Annotation:Jenny Dang the Weaver (1)
X:2 T:Jenny dang the weaver [1] M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel S:Bremner - Scots Reels (1757) p. 54 Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:D g | fA A/A/A ABAB | dA A/A/A Tf2ed | fB B/B/B BABd | ABde Tf2e :| |: f | defd efge | defd Te2 dB | defd eBgB | aA A/A/A Tf2e :|]
JENNY DANG(ED) THE WEAVER [1] (Planc Sinead an Fiodoir). AKA – "Jeannie Dang the Weaver." AKA and see "Furze Bush (The)," "Jenny Bang the Weaver," "Jemmy Dang the Weaver," "Jenny Beguil'd the Webster," "Longford Spinster (The)," "Longford Tinker (The)," "Musselborough." English, Scottish, Shetland, Irish, Canadian, American; Air, Country Dance Tune, Reel or "Solo Strathspey." USA, New England. Canada, Cape Breton. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Athole, Balmoral, Gow, Howe, Lowe, Skye, Surenne): AAB (Honeyman, Hunter, Martin & Hughes, O'Farrell, Ross): AA'B (Perlman): ABC (Breathnach): AABB (Cole, Hime): AA'BB' (Kerr). The composition of the tune has been credited to the Rev. Alexander Garden (1688–1778), minister of Birse, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. Hunter (1988) relates that around 1746 "the minister's 'handy-man,' and ex-weaver from Mary well called Jock, hotly refused to clean the parson's boots when requested to do so by Mrs. Garden. The enraged minister's wife gave him such a beating with her 'tattie-beetle' that he soon performed the task." Another explanation for the title stems from the fact that an engine or a machine was often called a "jenny"; thus a "jenny" that replaced a weaver to produce cloth could be said to 'dang' (beat) him. It was first published in the 2nd edition of William Thompson's Orpheus Caledonius (1733), where it appeared as "Jenny Beguil'd the Webster," followed by a printing in John Johnson's Wright's Compleat Collection of celebrated country Dances, vol. 2 (1742, p. 35) where it is given as "Musselborough, or Jenny bang the Weaver." John Glen (1891), though, finds it earliest in print in Robert Bremner's 1757 Collection of Scots Reels or Country Dances, and it was also printed in the Gillespie Manuscript of Perth (1768). It is reported to be in Rutherford's 200 Country Dances of c. 1756. It became a favorite early 19th century song (at least in Lowland centers, says Emmerson {1971}), with lyrics by Sir Alexander Boswell set to the tune. The song tells of a weaver who makes unwanted advances toward Jenny, who turns him down flatly, or 'dangs' him:
Jenny dang, and Jenny dang, and Jenny dang the weaver,
Soon the fool his folly kent and Jenny dang the weaver.
The popular melody was known in the American colonies where it appeared in the MS copybooks of violinist Whittier Perkins (Massachusetts, 1790) as "Jemmy dang the weaver" and Clement Weeks (Greenland, New Hampshire, 1783) as "Jenny Dangs." "Jenny Dang the Weaver" was entered into the large 1840 music manuscript collection of multi-instrumentalist John Rook of Waverton, Cumbria. It has been observed that there is some similarity between the reel and the Irish three-part setting called the "Longford Tinker (The)." See also the Irish "Furze Bush (The)" and an untitled reel in the Northern Fiddler (1979), No. 189.