The Skye Boat Song and Scarborough Fair

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Peacock Press

Composer: Traditional/Folk

Arranger: Ross Winters

Instrumentation: 2 Descants - Treble - Tenor + optional Piano

Period/Genre: Folk/Trad

Grade: Easy - Moderate

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Ross Winters Recorder Anthology

*Two Folk Song arrangements* for recorder quartet.

1. The Skye Boat Song
2. Scarborough Fair

Description: 

  • "The Skye Boat Song" is a late 19th-century Scottish song adaptation of a Gaelic song composed c.1782 by William Ross, entitled Cuachag nan Craobh ("Cuckoo of the Tree"). In the original song, the composer laments to a cuckoo that his unrequited love, Lady Marion Ross, is rejecting him. The 19th century English lyrics instead evoked the journey of Prince Charles Edward Stuart ("Bonnie Prince Charlie") from Benbecula to the Isle of Skye as he evaded capture by government soldiers after his defeat at the Battle of Culloden in 1746.
  • Scarborough Fair" is a traditional English ballad. The song lists a number of impossible tasks given to a former lover who lives in Scarborough, North Yorkshire. The "Scarborough/Whittingham Fair" variant was most common in Yorkshire and Northumbria, where it was sung to various melodies, often using Dorian mode with refrains resembling "parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme" and "Then she'll be a true love of mine." It appears in Traditional Tunes (1891) by Frank Kidson, who claims to have collected it from Whitby.

_Score 7 pp. Parts 2 pp._

NB: Cover colour may vary.

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