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  2. Scottish fiddling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_fiddling

    The Cape Breton style of fiddle music is related to these styles of music, the Cape Bretoners having come from the Highlands to Nova Scotia in the 1700s. West coast fiddlers include Angus Grant (Senior), Iain MacFarlane (Glenfinnan), Archie MacAlistair (Campbeltown), Alasdair White (Lewis), Allan Henderson (Mallaig), Eilidh Shaw (Taynuilt) and ...

  3. Flowers of Edinburgh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flowers_of_Edinburgh

    "Flowers of Edinburgh" is a traditional fiddle tune, of eighteenth century Scottish lineage. It is also prominent in American fiddle , Canadian fiddle and wherever old time fiddle is cultivated. The tune is also the basis for a Morris Dance , in the Bledington style.

  4. Cape Breton fiddling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Breton_fiddling

    These Scottish immigrants were primarily from Gaelic-speaking regions in the Scottish Highlands and the Outer Hebrides. Although fiddling has changed since this time in Scotland, it is widely held [who?] that the tradition of Scottish fiddle music has been better preserved in Cape Breton. While there is a similar tradition from the Irish-style ...

  5. Arthur Scott Robertson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Scott_Robertson

    He was first taught to play the instrument by Gideon Stove, and later on stopped playing traditional Shetland music, but proceeded with a more north-eastern Scottish style. In 1969, the first Scottish Fiddle Championship took place. Competing with other 115 fiddlers, he won and was titled "Scotland's Champion Fiddler".

  6. Hector MacAndrew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hector_MacAndrew

    When I met this man and heard him play, I knew I was in the presence of Scottish history." [4] MacAndrew was an expert in the playing of pipe music on the fiddle. He had many friends among the piping community, men who admired his approach to "their" tunes. Of contemporary pipers he particularly admired G. S. McLennan, Angus Mackay and William ...

  7. William Marshall (Scottish composer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Marshall_(Scottish...

    William Marshall (27 December 1748 – 29 May 1833) is regarded as one of the greatest composers of Scottish fiddle music. Marshall was born in Fochabers, Scotland. He entered the service of the Duke of Gordon, eventually becoming the factor to the Gordon Estate. James Hunter's The Fiddle Music of Scotland credits Marshall with writing 257 ...

  8. 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.

  9. John M. Mason (musician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_M._Mason_(musician)

    John Mason, Conductor. John M. Mason, MBE (21 January 1940 – 22 January 2011) was a Scottish solicitor, musician, composer and conductor.He was the co-founder, musical director, and conductor of the Scottish Fiddle Orchestra from its creation in 1980 until his death in 2011.