SCOTTISH FOLK/TRADITIONAL MUSIC QUIZ: ANSWERS

1. "Her auld faither girns at the ingle side - 'It's the Lowland squire
   ye maun wed, An' ye to the kirk in a coach shall ride, An' in velvet
   an' silk ye'll be cled, An' on siller ware ye shall dine at the
   board, An' the diamonds shall shine on your broo..."

These lyrics by William Martin were published in about 1903 to music
arranged by Gavin Greig; but who composed the original tune, and what
was it called?

===== "The Bonnie lass o' Bon Accord" by James Scott Skinner =====

2. What the connects the titles of these old Scottish reels: "John of
Badenyon;" "Och a Chiallain;" "Cuir sa Chiste Mhoir Mi."

===== They are together known as the Cape Breton Wedding Reels =====

3. The Shetland fiddler Ian Burns composed quite a few tunes, but what
was his very first composition?

===== "Spootiskerry" =====

4. Which town held Scotland's first folk festival in 1964?

===== Crieff, Perthshire =====

5. Which Scottish harper is also celebrated as an artist in engraved
glass?

===== Alison Kinnaird =====

6. Which song is quoted here: "Now the summer's in prime, wi' the
flowers richly blooming, And the wild mountain thyme a' the moorlands
perfuming..."

===== The Braes o' Balquhidder by Robert Tannahill =====

7. Which of the following has NOT been a member of the Tannahill
Weavers: Iain MacInnes; Michael Ward; Derek Hoy; Dougie MacLean; Bill
Bourne; Ross Kennedy.

===== Derek Hoy, unless he pipes up and tells us otherwise! =====

8. He was from Dundee, and in 1921 at age eleven he saw Scott Skinner
perform at the Caird Hall. His own recording began with Beltona in
1931, and he played with many of Scotland's top musicians. His popular
compositions include "Lament for Will Starr" and "J B Milne." Who is he?

===== Angus Fitchet =====

9. Patie Birnie was a celebrated fiddler from Loanhead, just outside
Edinburgh. Name another, possibly more recent, fiddler from Loanheed.

===== Chuck Fleming (JSD Band, 5 Hand Reel) =====

10. Who, in August 1999, said "...[quicksteps] started out as military
marches for the fife; usually a regiment had its own slow march
(invariably duple time) and quickstep (usually 6/8).  These probably
got into the dance repertoire via the piano; the Volunteer regiments of
the late 18th century inspired a mountain of salon marches aimed at
parlour patriots. The first printed quicksteps for the pipes date from
just after the Napoleonic War, which is a generation later.  But
probably the pipers had been adapting the fifers' tunes for decades
previously.  The army dropped the fife in 1816, and most of the old
quicksteps rapidly fell out of use, with the pipers' repertoire tending
to use the same rhythms but totally different melodic patterns..."

===== As Ted Hastings said, "It sounds awfully like Jack Campin." =====

Which locations do the following tunes and songs suggest: 

11. Mairi's Wedding  =====

===== Otherwise known as The LEWIS Bridal Song. I might also accept
Islay, if given a good reason. =====

12. The Dark Island

===== Benbecula =====

13. Teribus 

===== Hawick =====

14. Glencoe Village Hall 

===== Glencoe Mines, Cape Breton =====

15. The Bonnets o' Bonnie Dundee =====

Edinburgh/West Port =====

Finally, what are the original Scottish tunes on which the following
are based:

16. Billy in the Lowground (USA)

===== "Braes of Auchtertyre" =====

17. Old Molly Hare (USA)

===== "The Fairy Dance" =====

18. The Boyne Hunt (Ireland)

===== "The Perthshire Hunt" =====

19. The Watchmaker (Ireland)

===== "Neil Gow's Wife" =====

20. The Gallowglass (Ireland)

===== "Niel Gow's Lament for his Brother" =====

-- 
Nigel Gatherer, Crieff, Scotland
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.argonet.co.uk/users/gatherer/

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