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 UA-cam. ) 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!
That's really lovely playing, thanks so much. I love playing this really slowly like an air, it has such beautiful structure. 2:47
Thank you. It is a great tune. It works as a clogg too.
Beautiful! I loved this, it really made me smile. Thanks for sharing.
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.
thank you for the information!
Blue Pedro would be proud. Well done!
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 love that!!!!
A good fiddler
You are both great musicians! I listened to some couples and a single each and no matter - just very good!
Thank you
Lovely!
Thanks!
Thank you for sharing this!
About to start working on this tune! Lovely playing
It's a great tune!
Great job!..One of my favorite tunes!
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
Bellísimo!!
You can't drink coffee before playing Scottish tunes !!! ,???
You drink tea 😂 !
Such a grand duet🎻☀️✨🎶
thank you
Very nice to listen to
Love it!
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 UA-cam. ) 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!
Thank you for your kind words. Glad to hear you’re playing the Flowers of Edinburgh. We did record the Woodchopper’s Reel also. It’s FTC #24.
Isaac Callender Thanks, I will check it out now. I wasn’t sure if you had recorded it. Awesome!
enjoyed! Added to my likes to learn on fiddle.
Some Americam standards I' d like to hear in that style- Soldier's Joy, Cowboy Jig, Calliope House or Tombigbee Waltz.Any chance?
0:45 start
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!
Yes, indeed times have changed since the Victorian era..!! A good follow-on tune after FoE is "Staten Island".