Composite followup to three messages.

[Oswald]
: I see in the Scotman that there is a music festival soon in Crail. An
: obvious opportunity for an ensemble specialising in the music of one
: of the Scottish masters of the baroque and traditional styles. I wonder
: whether the organisers even know or care? 

Rob McKillop posted here a couple of years ago about his attempts to
interest them in an event devoted to Oswald's music.  They said "we'd
rather have a slide show about Antarctic penguins" or something to
that effect.


[Bruce Olson's list of now-traditional tunes Oswald composed]
* That's all that come to the top of my mind at present, but I'm
* sure others can add more to this short list.

According to Manson in "Hamilton's Universal Tune Book", "The Hen's
March to the Midden" comes from "Fortunatus", the unfinished opera
that was Oswald's last work.  I haven't seen it, the nearest copy to
me is in Dundee.


[Caledonian Pocket Companion]
> I heard that someone was going to publish a facsimile, but haven't
> seen it yet - any news? If not, a good project for Jack maybe?

There are, I think, two such projects.  They started as one, but the
parties involved had a terminal disagreement of some sort (I don't
know the details and don't want to).  I was talking to Alistair Hardie
at the launch party for David Johnson's reprint, and he said his CPC
edition was going ahead, with somebody doing detailed notes on all the
tunes.  He didn't give any dates.  As Rob MacKillop posted here on
9 May 2001:

+ The Hardie Press are to publish the Cally Pocket Companion later
+ this year.

I'm more interested in the popular-culture end of things at the moment,
which is why I'm doing Aird - his books were practical tools, not the
almost-coffee-table stuff that most facsimile publishers like doing.
Another reason for sticking to collections of fairly short pieces is
they're the ones where my CD-ROM design is most effective - you often
won't need to print them out at all, and if you do you've got all the
advantages of having individual sheets.  And I'm hoping that the more
different CD-ROMs I have available the sooner the music-book-buying
public gets the idea and starts digging in its collective pocket.  One
is a "what is that thing?", two is "oh, you've done that too?", three
starts to look like a product category.

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Mac logic fonts, Scots traditional music files and CD-ROMs of Scottish music.
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