Morning - there are some Proudlocks in my village doing some family research and they've been aware of the tune for some time. I said I'd see what I could find ...

Does anyone have any history, apocryphillia or references for the tune? Here's what I have so far...

 - The earliest printed reference I know of is the First NPS tunebook.
 - TOPIC have it played by Billy Ballentine on piccolo (1954 I think)
- Various sources cross-reference it to the much older Monk's March. I can see the similarity but it's distinct. I'm also unaware of any reference to the Monk's March in older NSP related manuscripts
 - Often (mis)attributed to James Hill - Proudlock's Fancy is a different tune
- Peter Kennedy recorded Jack Armstrong playing it in the 50s or 60s where it was listed as "Lewis Proudlock's Hornpipe". There's one compilation CD ("Bagpipes of Britain & Ireland" CD-SDL416) where the unattributed sleeve notes say: '"Lewie" was a famous local fiddler and fisherman who composed many tunes. He had no fixed job and moved around the county. His grand-daughter used to play with Jack.'

If 'Lewie' wrote it then that would date it somewhere in the 70 years preceding the recording... I've never come across any of the "many tunes" he composed. The only Lewis Proudlock I could find in this period was born in Swinden (sic). He's listed in the 1851 census as being 12 yrs old.

- There was another Lewis Proudlock who was a Coquetdale Poet but he was a bit earlier (d.1816)

cheers

Rob









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