Key signature: Adorian
Submitted on December 17th 2001 by Miss Lonelyhearts.
This tune has been added to 168 tunebooks.
Also known as Andt Renwick's Ferret, Andt Renwick;s Ferret, The Ferret.
Recordings of a tune by this name:
X: 1
T: Andy Renwick's Ferret
M: 4/4
L: 1/8
R: reel
K: Ador
|:cA (3AAA ABcd|eaag agef|gd (3ddd egde|degd egdB|
|cA (3AAA ABcd|eaag agef|gd (3ddd efgd|1 edgB A2 AB:|2 edgB A2 Bd||
|eaag ageg|a2 ag agef|gd (3ddd egde|degd egdg|
|eaag ageg|a2 ag agef|gd (3ddd efgd|edgB A2 Bd|
|eaag ageg|a2 ag agef|gd (3ddd egde|degd egdB|
|cA (3AAA ABcd|eaag agef|gd (3ddd efgd|edgB A2 AB||
|:cA (3AAA A2 cA|(3AAA cA agef|gd (3ddd ^cdcd|(3ddd ^cd cddB|
|cA (3AAA A2 cA|(3AAA cA agef|gd (3ddd efgd|1 edgB A2 AB:|2 edgB A2 Bd||
|eaag ageg|ageg ~a3 f|gd (3ddd eggd|^cdgd eggd|
|eaag ageg|ageg ~a3 f|gd (3ddd efgd|edgB A2 Bd|
|eaag ageg|ageg ~a3 f|gd (3ddd eggd|^cdgd eggd|
|cA (3AAA A2 cA|(3AAA cA agef|gd (3ddd efgd|edgB A2 AB|
Andy Renwick's Ferret
We had a rather desperate plea for sheet music on this tune, so here's the abc and Jeremy will do his magic to make the dots and sound file appear.
I've heard this on Nomos's cd I Won't Be Afraid Anymore. I can't promise I got all the notes exactly right, and the triplets I've written are what I would do on fiddle to get the gist of it. Not likely a tune I would often play....but there you have it.
Will
# Posted on December 17th 2001 by Miss Lonelyhearts
The ferret
This tune is a composition of GORDON DUNCAN of Pitlochry, Perthshire, who is one of Scotland's greatest players of the Highland bagpipe. He has composed many other great tunes,which are nowadays common both inside and outside of the piping repertoire. There is a story behind the tune, but I can't really go into that in any detail!
# Posted on December 26th 2001 by Kenny
Sure you can, Kenny, that's what this forum is for! (Unless of course it's an embarassing, deeply personal story...)
# Posted on February 19th 2002 by Kerri Brown
Exchanging ferret stories?
Are you sure you aren't thinking of www.ferrets.org? Or maybe http://www.urbanlegends.com/ ?

# Posted on February 19th 2002 by glauber
The ferret set
Old Blind Dogs does a kick-ass version of this tune on their "New Tricks" album. It is part of the track called "The Ferret Set". That starts with a nice version of "Dinky's" - I learned dinky's from this, ask me how hard that was
, into something they have as "shetland tune" in the liner notes, presumably this is a tune from shetland that they don't know the name of, then into the ferret, back to a faster version of dinky's, then into 2 other tunes that I can't remember the name of right now. All in all, I really like that track and have been trying to figure out the ferret from the cd, slow going. Now, thanks to this tune posting from you, Will, I should be able to figure out their version. Getting it up to speed is another problem altogether! When I have the cd here, I'll post it to the recordings section.
# Posted on April 17th 2002 by chicagofiddler
I posted the Old Blind Dogs album with the recording of this tune but it is not showing up as a link in the recordings list (for this tune). I'm not sure if this is because they spelled Andy's last name as Rennick which is how I entered it or because I messed up something else. I changed the spelling for it (and for Dinkies, Dinky's in the tunes database) but that hasn't fixed the problem. I'll check with Jeremy to find out how to fix it.
# Posted on April 18th 2002 by chicagofiddler
This tune also appears on Dublin piper Martin Nolan's solo album, "Travel'n'style".
# Posted on July 24th 2003 by Hanley
The key
Notable as it has c naturals throughout. Not a 'traditional' note on the Highland pipe?
# Posted on January 14th 2006 by NeilBarr
No indeed.
Tunes like this are why they arm judges at piping competitions.
(But it is a kick-ass tune.)
# Posted on November 15th 2006 by wormdiet
Tune to go with Andy Renwick's Ferret
I just finished learning "Andy Renwick's Ferret" (awesome tune, by the way) and need a tune to go with it. Leahy does it with the Westburne Reel, but I can't seem to pick it up by ear. At the end, I want to throw in "The Boys of Malin" somewhere, so this new tune would go in the middle. Any ideas?
Thanks,
Ben
# Posted on December 31st 2006 by Ben314
It does not have C naturals throughout, in fact one of the things that makes the tune so cool is the juxtaposition of C naturals and the pipe's usual C sharps. Gordon Duncan died at a rather young age not long ago. His long-awaited tunebook collection debuted last Wednesday in Glasgow and is now available from the Piping Centre, Glasgow.
By the way the version given on this site has quite a few errors. Now that Gordon Duncan's book is available, I hope that people become exposed to the actual tune as he wrote it.
# Posted on August 15th 2007 by Richard D Cook
A little bit similar to Charlie McKerron's Islay Rant http://www.thesession.org/tunes/display.php/1688
# Posted on September 4th 2007 by Dow
Follow up tunes
have seen the tongadale reel follow this one
# Posted on September 6th 2007 by richard bryant
Transcription in Gordon's Book
Interestingly enough the book transcription (page 38) is in Am not Ador. Thus the tune should be using Fnaturals rather than sharps.
Despite being able to read music I cannot make head nor tail of the oddly placed 1st/2nd time notation on the first 2 sections. Anyone able to explain to me what Im supposed to make of the extreme non-standard use of 1st/2nd time markers? At the moment the best I can come up with is to ignore them - which seems to make more sense.
The book has 6 parts rather than the 4 here.
# Posted on February 1st 2009 by Barry Pearce
More on Gordon's Book
Just a thought here...
Bagpipe notation...is there an 'assumed key'?
I'm curious why the transcription in the book uses no key signature, yet naturalises many Cs.....but leaves some untouched - given the discussions above that implies that the key sig should have a C sharp...which would also mean an F sharp...and therefore a Key of Amix?
Curious. Very curious.
# Posted on February 1st 2009 by Barry Pearce
GHB notation
Barry, the reason Highland pipe music is written that way is because it is based on one 9 note scale. Pipes never used to be concert pitch Bb no the actual notes written down were not important. Pipers call the notes A,B,C etc even though they are nearer to Bb, C,C# etc. On the pipes all you had was a straight mix so there was no need to show sharps or flats. Modern chanters can play a couple of flat notes by cross fingering but the music is written as it has been for year. So pipe music is written as it it's to keep things simple. I even have a very old collection written on 3 lines rather than 5 though I have to admit I find that pretty strange.
# Posted on February 1st 2009 by conscientious objector