Annotation:Scots wha hae: Difference between revisions
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'''SCOTS WHA HAE (WI’ WALLACE BLED).''' AKA and see "[[Hey Tuttie Taiti]]" "[[Fill up | '''SCOTS WHA HAE (WI’ WALLACE BLED).''' AKA and see "[[Hey Tuttie Taiti]]" "[[Fill up Your Bumpers High]]." Scottish, Air and Highland Schottische (whole or ¾ time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Antiquarian Frank Kidson (1915) says the tune comes from "remote antiquity;" it was said to have been played at the battle of Bannockburn. "[[Hey Tuttie Taiti]]" is the air to which Robert Burns set his famous lyric "Scots Wha Hae,” having been partly inspired by the French Revolution (Purser, 1992). The Burns song “Scots Wha Hae” appears in the James Johnson’s '''Scots Musical Museum''', No. 577 (published in six volumes, 1787-1803). A standard version of this tune (set as a schottische) appears in the music manuscript copybook of John Burks, dated 1821. Burks was a musician who was probably from the north of England. | ||
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Revision as of 04:48, 20 November 2018
SCOTS WHA HAE (WI’ WALLACE BLED). AKA and see "Hey Tuttie Taiti" "Fill up Your Bumpers High." Scottish, Air and Highland Schottische (whole or ¾ time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Antiquarian Frank Kidson (1915) says the tune comes from "remote antiquity;" it was said to have been played at the battle of Bannockburn. "Hey Tuttie Taiti" is the air to which Robert Burns set his famous lyric "Scots Wha Hae,” having been partly inspired by the French Revolution (Purser, 1992). The Burns song “Scots Wha Hae” appears in the James Johnson’s Scots Musical Museum, No. 577 (published in six volumes, 1787-1803). A standard version of this tune (set as a schottische) appears in the music manuscript copybook of John Burks, dated 1821. Burks was a musician who was probably from the north of England.