This notation is pretty simple; dark circles mean covered holes; empty circles mean uncovered holes; a '+' below means to blow harder to get the upper octave; a '#' below means this note is too low for the whistle chosen and you'll have to fake it :) The author of this program always plays accidentals by closing holes, so you'll never see half-covered holes.
When I was starting, I found notation like this to be very helpful, and I know plenty of people who have trouble reading music who find this notation easier. Good luck!
(This score available as
ABC,
SongWright,
PostScript,
PNG, or
PMW, or
a MIDI file)
(Choose a whistle key:
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
Ab
Bb
Cb
Db
Eb
Fb
Gb
A#
B#
C#
D#
E#
F#
G#)
Dulcimer tab
for this song is also available
The Oxen Ploughing Prithee lend your jocund voices for to listen we're agreed; Come sing of songs the choicest of the life we ploughboys lead, There are none that live so merry as the ploughboy does in spring When he hears the sweet birds whistle and the nightingales to sing cho: With my hump along! Jump along! Here drives my lad along Pretty, Sparkle, Berry, Good luck, Speedwell, Cherry, We are the lads that can follow the plough, oh, We are the lads that can follow the plow. In the heat of the daytime it's but little we can do We lie beside our oxen for an hour or two; On the banks of sweet violets I'll take my noon-tide rest And it's I can kiss a pretty girl as hearty as the rest. When the sun at eve is setting and the shadows fill the vale THen our throttles we'll be setting with the farmer's humming ale And the oxen home returning we will send into the stall When the logs and peat are burning we'll be merry ploughboys all. Oh the farmer must have seed, sirs, or I swear he cannot sow And the miller with his mill-wheel is an idle man also And the huntsman gives up hunting and the tradeszman stands aside And the poor man's bread is wanting, so 'tis we for all provide. From English Country Songbook, Palmer Collected from Adam Landry, Cornwall, 1895 RG oct97
Thanks to Mudcat for the Digital Tradition!