The Sailor's Hornpipe

The Sailor's Hornpipe (also known as The College Hornpipe and Jack's the Lad[1]) is a traditional hornpipe melody.

History

The usual tune for this dance was first printed as the "College Hornpipe" in 1797 or 1798 by J. Dale of London.[2] It was found in manuscript collections before then – for instance the fine syncopated version in the William Vickers manuscript, written on Tyneside, dated 1770.[3] The dance imitates the life of a sailor and their duties aboard ship. Due to the small space that the dance required, and no need for a partner, the dance was popular on-board ship.[4]

Accompaniment may have been the music of a tin whistle or, from the 19th century, a squeezebox. Samuel Pepys referred to it in his diary as "The Jig of the Ship" and Captain Cook, who took a piper on at least one voyage, is noted to have ordered his men to dance the hornpipe in order to keep them in good health.[4] The dance on-ship became less common when fiddlers ceased to be included in ships' crew members.

College Hornpipe
The Sailor's Hornpipe

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In dramatic stage productions, from around the sixteenth century, a popular feature was a sea dance. But the nineteenth century saw the more familiar form of the "sailors’ hornpipe" introduced. Nautical duties (for example the hauling of ropes, rowing, climbing the rigging and saluting) provided the dance movements.

In artistic and popular culture

During the Last Night of the Proms in London, the spectators bring miniature foghorns and party horns and blow them along to the music, creating a loud, frenetic finale as the music reaches its fastest speed.[5]

Groucho doing the "Hornpipe" in Duck Soup

The tune is one of the movements in Sir Henry Wood's Fantasia on British Sea Songs.

Groucho Marx does the traditional dance to this number at one point, as part of the opening number in the film, Duck Soup.

In the 1941 children's novel The Moffats by Eleanor Estes, Joey Moffat is supposed to do the hornpipe in a dancing school recital. Overcome by stage fright, he can't remember the steps until a tiny lap dog – formerly a sailor's pet – hears the music and jumps into the center of the floor to take up the dance.

The tune was played in the animated Popeye cartoons beginning in the 1930s, usually as the first part of the opening credits theme, which then segued into an instrumental of "I'm Popeye the Sailor Man".

The tune is also frequently heard as background music in many Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons, usually in situations concerning sailing, ships, or the sea.

Sylvester doing the "Hornpipe" in Back Alley Oproar

The Sailor's Hornpipe is the finale of part two of Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells. It was also the inspiration for the track "Moonshine" from his Tubular Bells II.

In the Gilbert and Sullivan comic opera H.M.S. Pinafore, Sir Joseph Porter tells Ralph Rackstraw "All sailors should dance hornpipes. I will teach you one this evening". In their later opera, Utopia, Limited, a slower version of the melody introduces "Captain Corcoran, K.C.B." In their opera The Gondoliers, it's quoted in the accompaniment for the line "With Admirals all round his wide dominions" from the song "There lived a King." An entire dance routine of a Hornpipe is included in Ruddigore.

The tune also appeared in the opening scene of Woody Allen's Radio Days as the final question in a "Name that Tune" contest.

The song also appears in Walt Disney's 1951 adaptation of Lewis Caroll's Alice in Wonderland. Lyrics are added to the tune, which is sung by the Dodo on the way to the Caucus race.

Rik Mayall sings the tune, but with the bawdy version of the lyrics of 'Do your ears hang low' in the Bottom episode 'Burglary'.

In The Simpsons episode Bart the Fink, the character Handsome Pete dances for nickles to The Sailor's Hornpipe.

John Philip Sousa's "Jack Tar March", written in 1903, features "The Sailor's Hornpipe" tune in one of its segments.

Recordings

This tune has been recorded by:

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, January 18, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.