Annotation:Stage Hornpipe (1)
X: 1 T: Stage Hornpipe, The R: hornpipe D: Paddy Glackin: In Full Spate Z: id:hn-hornpipe-77 N: Reformatted for readability [JC] M: C| F:http://www.john-chambers.us/~jc/music/abc/mirror/kirby98.fsnet.co.uk/st/Stage_Hornpipe_The_1.abc K: G ef |\ ga (3gfe dgbd | ceac Bdgd | BG~G2 A2ag | fa (3gfe dgef | ga (3gfe dgbd | ceac Bdgd | agfa (3efg fa | ecAF G2 :| |: GA |\ BG~G2 (3EFG DB, | G,GAB cBAE | A2AB cBcB | AF (3GFE (3DCB, (3CB,A, | G,GAB cBcd | edef ga (3gfe | dbca Bg~g2 | ecAF G2 :|
STAGE HORNPIPE [1], THE. AKA and see “Kielder Jock's,” "Merrymaker's Club,” “Norfolk Hornpipe (2) (The),” “Omnibus (The).” English, Irish; Hornpipe. England, Northumberland. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The melody was composed as “Omnibus (The)” by the 19th century Tyneside fiddler-composer James Hill, famous for his hornpipe compositions. Under the title “The Stage”, the hornpipe was published in the Newcastle Courant in 1882. Stage hornpipes were danced on stage for some one hundred and fifty years, although their heyday was in the latter half of the 18th century when several performers made their reputations dancing various hornpipes. They were still regularly performed between acts in plays as late as 1840 or 1850 (Kidson). A distanced version of Hill’s “Stage Hornpipe” tune was recorded in New York 1927 by the renowned County Sligo fiddler Michael Coleman (1891-1945), paired with “Western Hornpipe,” and was also recorded in 1939 by fiddler Hugh Gillespie with flute player John McKenna (who accompanied Gillespie on guitar). Coleman was an accomplished step dancer as well as a master fiddler and actually danced a stage hornpipe in the 1920’s while simultaneously playing the instrument, when he was hired as an entertainer on a tour of Keith’s Theaters. Influential Cape Breton fiddler Angus Chisholm learned the tune from Coleman’s recording, and it has been recorded by Johnny Wilmot, John Campbell, and others in the island’s tradition.