8.11.06

perllan

gair cloi parthed a'r berllan onedig. dyma rester o'r fale (a'r pers ne'r gellyg) a'u cymare sy wedi'u blannu yn barod (ar y gwilod) - a'r rheini sy i ddod (ar y top) llun i ddilyn

black worcester (xcatillac) = pitmaston duchesse (xbeth)

d'arcy spice des 14 D =cornish aromatic des 15 D
essex1785


devonshire quarrenden des B = burr knot ck 9C
1676 popular in s wales


court pendu plat des 26G = lodgemore nonpareil )des 23F
1610 1808 glos

tom putt sdr 10C =morgan sweet S B
dorset somerst 1700 / swales


afallon1

ashmeads kernel des 14D
glos ruset 1700

discovery (thurston august) des 11C
essex (worcester pearmain x possibly with beauty of bath) 1949

grenadier ck 11C
slough.1862

lord derby ck 14D
cheshire 1862

lord lambourne) des 8C
beds (james grieve x worcester pearmain) 1907

sunset des 10C
kent (raised from a cox's orange pippin) 1918

saint cecilia des 7B
(raised from a cox's orange pippin?)

twll tin gwydd des/ ck 7B
llangadog



wish list: perthyre, pitmaston pine apple, monmouth green/landore, cissy

y gwir yw hornpipes yw fale wedi'u blanu miwn cordon. dyma gwd hornpipe

X:1
T:Jacob
T:Enrico
M:4/4
L:1/8
Q:1/4=90
S:Mobberley session
R:English reel
N:Posted to the woodenflute mailing list November 2001. JACOB. AKA and see "Enrico." English, Reel. England, Dorset. D Major. Standard. AABB. See note for “Enrico” for more. Trim (Thomas Hardy), 1990; No. 13.
ENRICO. AKA – “Henryco,” “Water Loo Fair.” AKA and see "Jacob." English, Reel. D Major. Standard. AABB. The melody's original title was "Jacob," but was retitled by English author and musician Thomas Hardy. It was his favorite tune. The title appears in Hardy's (who was also an accomplished accordion player and fiddler) drama The Dynasts:
***
Let us go and look at the dancing. It is 'Voulez?vous danser'
? no, it is not, ? it is 'Enrico' ? two ladies between two gentlemen.
***
According to Hardy’s biography, the four-year old Hardy would sometimes burst into tears when his father played this and other tunes to him on the fiddle. Hardy, around the year 1925, wrote that “Enrico” was the usual vehicle for the country dance called Bonnets of Blue, or in Dorset when he was young, Hands Across. In his novel Under the Greenwood Tree the dance is described (but not named) as the one in which Shiner refuses to cast off (E.F.D.S. News, No. 12, Sept., 1926). The Welch manuscript gives the alternate title “Water Loo Fair” (while calling “Enrico” by the name “Henryco”). Trim (Thomas Hardy), 1990; No. 13 (appears as “Jacob”). BEJOCD-28, The Mellstock Band – “The Dance at Pheonix: Village Band Music from Hardy’s Wessex and Beyond.”
Z:Steve Mansfield January 2001
K:D
A2 | d2 fe dcdB | ABAG F2 A2 |
d2 ef gfgf | e2 a2 a2 A2 |
d2 fe dcdB | ABAG F2 A2 |
B2 gf edec | d2 d2 d2 ::
fg | a2 ag fgfe | dedc B2 B2 |
gagf efed | cdcB A2 (3ABc |
d2 d2 cecA | d2 d2 cecA |
d2 f2 edec | d2 d2 d2 :|





a dyma i chi gwd afal - sant cecilia hy - nawddsantes cerddorion dim llai



buws yn boblogedd ym mynwy y ganrif dwytha C20 hy.