Annotation:Captain White's Jig (1)
X:1 T:Captain White [1] R:Jig M:6/8 L:1/8 K:D DFA d2f|edc B2d|A2d F2B|AGF EFE| DFA d2f|edc B2d|A2d F2B|1 ABc dAF:|2 ABc d3|| efe A2f|ece a2f|efe dcB|A2B c2d| efe A2f|ece a2f|efe dcB|1 ABA c2d:|2 ABA GFE|| D2f fef|d2A AFG|A2f fef|g2f edB| A2f fef|d2A AFA|Bcd ecA|d2A GFE:||
CAPTAIN WHITE('S JIG) [1]. AKA - "Captain John White's," "Captain Wake," "Captain Wyake," "Captain Wyke's Dance." AKA and see "Jim Cameron's." Irish, English, Canadian; Jig and Country Dance Tune. D Major ('A' and 'C' parts) & A Major ('B' part). Standard tuning (fiddle). ABC (Kerr): AABC (Kennedy, Messer & Raven): AABCC (Miller). Donegal fiddlers play the tune as an untitled single jig, according to Caoimhin Mac Aoidh. It was played, for example, by Mairead ni Mhaonaigh and Frankie Kennedy in the 1980's. A similar jig is in the Fleishman index (6566), originally from a publication by Thomas Mooney called A History of Ireland (Boston 1846), where it is called "Rockeby or Captain Wyake," itself similar to another jig in the same index (5454) called "Lady Pert's Reel or Rockeby," originally from Maurice Hime's New Collection of Country Dances (Dublin, 1814). However, "Lady Pert's Reel" is not related to "Captain White's Jig." There may be some relationship with "Captain White's" to the first part of "Belfast Boat (The)" (Ceol Rince na hÉireann vol. IV, No. 2) and to "Tim Clifford's" or "Micho Russell's." The air for the song "The Trip to Bangor" is a similar tune.
The tune was entered into several English musicians manuscripts of the first half of the 19th century under the title "Captain Wake." It appears in the 1840 music manuscript collection of multi-instrumentalist John Rook (Waverton, Cumbria); in the 1837 music copybook of James Blackshaw (north Shropshire), and the 1832 collection of R. Hughes (Whitechurch, Shropshire). Blackshaw describes it as a "Quick Step." As "Captain Wyke's Dance" it can be found in the 19th century music manuscripts of the Hardy Family of Dorset. The jig was entered (as "Captain Wike") in the mid-19th century music manuscript of William Winter, a shoemaker and violin player who lived in West Bagborough in Somerset, southwest England.
American musician M.E. Eames entered it into his 1859 music manuscript as "Captain White's Fancy."