunes (ca.1805) E2|A3B c>dc>B A2E2E3^F|G2D2B,2D2 G3AB2E2|A3Bc2d2 (ed).e.f e2a2|(fe).d.c c2!trill!B2 {AB} A2-A(c/B/A2):| B2|c>de>f g3a g2e2c2e2|d2g2d3c B2G2G3B|{d}(c/B/c/d/) {f}(e/d/e/f/) g3a g2e2c2e2|d2b2 (ed).c.B B3AA3B| c>de>f g3a g2e2c2e2|d2g2d3c B2G2G3B|A3Bc2d2 e2a2 (gf).e.d|c2a2 (cB).A.^G A2-A(c/B/A2)|]



LADY COLLINGWOOD'S FAVORITE. Scottish, Strathspey (whole time). A Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. "Lady Collingwood's Favorite" was composed by Newcastle fiddler-composer biography:Abraham Mackintosh" and published in small issue around 1805. Lady Collingwood was born Sarah Blacket, daughter of John Erasmus Blackett, a well-to-do merchant and four times mayor of Newcastle. She married in 16 June, 1791, in Newcastle to a naval officer Her husband, when named vice-admiral, was created Baron Collingwood of Caldburne and Hethpoole. Collingwood was second-in-command at the Battle of Trafalgar and engaged the enemy first, taking full command on Nelson's death. However, he lost many of the prize ships by neglecting Nelson's last order. Besides that action he blockaded Cadiz 1797-8, Brest 1799-1805 and Toulon 1808-10, and eventually died at sea. Mackintosh's next tune in the two-sheet issue was "21st of October (The) or The Battle of Trafalgar".


Additional notes



Printed sources : - Mackintosh (Three Favorite Tunes), c. 1805; p. 1.






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