Annotation:Willie Blair (1)
X: 1 T: Willie Blair (Queen Victoria's Fiddler) C: Joseph Lowe R: strathspey Z: 2006 John Chambers <jc:trillian.mit.edu> M: C L: 1/16 K: F B | "F"AF3 F3B ABcA F3A | "Gm"BG3 G3A "C7"B3c df3 | "F"AF3 F3B ABcA F3A | "Gm"Bd3 "C7"c3B "A"AF3 F3 :|c | "F"f3c fgag f4 c3B | "F"A3F dcBA "C7"BG3 G3c | "F"f3c fgag f4 c3f | "Gm"dcBA "C7"G3c "F"AF3 F3 |]c | "F"f3c fgag f4 c3f | "Gm"b3g bagf "C7"eg3 g2fe | "Bb"(3d2B2d2 (3d2e2f2 "F"c3A f3c | "Gm"dcBA "C7"G3c "F"AF3 F3 |]
An essay on Blair was written by Aberdeen fiddler and fiddle-maker Alexander G. Murdoch, and appears in his The Fiddle in Scotland: Comprising Sketches of Scotch Fiddlers and Fiddle Makers (1888, pp. 66-71)[2]. Blair was well-known in the area when Victoria and Albert bought Balmoral in 1852, and he soon received a summons to entertain at the estate, which he continued to do for several decades. Murdoch includes this anecdote about Willie:
He liked a compliment and smacked his lips over it with truly professional zest. One night, when playing at a ball, after the most of the company had dispersed, old Willie, who had had a good dram, was to be seen playing away at his very best, and only one couple dancing on the floor. When he ceased a voice cried out,
'Weel dune, Willie Blair! Ye've played 'Smith's a Gallant Fireman (The)' first rate'.
'Aye, ha'e I,' replied Willie in grave earnest, 'It was never better played since the world cam' intae existance.
J. Scott Skinner (1843-1927) befriended Blair when he taught dancing at Deeside. See also his tune "Willie Blair (2)."
- ↑ Alexander Murdoch, The Fiddle in Scotland, 1888, p. 67.
- ↑ https://books.google.com/books?id=jIbAM455AWAC&pg=PA33&source=gbs_toc_r&cad=3#v=onepage&q&f=false