Ashover Ms
The Ashover Manuscript is attributed to Joshua Harrison and David Wall. Nothing is yet known about Harrison but David Wall was a bassoon player. There is a memorial plaque at All Saints' Church, Ashover, which appears from time to time in anthologies of epitaphs. It reads something like-
To the memory of David Wall
Whose superior performance on the bassoon endeared him
To an extensive musical acquaintance.
His social life closed on the 4th Dec. 1796. in his 57th year.
There are dance instructions and tunes for:
- The Black Boy
- Bonny Cate
- The Duchess of Hamilton's Rant
- The Scotch Bamble
- Harper's Frolick
- London
- The Fantocini
- The Polygon
- The Dance of the Polygon
- The Spanish Dance
- One More Dance and Then..
- Russian Dance
- Major O'Flacherty
- Rockingham Reel
Five Country Dances together with their tunes was published by the Sheffield branch of the English Folk Dance Society in 1927 (a few years prior to amalgamation with the Folk-Song Society) containing the following dances, with facsimiles from the MS:
- The Russian Dance
- Bonnie Cate
- Major O'Flacherty
- The Duchess of Hamilton's Rant
- The Black Boy
It was apparently reprinted in 1936 and again some time after the war, the final edition being a pamphlet without the facsimiles and with Major O'Flacherty's Jig omitted. From comments made on the ECD list some years ago, it appears that the transcribed dance instructions may not correspond very closely to the originals.
The tunes only are transcribed at the Village Music Project.
A brief notice appeared in EFDS News, number 16, February 1928, 87-8:
The "Ashover" Country Dances.
The Sheffield Branch of the E.F.D.S. has published five Country Dances, transcribed from David Wall's manuscript, Ashover (Derbyshire), 1764. The publication contains facsimiles of the original manuscript together with the notation of the dances as transcribed by members of the Branch and the music arranged by G. F. Linfoot. The book is published at 4s. and can be obtained from the Hon. Secretary of the Branch, Miss H. Mawson, 80, Kenbourne Road, Sharrow, Sheffield.
With Acknowledgement to the late Malcolm Douglas. --JohnnyAdams 19:22, 8 September 2009 (UTC)