This song became well known in America as Old 1812, due to its popularity in the 1812 war. It also became known in England as Welcome Here Again, a shortening of the longer name, All Ye'll Be Welcome Here Again.
Outstanding! It's such a vital element but seldom executed with such palpable strength--or so deliberately or so cleanly. It's very attractive, Isaac Callender.
I like the part B added ornamentations 3x. the piano and fiddle coincide as well on those parts. uplifting! GREAT JOB! I will be looking for your music.
A tour de force, great tone with that left hand underpinning strong melody. Can I keep up? Coffee definitely needed. We play this for the Lucky 7 dance and am tempted to try at this speed and see how many ( more) miss a partner at the end- it's common anyway and adds to the fun- or spin off into outer darkness. Great
Love you guys! Been following you for quite a while and am so glad you keep posting new videos. Flowers of Edinburgh is one of my reel options for competition this coming summer and I really like the feel and happiness that comes forth through your playing. I am still learning to play the fiddle (loving every part of learning) and I am almost up to speed with playing you. I have to push myself outside my comfort zone because I actually prefer to play at 75% of your speed. (Thank goodness for the playback speed adjustments you can use in RU-vid. ) Was wondering if you could please post a video playing The Woodchopper’s Breakdown, because that is my other reel tune option I am working on. Thanks for sharing!
Good clean fiddle playing and great piano. The origins of the title of this tune are interesting: tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Flowers_of_Edinburgh_(1)
Thanks John! Louise prefers to connect the title with her memory of crocuses and other spring flowers she saw in Edinburgh in February a few years ago!