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  2. Scottish fiddling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_fiddling

    Scotland has influenced Donegal fiddling in various ways. Workers from Donegal would go to Scotland in the summer and bring back Scottish tunes with them; Donegal fiddlers have used Scottish tunebooks and learned from records of Scottish fiddlers like J. Scott Skinner and Mackenzie Murdoch.

  3. Colyn Fischer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colyn_Fischer

    Colyn C. Fischer (born 1977 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is an American violinist that has played the violin since the age of three and has been Scottish fiddling since the age of five. As a teenager, he studied with a number of the great fiddlers of Scotland , such as Ian Powrie and Alasdair Hardy, and of the United States, including John ...

  4. Hanneke Cassel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanneke_Cassel

    Hanneke is the 1997 United States National Scottish Fiddle Champion, [3] and she has performed and taught across the United States, Scotland, Sweden, China, New Zealand, France, England, and Australia. [4] Her debut album, My Joy, received the following feedback from Alasdair Fraser:

  5. Scottish Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Americans

    Fiddle tunes from the Scottish repertoire, as they developed in the eighteenth century, spread rapidly into British colonies. However, in many cases, this occurred through the medium of print rather than aurally, explaining the presence of Highland-origin tunes in regions like Appalachia where there was essentially no Highland settlement.

  6. American fiddle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_fiddle

    Early influences were Irish, Scottish, and English fiddle styles, as well as the more upper-class traditions of classical violin playing. Popular tunes included "Soldier's Joy", for which Robert Burns wrote lyrics, and other tunes such as "Flowers of Edinburgh" and "Tamlin," which have both been claimed by both Scottish and Irish lineages.

  7. Niel Gow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niel_Gow

    Gow was born in Strathbraan, Perthshire, in 1727, as the son of John Gow and Catherine McEwan.The family moved to Inver in Perthshire when Niel was an infant. He started playing the fiddle when very young, and at age 13 received his first formal lessons from one John Cameron of Grandtully.

  8. Catriona MacDonald - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catriona_MacDonald

    Catriona Macdonald (born 1969 or 1970) is a fiddler, composer, researcher, and lecturer from Shetland, located some 320 km (200 miles) north of the Scottish mainland.She is considered to be among the world's leading traditional fiddle players, and one of the top exponents of the Shetland fiddle, a branch of traditional music with clear connections to the music of Scotland, but which features ...

  9. Tom Anderson (fiddler) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Anderson_(fiddler)

    Shetland schoolchildren fiddlers, Unst, 2004. Anderson died on 20 September 1991, in Montfield Hospital, Lerwick, five weeks after his 81st birthday. In his lifetime he taught hundreds of pupils. Today the sons and daughters of his pupils are coming to the fore in schools music in Shetland, while Aly Bain and many others have achieved fame ...