Annotation:For the Love of Gean

Find traditional instrumental music



X:1 T:For the Love of Jean M:3/2 L:1/8 B:Daniel Wright – Aria di Camera (London, 1727, No. 64) N:”being A Choice Collection of Scotch, Irish & Welsh Airs N:for the Violin and German Flute by the following masters N:Mr. Alex. Urquahart of Edinburgh, Mr. Dermot O'Connar of Limrick N:Mr. Hugh Edwards of Carmarthen” F: https://ia600808.us.archive.org/20/items/AriaDiCamera1727/Wright-AriaDiCamera-1727.pdf Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:G G2 FE DEFG A4|F2 A4 d2 {G}F3A|G2 FE D2 G2 ABcd| B2 (AG) (BA)(GF) G4|| GABc d2G2 B2 (AG)|F2 A4 d2 {G}F3A| GABc dcBA Bc d2|g2G2 G4F G4|| g2 fe d2 g2 a4| f2 a4 c'2 {g}f3a|g2 fe defg ab c'2|b2 (ag) a2 (gf) g4|| GABc (dc)(dA) B2 AG|FGAB ABcd F3A|GABc dcBd cBAd|BAGB AGFA G2|| G2 g4 (fg) (ef)(de) (cd)(Bc) (AB)(GA) F3A|G2 g4 (fe) fg a2 |b2 G2 G3F G4||



FOR THE LOVE OF GEAN. AKA - "For the Love of Jean." Scottish, Air (3/2 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCCDDEE (Young): AABBCCDDEEFF (Oswald). The song, as "For the Love of Jean," appears in poet and writer Allan Ramsay's Tea-Table Miscellany (1724), with the letter 'Z' attached to it, indicating that it was old and the author was unknown. However, the 19th century antiquarian William Stenhouse could find no earlier occurrence of the music, other than in Alexander Steuart's Music for the Scots Songs in the Tea-Table Miscellany (c. 1726). However, the HMS Scot site[1] records that versions of the melody can be found as "Baggpipe tune" (Bagpipe Tune) in the Newbattle Violin Manuscript (1 32, f. 31v), and as "Baggpipe tune" in the Panmure Violin Manuscript (1 28, f. 12v), both dating to c. 1670-80.

Edinburgh fiddler and writing master biography:David Young included the melody with a few variation sets in his MacFarlane Manuscript (c. 1741, No. 41, pp. 82-83), "Written for the use of Walter Mcfarlan of that ilk." Later versions of the song were published as "Jocky and Jenny" or "Jockey Said to Jenny (1)." Several writers have pointed out that Ramsay's title seems to bear no relation to the words printed in the Miscellany, and there are suggestions there might have been another (lost) song set to the air. Ramsay's song goes:

Jocky said to Jeany, "Jeany, wilt thou do't?"
"Ne'er a fit," quo' Jeany, "for my tocher-good,
For my tocher-good, I winna marry thee."
"E'en's ye like," quo' Johnny, "ye may let it be."

"I hae gowd and gear, I hae land enough,
I hae seven good owsen ganging in a pleugh,
Ganging in a pleugh, and linking o'er the lea,
And gin ye winna tak' me, I can let ye be."

"I hae a good ha' house, a barn and a byre,
A stack afore the door, I'll make a rantin' fire,
I'll make a rantin' fire, and merry shall we be:
And gin ye winna tak' me, I can let ye be."

Jeany said to Jocky: "Gin ye winna tell,
Ye shall be the lad, I'll be the lass mysell.
Ye're a bonny lad, and I'm a lassie free,
Ye're welcomer to tak' me than to let me be."


Additional notes



Printed sources : - Oswald (Caledonian Pocket Companion, Book 8), 1760; p. 15. Daniel Wright (Aria di Camera), London, 1727; No. 64.






Back to For the Love of Gean

0.00
(0 votes)