wonderful...

isn't it also the tune for "pistol packin' mama" - sung by bing crosby 
and the andrew sisters?

lay that pistol down, babe.
lay that pistol down.
pistol packin mama
lay that pistol down.

- bill


On Mercoled�, mag 26, 2004, at 02:11 Europe/Rome, Stewart McCoy wrote:

> Dear Thomas,
>
> In answer to your question, "Is playing the Quadro Pavan on the
> banjo lute related?" I would say, "Of course it is."
>
> The Quadro Pavan is named after the quadrant or square-shaped sign
> looking like a modern natural sign, which was used in the lowest
> hexachord of the hexachord system - based on G - for the 3rd degree
> of that hexachord. Quadros appear in several lute sources, in
> particular early ones like Marsh and Willoughby ...
>
> Let's start again, and keep things simple. Today we have "do, re,
> mi" for the first three notes of the scale. In the past they called
> it "ut, re, mi." If you started your scale on bottom G (bottom line
> of the bass clef stave), G would be Gamma ut (origin of our word
> gamut, which now means a whole range of things, not just notes, and
> certainly not just the first note), A would be A re, and B would be
> B mi, i.e. B natural. Instead of writing the letter B, they wrote a
> natural sign, which they called the quadratum. "Quadro" is just a
> fun way of saying "quadratum" or low B natural.
>
> The point is that you get B natural in major keys (B flat in minor
> keys), so the Quadro Pavan simply means a pavan in a major key.
> Richard Allison found another way of saying the same thing. He
> called his well-known piece the Sharp Pavan, because it was based on
> a major key, not a minor one. He couldn't call it Quadro Pavan,
> because the Quadro Pavan had became associated with the following
> chord sequence:
>
> G - C - G - D - G - C- GD G -
>
> Thomas Morley refers to this chord sequence as Gregory Walker,
> because it walketh amongst all the barber shops, i.e. any old idiot
> can strum it on his cittern. [I'm afraid I can't find the exact
> quote from Morley's _A Plaine and Easie Introduction to Practicall
> Musick_ (London, 1597), because I'm sitting at the computer in
> complete darkness. The light bulb has gone in the room, I can hardly
> see what I'm doing, and the beer in the Vale of Belvoir earlier this
> evening was particularly good. It would take too many lutenists to
> put in a new bulb, but please don't ask me why.]
>
> Now, anyone who has had the pleasure of learning the 5-string banjo
> will have learned the old favourite, "Bile dem cabbage down", which
> has the following chord sequence:
>
> G - C - G - D - G - C- GD G -
>
> The more observant lutenetters may have noticed that there is a
> striking resemblance between the chord sequence of the Quadro Pavan
> and "Bile dem cabbage down". So if Garry goes off to frail the
> Quadro Pavan on his banjo, he could as well pluck (thumb-inside, of
> course) "Bile them cabbage down" on his renaissance lute.
>
> Here is "Bile dem cabbage down" arranged for a lute in F double #
> with metal frets:
>
>  |\            |    |\ |\ |\      |\   |\
>  |\            |    |\ |\ |\      |    |\
>  |             |    |. |\ |       |.   |
> _e__e__e__e____f____e__e__c__a____c____c___
> _a___________|_c__|_a___________|_a______|_
> _____________|____|_____________|_a______|_
> _c___________|____|_c___________|________|_
> _____________|_a__|_____________|_c______|_
> _____________|____|_____________|________|_
>
>  |\                                      |
>  |\                                      |
>  |                                       |
> _e__e__e__e____f__f__f__f___e__a__c__c___a_____
> _a___________|_c__________|_a_____a____|_a__||_
> _____________|____________|_______a____|_c__||_
> _c___________|____________|_c__________|____||_
> _____________|_a__________|_______c____|____||_
> _____________|____________|____________|_a__||_
>
> Chorus:
>
> Bile dem cabbage down,
> Bake dem oat cakes brown.
> The only song that I can sing is
> Bile dem cabbage down.
>
> [NB: "Bile" = "Boil".]
>
> There are many verses, of which the following is my favourite:
>
> 'Twas on the bridge at midnight,
> My heart was all a-quiver.
> I undid her suspender,
> And her leg fell in the river.
>
> Those particular lyrics might not have been quite what Thomas Morley
> had in mind when he wrote his hard and difficult introduction to
> theoretical music, but as far as the harmonic sequence is concerned,
> he could have happily jammed away for hours on his organ,
> improvising
> countless divisions on Bile dem cabbage down, yet believing all the
> time that he was playing the Quadro Pavan.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Stewart McCoy.
>
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Thomas Schall" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "Lautenliste" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Tuesday, May 25, 2004 10:34 PM
> Subject: Re: Subliminal message - please read
>
>
>> Am Die, 2004-05-25 um 21.27 schrieb Garry Bryan:
>>
>>>
>>> Garry ( off to play the quadro pavin on the banjo again )
>>>
>>
>> ... which is worth discussing. Is playing the quadro pavin on a
> Banjo
>> lute-related? <grin>
>>
>> Thomas
>>
>> (having tried to distinguish between the "et" and "con", the "x"
> and
>> "r", the "g" and "et" in Sixt Kargel which is so frustrating that
> I
>> wouldn't bear any politics anymore - can one "dislearn" german
> tab? I
>> never had such problems reading it)
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>
>
>



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