X: 8
T: the CHARLES ATTWOOD
%R: hornpipe
B: Jean White "100 Popular Hornpipes, Reels, Jigs and Country Dances", Boston 1880 p.4
F:
http://www.loc.gov/resource/sm1880.09124.0#seq-1
Z: 2014 John Chambers <jc:trillian.mit.edu>
M: C|
L: 1/8
K: A
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(3(EFG) |\
A>GB>A c>Bd>c | e>df>e d>cB>A |\
F>AG>B A>cB>d | (3(cBA) d>c B2 (3(EFG) |
A>GB>A c>Bd>c | e>df>e d>cB>A |\
F>AG>B A>cB>d | c>AB>G A2 :|
|: (3(efg) |\
a2 ((3c'ba) g>af>g | e>fd>e c>dB>c |\
A>EC>E A>cB>d | (3(cBA) d>c B2 (3(efg) |
a2 (3(c'ba) g>af>g | e>fd>e c>dB>c |\
A>EC>E A>cB>d | c>AB>G A2 H:|]
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CHARLES ATTWOOD. AKA and see "Attwood." English, Hornpipe (cut time). England, Northumberland. A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. "Charles Attwood" is a composition of early 19th century Tyneside fiddler and composer James Hill, renowned for his hornpipes. The melody was entered into the mid-19th century music manuscript collection of the Lister Family, of East Bolden, Northumberland (p. 65).