Annotation:Coutie's Wedding
X:1 T:Scotch Air, A T:Cuttie’s Wedding M:C L:1/8 B:Edward Riley – “Riley’s Flute Melodies vol. 1” (New York, 1814, No. 158, p. 41) B: https://archive.org/details/flutemelodies0000rile/page/n55/mode/2up Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:Amin A<A c2 (e/d/c/B/) c2|A>A c>d e<A c<e|A<A c2 (e/d/c/B/) c2|G<G B<G d<G B<d:| |:c<g g>f e<c e2|c<g g<f e<c e<g|c<g g<f e<c e2|G<G B<G d<G B<d| c<g g<f e<c e2|c<g g>f e<c e<g|a<f g<e f<d e<c|G<G B<G d<G B<d||
COUTIE'S WEDDING. AKA - "Cutty's Wedding." AKA and see "Cuttie's Wedding." Scottish, Strathspey. A Aeolian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Surenne): AAB (Gow, McGlashan, Riley, Stewart-Robertson): AABB' (Kerr). Cuttie is Scots for 'shorty', supposedly the nickname of the bridegroom, a local fisherman in the parish of St. Fergus, Drumlithie, Scotland. His wedding was around the year 1770 and was a penny (or "siller") affair, and this tune was composed for it, according to collector Peter Buchan (1790-1854), writing in his Ancient Ballads and Songs of the North of Scotland (1828). Words to the melody, printed by Buchan, go:
Busk and go, busk and go,
Busk and go tae Cuttie's wedding;
Fa's the lassie and the lad,
That widnae gang if they were bidden.
Cuttie he's a lang man,
o he'll tak' hissel' a wife;
Gin he tak's on tae the toonlan',
Gin she takes on her fikie-fikie.
Cuttie he cam' here yestreen,
Cuttie he fell o'er the midden;
He wat his hose an' tine his sheen,
Courtin' at a cankered maiden.