Ceolas  >  Tunes  >  Fiddler's Companion

The Fiddler's Companion

Search the Fiddler's Companion by typing a partial title in the box below.
Perl regular expressions can be used if you're into such arcania.


Result of search for "Royal Scots Polka":

I HAVE A BONNET TRIMMED WITH BLUE [2]. Scottish, Polka. D Major ('A', 'B', 'C' and 'F' parts) & G Major ('D' and 'E' parts). Standard. AABBCCDDEEFF. A variation of version #1. Jack Campin suggests the polka started as a World War I vintage tune called "The Liberton Polka", picked up by pipers, which became attached to an older tune called "The Kilberry Ball" to make up the modern four-part tune called "I Have a Bonnet Trimmed with Blue." It is a regimental march of the Royal Scots. See version #1 above for various lyrics, all rather simple. Soldiers of the first World War had their own set of words to the melody, famously and cynically entitled "Hanging on the Old Barbed Wire":
***
If you want to find the General, I know where he is...
***
Martin (Ceol na Fidhle), Vol. 1, 1991; pg. 48.

ROYAL SCOTS "MARCH". Canadian, March (cut time). Canada, Prince Edward Island. D Major. Standard. AABB'. This is a march setting of a polka called "The Royal Scots Polka," originally a four-part tune. Source for notated version: Sterling Baker (b. mid-1940's, Morell, North-East Kings County, Prince Edward Island; now resident of Montague) [Perlman]. Perlman (The Fiddle Music of Prince Edward Island), 1996; pg. 181.


Ceolas  >  Tunes  >  Fiddler's Companion