Book description
In the second of a three-volume set of The Scots Fiddle, J. Murray
Neil has compiled a collection of the fiddle music of Scotland
relating to Edinburgh and the Lothians, Borders and Ayrshire. It
includes a selection of traditional fiddle tunes and song airs that
are played and sung wherever Scots meet at festivals and on special
occasions. These include many that were collected and adapted by
Robert Burns and feature in the Ayrshire section, which also contains
extensive notes on Burns as a fiddler, musician and songwriter.
Extensive biographical sketches, narratives and anecdotes accompany
the tunes and provide a fascinating insight into the rich inheritance
of Scottish culture. Famous fiddler/composers and songwriters, past
and present; famous characters and landmarks; history, legends and
traditions; language and dialect, poetry and song are represented in a
stimulating account. The selection contains over 160 tunes, including
airs and pastorals, reels, strathspeys, marches, jigs, hornpipes,
waltzes, polkas and minuets. There are melodies by well-known and less
well-known fiddler/composers and songwriters, new and unpublished
tunes, as well as compositions from the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries. Featuring:- The Last Raid o' the Kers (Bob Hobkirk), The
Copshaw Hornpipe (Tom Hughes), The Carter Bar (Jim Nagle), In the
Shadow of the Pentlands (Alex J. Lawson), Dunsapie (Boyd Gordon),
Thistledown (Ron Purvis), On! St Ronan's (William Sanderson, the
'Tweeside Laddie'), Hawthornden (J. Nash), Within a Mile of Edinburgh
Town (James Hook), Lady Hope of Pinkie's Strathspey (Nathaniel Gow),
Buff and Blue (Robert Riddell), Miss Walker's Strathspey (John
Pringle), One Chopin' Mair and The Reel o' Stumpie. The Scots Fiddle
is not only an excellent fiddle music reference book, it is a book
about Scotland and should appeal to all those with an interest in her
and her cultural traditions.