Annotation:Carlin is Your Daughter Ready?
X:1 T:Carlen is your Daughter ready M:2/4 L:1/8 R:Reel B:Aird - Selection of Scotch, English, Irish and Foreign Airs, vol. 1 (1782, No. 24, p. 9) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:D A2ef|eAcA|B2 Gg|BG dB|A2 ef|eAcA|BE E/E/E|GABG:| |:Aaaa|caca|Bggg|dgBG|Acae|ce a2|gg (a/g/f/e)|dgBG:|]
CARLIN, IS YOUR DAUGHTER READY? AKA – "Carlen is your Daughter ready," "Port Nan Con." AKA and see "Bob o' Dooly (The)," "Jenny Cameron's Rant," "Salmon Tails up the Water (2)." Scottish, Reel and Strathspey. A Mixolydian (Athole, Johnson): D Mixolydian (Mackintosh). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A ‘carlin’ is a Scots word meaning an old woman. There are several melodies with this title. One "Carle is Your Daughter Ready?" appears in David Rutherford's Compleat Collection of 200 country Dances, vol. 2 (London, 1760), and a tune by that name appears in the 1790 music manuscript collection of American musician Edward Murphy (Newport, R.I.?). There was also a song by the title[1]:
I will buy a pound of woo',
I will wash't and mak a plaidy,
I'm guan ower the muir to woo',
Carlin, is your daughter ready?
Northumbrian musician William Vickers included a version as "Jenny Cameron's Rant" in his 1770 music manuscript collection. Later County Cork uilleann piper and Church of Ireland cleric wikipedia:James_Goodman_(musiologist) (1828-1896) entered it into Book 2 of his large mid-19th century music manuscript collection, copied from Aird's 1782 volume.