Hornpipes: Difference between revisions
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The early tunes were mostly written down and presumably played 'straight', ie. without dotted notes. As the 4/4 hornpipe moved into the end of the 19th century, it acquired a more dotted characteristic and many of these tunes shared a common feel with the [[Schottische]] and many Schottische dances today are done to dotted hornpipes - eg. [[Nottingham Swing]]. | The early tunes were mostly written down and presumably played 'straight', ie. without dotted notes. As the 4/4 hornpipe moved into the end of the 19th century, it acquired a more dotted characteristic and many of these tunes shared a common feel with the [[Schottische]] and many Schottische dances today are done to dotted hornpipes - eg. [[Nottingham Swing]]. | ||
Please refer to the help page on [[Referencing Hornpipes]] before adding tunes. |
Revision as of 15:14, 19 April 2008
This is the place for hornpipes in 4/4 time as opposed to the earlier versions that can be found in the 3/2 and 6/4 tunes section.
A probably definitive article on the hornpipe was written by George Emmerson in the Folk Music Journal Vol.2 No.1
Many of the 4/4 hornpipes in the English tradition originated in the theatre, the most famous being the Sadler's Wells, in London.
Many of the tunes we play now were named for the actor/dancers who performed them - Fisher, Durang, Ball..... The tunes travelled and many of them crossed the North Sea where they settled into a new Scandinavian home as Engelskas.
The early tunes were mostly written down and presumably played 'straight', ie. without dotted notes. As the 4/4 hornpipe moved into the end of the 19th century, it acquired a more dotted characteristic and many of these tunes shared a common feel with the Schottische and many Schottische dances today are done to dotted hornpipes - eg. Nottingham Swing.
Please refer to the help page on Referencing Hornpipes before adding tunes.