Scottish Airs and Dances for Violin Solo or Duet
(or Solo Violin); Guitar Chords Included
by Anne C. Witt
String Duet - Sheet Music

Item Number: 19581340
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Violin - Beginning-Intermediate

SKU: MB.22250

(or Solo Violin); Guitar Chords Included. Composed by Anne C. Witt. Saddle-stitched, Style, Duets and Ensembles, Alternative Styles, Solos, Duets & Ensembles, Fiddle, Solos, World. Bill's Music Shelf. Scottish. Book. 32 pages. Mel Bay Publications, Inc #22250. Published by Mel Bay Publications, Inc (MB.22250).

ISBN 9780786683383. UPC: 796279112482. 8.75 x 11.75 inches.

The twenty-five pieces in this collection date back to eighteenth and nineteenth century Scotland. Music was passed around among professional and amateur musicians, hand copied, and ended up in slightly different versions in many collections. The Airs were originally songs or for solo violin. The Dances - strathspeys, reels, jigs, a hornpipe, and the sword dance - were originally for fiddle or bagpipe. The book is arranged as a program from beginning to end - from sunrise, with Ossians Hymn to the Sun, to sunset, with the lullaby O, Can Ye Sew Cushions. And no Scottish evening is complete without Auld Lang Syne as a finale. But one can, of course, choose to play a selection. Three of the airs are Gaelic songs. Others are tunes for which Robert Burns and other poets wrote lyrics. Two airs were composed for the violin - Neil Gows Lament for the Death of His Second Wife and the anonymous Killiecrankie. The dances were played by fiddlers or pipers. They played and still play many of the same pieces. One example is Gillie Callum, the sword dance. Originally a bagpipe tune, its range was expanded beyond the pipes nine notes and it became a fiddle tune. The composers are anonymous except for pieces by Niel Gow 1727-1807 , his son, Nathaniel Gow 1763-1831 and William Marshall 1748-1833 . Niel Gow was the preeminent violinist of his day. All three composed many fiddle tunes for Scottish country dancing. Most of the pieces are presented in sets of two, and they should be played without stopping in-between, as they would be performed at a country dance. Metronome markings are given as a guideline. Guitar chords are included ad libitum. Since the first violin generally has the melody, the pieces can also be played by solo violin. The music of Scotland is unique. The airs have their own special beauty. The dances are fun to play, with lively tempos, dotted rhythms and sudden key changes. This music has long been the pleasure of country fiddlers and pipers. These new arrangements for two violins are perfect for student and teacher as well as violin colleagues.

  • About Scottish Airs And Dances
  • About the Arranger
  • Ossians Hymn To The Sun (Laiodh Oisein Don Ghrian)
  • Wantonness
  • Steer Her Up and Had Her Gawn
  • Jamie Come Try Me
  • Ye Shepherds
  • The Banks Of Doon
  • Gillie Callum
  • Gloomy Winter
  • Whistle An Ill Come To Ye, My Love
  • Logan Water
  • The Haughs Of Cromdale
  • Niel Gows Lament For The Death Of His Second Wife
  • I Hae A Wife O My Ain
  • Killiecrankie
  • Jennys Lamentation
  • Alas For Me (Oich Mar Tha Mi)
  • Miss Admiral Gordons Strathspey, By William Marshall
  • Lady Glenorchy
  • Lady Charlotte Campbell, By Nathaniel Gow
  • A Hundred Pipers
  • Loch Torridon
  • Muirland Willie
  • The Lay Of Fraoch (Laiodh Fraioch)
  • O, Can Ye Sew Cushions
  • Auld Lang Syne
  • Notes
  • The Lay Of Fraoch, Poem