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Swedish Tunes


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#1 michael sam wild

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Posted 29 August 2011 - 09:27 AM

I went to a great workshop/session at Whitby with Vicky Swann and Jonny Dyer. The taught us some nice Swedish tunes and they fitted nicely under the fingers on the Anglo C/G. The Nykelharpa was nice to play along to maybe it has the same feel as a concertina reeds.
Has anyomne got any good links for the Swedish tunes.? I have a few Vasen CDs

#2 SteveS

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Posted 29 August 2011 - 10:11 AM

I went to a great workshop/session at Whitby with Vicky Swann and Jonny Dyer. The taught us some nice Swedish tunes and they fitted nicely under the fingers on the Anglo C/G. The Nykelharpa was nice to play along to maybe it has the same feel as a concertina reeds.
Has anyomne got any good links for the Swedish tunes.? I have a few Vasen CDs


FolkWiki is a good source of tunes.
Swedish music is my favourite - duets with EC and fiddle work especially well.

Edited by SteveS, 29 August 2011 - 10:12 AM.


#3 Steve Mansfield

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Posted 29 August 2011 - 10:21 AM

I've always found Scandinavian music sits really well on the EC, both for listening and for playing.

If you can get hold of a copy, Ben Paley's book for Dragonfly, 'Swedish Fiddle Music', is a great collection. The Yorkshire Dales Workshop people also published a good collection, 'Music and dances from Sweden', which might still be available somewhere or other (haven't Googled sources of either book).

Online collections include:
http://richardrobins...lection/28?i=47
http://www.andyhornb...ll%20scandi.ABC
http://www.pineycree...nes/Flilkid.abc

and, if you're interested, I've also got a personal abc file of about 50 tunes which I'll happily share, PM me if interested.

Great music, enjoy!



[Edited because I couldn't spell Yorkshire]

Edited by Steve Mansfield, 29 August 2011 - 10:23 AM.


#4 michael sam wild

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Posted 29 August 2011 - 10:22 AM

Thanks , Vickyand Jonny put this up too http://homepage.mac....per/whitby.html

#5 anlej

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Posted 29 August 2011 - 12:09 PM

Thanks Mike and Steve for the links Posted Image

I didn't get to the Swedish tunes workshop at Whitby as it clashed with the Early/Renaissance music one. More tunes to learn Posted Image

#6 JimLucas

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Posted 29 August 2011 - 12:50 PM

I went to a great workshop/session at Whitby with Vicky Swann and Jonny Dyer. They taught us some nice Swedish tunes....

Sweden is a wonderful place for music! It has many (thousands of) wonderful tunes, and a great number of regional styles. And I'd say a greater fraction of the population is actively involved in the folk music than in any other country, including Ireland.

...and they fitted nicely under the fingers on the Anglo C/G.

I wish I could get my friend Pontus to do some recordings. He played fiddle before concertina; he dances; and he also plays the one-row "melodeon". But the concertina is where he really shines... all great traditional Swedish tunes on his Dipper County Clare. :)

#7 John Wild

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Posted 29 August 2011 - 12:57 PM

there is a book called Fiddle music from Northern Lands,
this is a collection of tunes from Scandinavian countries -loosely defined to include Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Orkney and Shetland
ISBN 978-0-9560771-0-35

I ordered my copy through an ebay shop - it may still be available that way. Look in music/song books within the musical instruments category.
It came with a CD which has the tunes in the book as PDF files and as midi files, plus some as scorch files for Sibelius.

It was £11.99+post

Published by Catacol, Montgarrie, Aberdeenshire, Scotland
beezer2001@lineone.net



- John Wild

#8 Steve Mansfield

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Posted 29 August 2011 - 01:08 PM

there is a book called Fiddle music from Northern Lands,
this is a collection of tunes from Scandinavian countries -loosely defined to include Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Orkney and Shetland
ISBN 978-0-9560771-0-35

I ordered my copy through an ebay shop - it may still be available that way. Look in music/song books within the musical instruments category.
It came with a CD which has the tunes in the book as PDF files and as midi files, plus some as scorch files for Sibelius.

It was £11.99+post

Published by Catacol, Montgarrie, Aberdeenshire, Scotland
beezer2001@lineone.net



- John Wild


What, you mean Ebay item 200637008564 (just search Ebay for that number)? Thanks for that John, there's already one less copy available now :)

#9 John Wild

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Posted 29 August 2011 - 05:46 PM

What, you mean Ebay item 200637008564 (just search Ebay for that number)? Thanks for that John, there's already one less copy available now :)


Yes.that is the one, and the same seller ID. I think I have to apologise as well because the price I quoted referred to (I believe) the book on CD only without the hard copy.
The price I paid for this item is the same as now, £18.50+post. I strongly recommend it.
the current advert on Ebay says there are still 5 available, but I expect when these have gone it might come round again.

regards

- John

Edited by John Wild, 29 August 2011 - 06:00 PM.


#10 MarkvN

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Posted 30 August 2011 - 05:05 AM

Hi Michael,
You'll find large collections of old Swedish manuscripts here
http://www.smus.se/e...dex.php?lang=en
here
http://www.lu.se/fol...ar/notsamlingen
and here
http://www.gotlandstoner.se/web/.

And a very nice Danish site with a lot of Scandinavian music (also abc, midi and pdf, if I remember well) is
http://www.spillefolk.dk/
Cheers,
Mark

#11 RatFace

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Posted 30 August 2011 - 05:08 AM

If you can get hold of a copy, Ben Paley's book for Dragonfly, 'Swedish Fiddle Music'...


This is indeed a great book. I recorded some of the tunes for practice purposes here (towards the end of that page).

#12 michael sam wild

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Posted 30 August 2011 - 05:42 AM


If you can get hold of a copy, Ben Paley's book for Dragonfly, 'Swedish Fiddle Music'...


This is indeed a great book. I recorded some of the tunes for practice purposes here (towards the end of that page).



Can you tell us, is that link part of a web site or a 'one off' ? Intersting tunes and a lotof hard work obviously gone into it! Thanks

#13 eskin

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Posted 30 August 2011 - 12:04 PM

Some Säckpipa tunes might work out well on the concertina, perhaps transposed:

http://w7fr0p555.hom...pa-Lehrbuch.pdf

#14 SteveS

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Posted 30 August 2011 - 12:19 PM

Some Säckpipa tunes might work out well on the concertina, perhaps transposed:

http://w7fr0p555.homepage.t-online.de/S%E4ckpipa-Lehrbuch.pdf

Some good tunes here - some of them I play already on EC - they work well.

Edited by SteveS, 30 August 2011 - 12:20 PM.


#15 blue eyed sailor

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Posted 30 August 2011 - 05:08 PM

And a very nice Danish site with a lot of Scandinavian music (also abc, midi and pdf, if I remember well) is
http://www.spillefolk.dk/

Wow, simply amazing! no abc, but gif and pdf (as well as midi).

Dozens of tunes alone from "my" beloved Fanø...

Thanx a lot! :)

#16 Chris Drinkwater

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Posted 31 August 2011 - 10:05 PM

There is also this website for the Scandinavian Sessions in London, which I go to. It has PDFs of many of the tunes we play at the sessions. And sometimes, Vicki Swann, herself, comes to the sessions to play with us, which is nice. :)

Chris

#17 MarkvN

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Posted 01 September 2011 - 02:04 AM

Thank you all for some very nice tune collections and recordings!
Mark

#18 Steve Mansfield

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Posted 01 September 2011 - 04:16 AM

My copy of 'Fiddle music from Northern Lands' arrived yesterday, and it's lovely - nice clear music & good production values generally, lots of information, and a good proportion of new-to-me tunes alongside the standards.


That's my leisure playing sorted for the next few weeks :) Thanks to John Wild for the tip-off.




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