The Popular songs of Scotland with their appropriate melodies . also preserved in Airds firstvolume of Select Airs, and other Collections. See Museum Illustrations, vol. vi. pp. 491, 492. This air of TheCordwainers March suggests to us a Russian air that resembles it in some leading passages, and is found in aMS. Collection of Russian airs, made in 1817-18, by Dr. William Howison of Edinburgh, when he was in here quote the air, No. 29 of Dr. Howisons Collection, and obligingly sent to us by him at our request. TheRussian title of the song for the air is translated I did not know for


The Popular songs of Scotland with their appropriate melodies . also preserved in Airds firstvolume of Select Airs, and other Collections. See Museum Illustrations, vol. vi. pp. 491, 492. This air of TheCordwainers March suggests to us a Russian air that resembles it in some leading passages, and is found in aMS. Collection of Russian airs, made in 1817-18, by Dr. William Howison of Edinburgh, when he was in here quote the air, No. 29 of Dr. Howisons Collection, and obligingly sent to us by him at our request. TheRussian title of the song for the air is translated I did not know for Molto. S= wm ^Lsl^^^- i fei * ^& !$ This is an air of one strain, modulating half between A minor and E minor, on which last key it ends. Ingeneral, Russian airs in a minor key, if they consist of two strains, modulate from the minor ;o its next relativemajor; for example, from A to C—and in the second strain modulate back from the relative major to the originalminor. > 158 SCOTTISH SONGS. THE WEARY PTTND 0 TOW. ARRANGED ET 0. F. GRA0A1L. -E-E m The fppflil^^i^ps H £ PF W-0-m j Be ^=£


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectsongsen, bookyear1887