Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Soldier's Joy, performed by the Gunnel Hensmar (1951). " Soldier's Joy " is a fiddle tune, classified as a reel or country dance. [1] It is popular in the American fiddle canon, in which it is touted as "an American classic" [1] but traces its origin to Scottish fiddling traditions. [2]

  2. 18 de oct. de 2018 · Hillary Klug fiddles and dances "Soldier's Joy" in Nashville, TN. https://hillaryklug.com ...more.

  3. 5 de mar. de 2010 · Fiddler Larry Rice plays Soldier's Joy with Wilmer Kerns on the guitar. This is a basic version of the fiddle tune for those who are interested in learning i...

  4. 6 de feb. de 2023 · From the DVD "Doc Watson & David Grisman in Concert." (https://www.guitarvideos.com/#!/Doc-Watson-and-David-Grisman-In-Concert/p/131764598)Doc Watson has kn...

  5. 16 de ene. de 2014 · “Soldier’s Joy” appeared in late eighteenth-century sheet music and dance instruction manuals on both sides of the Atlantic. By the nineteenth century, it was published in numerous books of fiddle tunes, usually classified as a reel or country dance.

  6. 17 de feb. de 2020 · Soldier’s Joy ” is a fiddle tune, classified as a reel or country dance. It is popular in the American fiddle canon, touted as “an American classic” but traces its origin to Scottish and Irish fiddle traditions. It has been played in Scotland for over 200 years, and Robert Burns used it for the first song of his cantata ‘The Jolly Beggars’.

  7. - "Soldier's Joy" is one of the oldest and most widely distributed tunes in the English-speaking world. The earliest printings of the tune are in the later eighteenth century, and its appearance in manuscript tunebooks such as "Henry Beck's Flute Book [1786]" shows that it was already in circulation before 1800 on both sides of the Atlantic.