Annotation:Bill Hall's (2)
X: 1 T:Bill Hall's No2,aka. RH.338 R:rant S:Rev.R.Harrison's MS,c1815,Cumbria N:aka Bill Hall's No. 2, by Isaac Cooper. N:No time signature in MS. O:England A:Temple Sowerby,Cumbria Z:vmp.Simon Wilson. Review PJH, 2008. M:2/4 L:1/16 Q:1/4=95 F:http://www.village-music-project.org.uk/abc/HARRISON.ABC 2010-05-09 12:43:58 UT K:D DE|F3A AFED|F2A2 B2d2|A3A AFED|F2E2E2 DD|! F3A AFED|F2A2 B2d2|A3B AFED|F2D2D2:|! |:Ac/e/|dcde dcBA|BcdB A3G|FAcA GFED|F2E2E2 AB/d/|! dcde dcBA|BABc e3B|A3B AGFE|F2D2 D2:|]
BILL HALL'S NO. 2. AKA and see "Miss Forbes' Farewell to Banff." English, Schottische (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. This version of the well-known Scottish tune "Miss Forbes' Farewell to Banff" (composed by Isaac Cooper of Banff, 1754-1820) is sourced to a fiddler and concertina player named Bill Hall, from the Pennine area of West Birk Hatt, Baldersdale [Barber 2002/Callaghan 2007]. This is a remote region in north Yorkshire, known for its harsh conditions. The tune came via Sam Fawcett, another Yorkshireman and a neighbour of Hannah Hauxwell. Hauxwell (b. 1926) is well-known to British audiences as the subject of two documentaries on the BBC, which chronicalled the almost unendurable conditions of farmers in the High Pennines in winter. Hauxwell ran the family farm singlehandley for many decades, without running water or electricity, and became a celebrity due to the documentaries. Fiddler Fawcett was an allegedly successful poacher.
"Bill Hall's (1)" and "Bill Hall's (2)" are customarily played together as a set.