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DBpedia 2015-10

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Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { ?s ?p ""Haste to the Wedding" is a Scottish jig, also adopted into Irish tradition, in D Major with standard AABB format.The earliest known source for the tune is James Oswald's "Caledonian Pocket Companion", volume 10, page 8 (London, 1759), where it is titled "The Small Pin Cushion". No source or composer is listed, which in Oswald's collections sometimes means he wrote it himself."The tune 'Come, Haste to the Wedding', of Gaelic origin, was introduced in the pantomime 'The Elopement' in 1767. This version is known as the Manx tune and was printed by the Percy society in 1846. It is the basis for the Manx ballad, 'The Capture of Carrickfergusby,' written by Thurot in 1760 (Linscott)." One of the tunes associated with the dance "Lady in the Lake" in N.H./ Widely known in the USA: in the repertory of Buffalo Valley, Pa., dance fiddler Harry Daddario. This tune, known variously as “Haste to the Wedding,” “Come Haste,” “Rural Felicity” and even “The Rules of Felicity”.Source for notated version: Smith Paine (Wolfboro, N.H.) [Linscott]. Linscott (Folk Music of Old New England), 1939; pg. 87. Sweet (Fifer's Delight), 1964/1981; pg. 24."@en }

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