Difference between revisions of "Flying Pieman"
From Australian Traditional Music Tunes
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<!-- edit/replace the abc notation below corresponding to the tune for this page. | <!-- edit/replace the abc notation below corresponding to the tune for this page. | ||
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N:The Fiddlers Companion ascribes its origin to "The Masque", | N:The Fiddlers Companion ascribes its origin to "The Masque", | ||
N:a Plaford tune which morphed into "The Frost Is All Over". | N:a Plaford tune which morphed into "The Frost Is All Over". | ||
− | N:Several variants were collected in Australia. | + | N:Several variants were collected in Australia. It turns up as: |
+ | N:- Orley Bensons 'Set Tune' | ||
+ | N:- Harry Schaefers’ ‘Lancefield Quadrille No 5’ | ||
+ | N:- Alf Radunz ‘What would you do if the Billy Boiled Over' | ||
+ | N:- Harry Cotter's ‘Moriarty’s Jig’ | ||
+ | N:- Harry Cotter’s ‘Billy Boiled Over' | ||
+ | N:- Joe Cashmere's ‘What would you do if the Billy Boiled Over’ | ||
+ | B:Kerr's Collection of Merry Melodies, Vol 1, p39, No 35 | ||
B:Folk Songs of Australia, Vol 1, p157, ISBN 0 86840 002 5 | B:Folk Songs of Australia, Vol 1, p157, ISBN 0 86840 002 5 | ||
B:Bush Dance, Ed D.Johnson, ISBN 0 9599528 1 0 | B:Bush Dance, Ed D.Johnson, ISBN 0 9599528 1 0 | ||
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− | <html5media> | + | <html5media>https://bushtraditions.wiki/recordings/Flying_Pieman.mp3</html5media> |
− | <br><caption>'''[ | + | <br><caption>'''[https://bushtraditions.wiki/recordings/Flying_Pieman.mp3 Flying Pieman - played by Greg O'Leary]'''</caption> |
== Additional Information == | == Additional Information == |
Latest revision as of 09:41, 8 July 2022
X:21 T:Flying Pieman S:collected from Herb Gimbert, Sydney, NSW S:by John Meredith H:William Francis King found renown as the flying piemen. H:Born in London in March 1807, he arrived in Sydney in 1829. H:William was a gifted athlete and performed many amazing H:athletic feats, mainly walking long distances. While working H:as a pieman he would sell pies to passengers boarding the H:Parramatta ferry, then run to Parramatta, a distance of some H:18 miles, and offer them the unsold pies as they got off the ferry. H:More detail of King and his exploits can be found on the web. N:John Meredith records that the tune used by Gimbert was based on N:a tune that he learned from his grandmother, a Mrs Byrnes N:who was born in Australia of Irish parents. N:The Fiddlers Companion ascribes its origin to "The Masque", N:a Plaford tune which morphed into "The Frost Is All Over". N:Several variants were collected in Australia. It turns up as: N:- Orley Bensons 'Set Tune' N:- Harry Schaefers’ ‘Lancefield Quadrille No 5’ N:- Alf Radunz ‘What would you do if the Billy Boiled Over' N:- Harry Cotter's ‘Moriarty’s Jig’ N:- Harry Cotter’s ‘Billy Boiled Over' N:- Joe Cashmere's ‘What would you do if the Billy Boiled Over’ B:Kerr's Collection of Merry Melodies, Vol 1, p39, No 35 B:Folk Songs of Australia, Vol 1, p157, ISBN 0 86840 002 5 B:Bush Dance, Ed D.Johnson, ISBN 0 9599528 1 0 O:Australia, NSW, Sydney R:Jig M:6/8 L:1/8 K:D A|"D"def d2B|A2AF2E|D2AA2A|"A7"Acd e2A| "D"def d2B|A2AF2E|D2AA2A|"A7"ABc "D"d2::! e|"D"f2a afd|"G"g2b baf|"D"f2aa2f|"A7"f2ee2e| "D"f2a afd|"G"g2b baf|"D"fgf "A7"edc|"D"d3d2:||
Flying Pieman - played by Greg O'Leary
Additional Information
Additional information may be available on the following people or
organisations associated with the collection of this tune:
| Herb Gimbert |