Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

The Durham Rangers

reel

Key signature: Dmajor

Submitted on August 9th 2004 by lildogturpy.

This tune has been added to 26 tunebooks.

Also known as Durham Rangers, The Merry Sherwood Rangers, Mildew On My Mind, Sherwood Forest, Sherwood Rangers, The Sherwood Rangers.

Recordings of a tune by this name:

Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

X: 1
T: Durham Rangers, The
M: 4/4
L: 1/8
R: reel
K: Dmaj
FG |:AB AF A2 de |fg fe d3 A |Bc dB AB AF |G2 E2 E2 FG |
AB AF A2 de |fg fe d3 A |Bc dB AB AG |1F2 D2 D2 FG :|2F2 D2 D2 ag ||
|:fe fg af df |fe fg a2 gf |g2 bg f2 af |g2 e2 e2 FG |
AB AF A2 de |fg fe d3 A |Bc dB AB AG |1F2 D2 D2 ag :|2F2 D2 D4 ||

Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments
The Durham Rangers sheetmusic
Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

Reel Set

I learned this reel as a set of three: The Great North Run '86, The Dinnington Rant and the Durham Rangers. The start of part B is a real finger twister on my concertina!

# Posted on August 9th 2004 by lildogturpy

Durham Rangers

This tune has somewhat classic hornpipe format - are you sure it's a reel?

# Posted on August 10th 2004 by radriano

German?

I almost hesitate to raise the subject, but this is the one [ the 2nd? ] of the 3 "Germans" on Frankie Kennedy & Mairead Mooney's first LP on the "Gael Linn" label. It would therefore appear to be played as a "German" in Co. Donegal, rather than a reel.

# Posted on August 10th 2004 by Kenny

I think this is the 2nd of the 2 Germans on "Ceol Aduaidh."

# Posted on August 10th 2004 by slainte

This is one of those tunes that started life as a reel, commonly played in Scotland and the North East of England. I don't know much about the dances but I'd have thought it would be good as a rant also. I dunno, ask Noel cuz he knows more about all that stuff. In some places it would be considered as a sort of "sailor's hornpipe", which is essentially a Scottish reel (played quite fast and with only the tiniest bit of swing if any). I can't really remember but I think we used to play this for the Circassian Circle. These are very different to what I consider as "proper!" hornpipes which contain more triplets and a melodic line that leaps about a bit more. The Irish seem to loathe hornpipe part-endings in reels, so when tunes like this were taken to Ireland, they morphed into hornpipes or barndances (Germans).

# Posted on August 11th 2004 by Dow

BTW I've only ever heard this called "Durham Rangers". It sounds weird with the "the" in the title.

# Posted on August 11th 2004 by Dow

Big Feet

I'm learning a lot here - shows what happens when us new folks come stomping over the more informed toes :-) I thought the set sounded sort of hornpipish - see my comment on the dinnington rant.

# Posted on August 11th 2004 by lildogturpy

i've heard this called 'the merry durham rangers' or just 'durham rangers',like dow.
the tune after this on the ceol aduaidh album is a belter tho.
this one is played pretty regularly at the cricketers' ennglish session in greenwich.

# Posted on August 11th 2004 by biggus dave

Robin, if you want to simplify your transcriptions, you can get rid of the 1st & 2nd time repeats if you place your repeat barlines strategically (see below).

Instead of |:ag|fefg afdg|fefg a2gf|... we used to play a version at school that arpeggios down to A:

|:FG|ABAF A2de|fgef d2dA|BcdB ABAF|G2E2 E2FG|
ABAF A2de|fgef d2dA|BcdB ABAG|F2D2 D2:|
|:ag|fefg afdf|edcB Adfa|g2bg f2af|g2e2 e2FG|
ABAF A2de|fgef d2dA|BcdB ABAG|F2D2 D2:|

# Posted on August 11th 2004 by Dow

Reel into Barndance

Considering even "The Flowers of Edinburgh" has been played as a barndance in Ireland. I once tried to post "Davy Davy Nick Nack" as a barndance on this site.

# Posted on August 11th 2004 by slainte

Transcription Help

Thanks for the pointer Mark - learning all the time :-)

# Posted on August 11th 2004 by lildogturpy

Durham Rangers

Yes, this is a Rant and there is a good NE ceilidh band who call themselves The Durham Rangers after the tune. Because it is relatively easy to play/remember, the tune has travelled and it is quite common in Yorkshire and up into the Borders.

Away from home, folk flatten it out and it gets reeled but its a pretty boring reel. Similarly, if you go the otherway and play it as a snappy Tyneside hornpipe there seems to be something missing. If you play it over a brisk short, short, LONG beat, it should come over sounding pretty ranty.

The Angels don't use this tune (yet) but the Belmont Broom Dancers did a routine which had a chorus based on early nineteenth century musket drill to this tune as the Durham Rangers were a volunteer militia raised during the tail end of the napoleonic wars.
Noel

# Posted on August 18th 2004 by noelbats

"The Durham Ranger" is also the name of a salmon fly

"The Durham Ranger" was the name of an artificial fly devised for salmon fishing in Victorian times - one of various quite elaborately made lures of that era, works of art when well made: they may have gone out of use now, being expensive to make and likely to include feathers from endangered species. At least two prominent Durham men of the c19 - Canon Greenwell and William Henderson - are figures of angling history also, and will have used this fly on the River Tweed which they visited often: it's a big-river, high-water fly. Having been an angler, I imagine this fly was devised for the Tweed, but don't know who invented it.

Trout and salmon flies have regional characteristics like tunes, and inspire comparable loyalties, purism, you name it..!

# Posted on September 3rd 2006 by nicholas

Durham Ranger

Interesting info from Nicholas. I have the tune in a number of places as "The Duran Ranger", and according to George S Emmerson, "The Duran Ranger is a particular artificial fly used in angling for salmon. The tune and dance were collected in the Borders in the 1930s by Ian Jamieson of Galashiels, who collected all the dances in the so-called 'Border Book of Country Dances." Of course we know the tune is much older than that, appearing in Kerr's Merry Melodies (c1875) as "The Sherwood Rangers". It would be interesting to find out what the earliest use of the Duran/Durham title was.

# Posted on April 5th 2007 by nigelg

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