Mile to Ride (A)

%REPLACE THE NEXT 5 (FIVE) LINES WITH YOUR ABC NOTATION CODE X: 3 T: A Mile to Ride B: Peacocks' Tunes L: 1/8 M:9/8 Z: Valerio M. Pelliccioni K: G dBd g2g f2d|g2B BcB d2e|dBd g2g f2d|ecA ABA c2e:][: dBG G2c B2c|dBG GAB c2e|dBG G2c B2d|ecA A2B c2e:]]

 A MILE TO RIDE: The melody appears in Henry Playford's 1698 English Dancing Master (Part II). "This tune has several titles by which it is known to pipers, such as 'Stannerton (or Stamfordham) Hopping', 'Stanhope i' Weardale' and 'The Fleet's a Coming' "" (Bruce & Stokoe). Northumbrian musician William Vickers printed the melody three times in his 1770 music manuscript collection (as “A Mile toRide,” “Stanhope in Weardale,” and “Stannerton Hopping”). It also appears in the 1800-1805 manuscript (as “A Mile to Ride”) of Northumbrian smallpiper John Peacock (1754-1817) and that of 1812 from John Bell (c. 1864) (appears as “Stamfordham Hopping”). It is a popular three-part slip jig in Ireland, most often appearing under the title “Riding a Mile.” Source for notated version: John Peacock [Bruce & Stokoe]. Bruce & Stokoe (Northumbrian Minstrelsy), 1882; pg. 181. __NORICHEDITOR__