Andrew Lammie
"Andrew Lammie", also known as Mill o' Tifty or Mill o' Tifty's Annie, is a traditional Scottish ballad, set in Aberdeenshire, and catalogued as Child ballad 233 (Roud 98). It tells the story of an ill-fated romance between Annie, the daughter of the miller at Tifty, and Andrew Lammie, the trumpeter for the lord of nearby Fyvie Castle. The romance is thwarted by Annie's ambitious family, who disapprove of the trumpeter's low rank. In most versions, the ballad ends with Annie's death at the hands of her brother.
The ballad is said to recount a historical event, with the heroine "Bonnie Annie" being buried in the churchyard at Fyvie.[1] In 1825, Peter Buchan described the song as "one of the greatest favourites of the people in Aberdeenshire that I know."[2] The "Annie" of the title is traditionally identified with Agnes Smith, who died in 1673.[3]
"Andrew Lammie" is one of a group of several traditional Scottish ballads that, in many versions, use a "single rhyme" throughout, with the second line of each verse rhyming loosely with either "Lammie" or "Annie".[4] The stress falls on the penultimate syllable of the rhyming line, resulting in a feminine rhyme that is unusual in Scottish ballads. Each stanza has four lines; the first and third lines have four beats while the second and fourth lines have three. [4] Other popular ballads sharing similar meter and rhyme schemes include Barbara Allen and The Dowie Dens of Yarrow.[5] These ballads are often sung to the same or similar melodies.[6][7]
Synopsis
[edit]Annie, daughter of the miller of Tifty, falls in love with Andrew Lammie, trumpeter for the lord of Fyvie. Her parents refuse permission because of Lammie's low rank as a servant. He has to leave, and although he has promised fidelity and to return, she sickens. Her family, set against the match, try beatings to make her give him up, but it is unavailing. They may send to the lord accusing Andrew Lammie of bewitching her, but the lord believes his claim that it was only love.
She dies, either of a broken heart or her back broken by her brother. Her father may repent of his insistence. In many versions, Andrew Lammie dies soon after.
Variants
[edit]The earliest extant version of "Andrew Lammie" appeared as a broadside ballad in 1776.[3] Francis James Child catalogued three versions of the song in the 19th century. Of these, most known sung versions of the ballad are variants of Child's third version (Child 233 C).[8]
Although most contemporary versions of the ballad are fairly short, the original version of Child 233 C has 49 verses. The traditional singer Jane Turriff sang a version with 52.[9] Turriff and other traditional singers would vary length of the song depending on the audience.
Most versions of the song refer to Annie's brother breaking her back on the "ha' door", referring to the main entrance to a farmhouse.[10] However, certain variants arising from the Traveller singing tradition refer to this fatal blow being delivered on "the temple stane", or in one recorded variant "the altar stane".[11]
Although most versions of the ballad retain the basic narrative in which Annie dies first and Andrew dies later (or does not die at all within the story), in a Nova Scotia variant Andrew dies first and it is Annie who exclaims "My true loved died for me today, I'll die for him tomorrow".[12] Tristram P. Coffin considered this to be an example of a cliched phrase overpowering the story.[13]
Themes
[edit]"Andrew Lammie" shares the themes of martyrdom and tragic love with many Scottish ballads.[14] It shares with ballads such as The Bride's Burial the trope of the would-be bride whose purity is "guaranteed by death".[15]
Like "The Dowie Dens of Yarrow", this ballad tells the story of a woman who, despite social pressure, is able to take control of her own life, at the cost of losing it.[16] A review of recordings of traditional singers held at the School of Scottish Studies, recorded between 1951 and 1997, found that it was among the ten most popular among women singers but not among men.[17]
The brother's violence is also a common theme in many Scottish ballads, including The Cruel Brother and Bonnie Susie Cleland.[18] Contemporary singers including Martin Simpson[19] and Iona Fyfe[20] have cited this ballad as an example of a Scottish honour killing. Ballads about honour killings are found in both the Scottish and Scandinavian ballad traditions, although "Andrew Lammie" is unusual in that the victim's entire family participates in the violence.[21]
Recordings
[edit]Year | Performer | Album/Single | Title |
---|---|---|---|
1961[a] | Lucy Stewart | Lucy Stewart: Traditional Singer from Aberdeenshire, Scotland, Vol. 1—Child Ballads | Tifty's Annie[22] |
1968 | Sheila Stewart | Back o' Benachie | Mill o’ Tiffy’s Annie[23] |
1972 | Ray Fisher | The Bonny Birdy | Mill O'Tifty's Annie[24] |
1973 | The Boys of the Lough | The Boys of the Lough | Andrew Lammie[25] |
1998[b] | Jeannie Robertson | The Queen Among the Heather | Bonnie Annie and Andrew Lammie[26] |
1978 | Jean Redpath | Song of the Seals | Mill o' Tifty's Annie[27] |
1986 | Ewan MacColl | Blood and Roses - vol 5 | Andrew Lammie |
1997 | Gordeanna McCulloch | Ballads | Mill o' Tifty's Annie[28] |
1999 | Old Blind Dogs | The World's Room | Mill o' Tifty[29] |
2000 | Asonance | Alison Gross | Krutý bratr[c] |
2004 | Hilary James & Simon Mayor | Laughing with the Moon | Andrew Lammie[30] |
2007 | Martin Simpson | Prodigal Son | Andrew Lammie[31] |
2007 | Kate Rusby | Awkward Annie | Andrew Lammie[32] |
2011 | Craig Herbertson | A Health To The Ladies | Andrew Lammie |
2020 | Iona Fyfe | Ballads Vol. I | Mill o' Tifty's Annie[33] |
2024 | Amanda MacLean | 365 Days Of Folk | Mill O'Tifty's Annie |
- ^ From Smithsonian Folkways field recordings, 1959-1960.
- ^ From 1953 field recording by Alan Lomax. Probably the longest version - over 13 minutes.
- ^ Czech translation (Cruel Brother).
Adaptations
[edit]This ballad forms the unifying device of a ballad opera, Mill O' Tifty's Annie, by the Scottish composer Eric James Reid (1935–1970).[35] There were several performances in the 1960s. Subsequently, a concert suite devised by Geoffrey Atkinson from the opera was made available.[36]
A novel based on the ballad, entitled The Flax Flower, was published by Amanda MacLean in 2015.[37][38]
Landscape
[edit]Several landmarks near Fyvie are associated with the ballad. The gravestone of Agnes Smith stands in the Fyvie kirkyard. The original 17th-century headstone was replaced in 1845, and in 1869 a polished granite cross was added by public subscription.[39] In Fyvie Castle, a statue of a trumpeter traditionally held to represent Andrew Lammie stands at the top of Preston Tower.[40][41]
The location of the farmhouse where she lived was about half a mile (0.8 km) from Fyvie Castle, uphill from Tifty's Mill.[39] The 17th-century bridge over Skeugh Burn, which figures in some versions of the ballad as the place of Annie and Andrew's final parting, was located a distance upstream of the later road bridge.[39]
Works cited
[edit]- Child, Francis James (1890). "Andrew Lammie". The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, Volume 4. pp. 300–308.
- Coffin, Tristram Potter (1963). The British Traditional Ballad in North America. American Folklore Society. ISBN 978-0-292-70719-1.
- McCarthy, William Bernard (2003). ""Barbara Allen" and "The Gypsy Laddie": Single-Rhyme Ballads in the Child Corpus". The Flowering Thorn: International Ballad Studies. University Press of Colorado. p. 153. doi:10.2307/j.ctt46nrm0.14. ISBN 978-0-87421-568-7. JSTOR j.ctt46nrm0.14.
- MacLean, Amanda (2011). "The Sad Fate and Splendid Career of the Trumpeter of Fyvie". Folk Music Journal. 10 (1): 89–101. JSTOR 23208182.
- MacLean, Amanda (2023). "Dropping Stones and Opening Doors on to 'Mill o' Tifty's Annie'". Folk Music Journal. 12 (3): 78–85.
- Sharp, Sarah Elizabeth (2016). Digging up the kirkyard: death, readership and nation in the writings of the Blackwood's group 1817-1839 (PDF) (Ph.D. thesis).
- Strong, Martin Charles (2002). The Great Scots Musicography: The Complete Guide to Scotland's Music Makers. Mercat Press. ISBN 9781841830414.
- Thompson, Dave (2023). An Evolving Tradition: The Child Ballads in Modern Folk and Rock Music. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781493068241.
- Wollstadt, Lynn (2002). "Controlling Women: "Reading Gender in the Ballads Scottish Women Sang"". Western Folklore. 61 (3/4): 295–317. doi:10.2307/1500424. JSTOR 1500424.
References
[edit]- ^ Ford, Robert (1889). Auld Scots Ballants. A. Gardner. p. 104.
- ^ MacLean 2011, p. 89.
- ^ a b MacLean 2011, p. 90.
- ^ a b McCarthy 2003, p. 150.
- ^ McCarthy 2003, p. 163.
- ^ Stewart, Elizabeth (2012). Up Yon Wide and Lonely Glen: Travellers' Songs, Stories and Tunes of the Fetterangus Stewarts. University Press of Mississippi. p. 327. ISBN 978-1-4968-0183-8.
- ^ Keith, Alexander (1925). "Ballad Music of Aberdeenshire". The Scots Magazine. Vol. 3, no. 1. p. 53.
- ^ MacLean 2023, p. 78.
- ^ Munro, Ailie (1996). The Democratic Muse: Folk Music Revival in Scotland. Scottish Cultural Press. p. 91.
- ^ MacLean 2023, p. 79.
- ^ MacLean 2023, pp. 79–80.
- ^ Coffin 1963, p. 12.
- ^ Coffin 1963, p. 135.
- ^ Sharp 2016, pp. 203–204.
- ^ Sharp 2016, p. 204.
- ^ Wollstadt 2002, p. 302.
- ^ Wollstadt 2002, p. 301.
- ^ Perry, Ruth. "Brother Trouble: Murder and Incest in Scottish Ballads". Sibling Relations and the Transformations of European Kinship, 1300-1900. p. 303. doi:10.1515/9780857450463-010.
- ^ "Andrew Lammie / Mill o' Tifty's Annie". Mainly Norfolk: English Folk and Other Good Music. Retrieved 2024-03-01.
- ^ Iona Fyfe and Anthony Simpkins (2020-05-26). Iona Fyfe, "Mill o' Tifty's Annie," (Video interview). GemsOnVHS. Event occurs at 0:19. Retrieved 2024-03-02 – via YouTube.
- ^ Åkesson, Ingrid (2014). "Mord och hor i medeltidballaderna – en fråga om könsmakt och familjevåld" [Murder and adultery in medieval ballads - a question of gender power and family violence] (PDF). Noterat (in Swedish). 21: 10.
- ^ "Lucy Stewart: Traditional Singer from Aberdeenshire, Scotland, Vol. 1—Child Ballads". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2024-03-04.
- ^ Brocken, Michael (2017). The British Folk Revival: 1944–2002. Routledge. ISBN 9781138459625.
- ^ Strong 2002, p. 29.
- ^ Thompson 2023, p. 329.
- ^ Strong 2002, p. 68.
- ^ Redpath, Jean (2018). Giving Voice to Traditional Songs: Jean Redpath's Autobiography, 1937–2014. University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 9781611178937.
- ^ Atkinson, David (2001). "The English Revival Canon: Child Ballads and the Invention of Tradition". The Journal of American Folklore. 114 (453): 374. doi:10.2307/542028. JSTOR 542028. S2CID 201746574.
- ^ Strong 2002, p. 64.
- ^ Koritsas, Debbie (2004). "HILARY JAMES WITH SIMON MAYOR 'Laughing At The Moon' Acoustics CDACS047". The Living Tradition. No. 58. Retrieved 2024-03-05.
- ^ Jackson, Aaron (2019-03-25). "Martin Simpson: Prodigal Son (Deluxe Edition Reissue)". KLOF Magazine. Retrieved 2023-03-05.
- ^ Thompson 2023, p. 449.
- ^ Léger, Devon (2021-02-05). "Album Reviews: Artists to Watch at Folk Unlocked, this year's Folk Alliance Conference". FolkAlley. Retrieved 2024-03-05.
- ^ Stirling, Anna Maria Wilhelmina (1928). Fyvie Castle: Its Lairds and Their Times. J. Murray. pp. 250–51.
- ^ Evans, Robert; Humphreys, Maggie, eds. (1997). "REID, Eric James". Dictionary of Composers for the Church in Great Britain and Ireland. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 280. ISBN 9781441137968.
- ^ "Eric Reid (1935-1970): Mill O' Tifty's Annie (1964): Concert Suite from the Ballad Opera". Fagus-Music.com. Retrieved 2024-02-26.
- ^ "Amanda MacLean Archives". Historical Novel Society. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ Thompson 2023, p. 6.
- ^ a b c Child 1890, p. 302.
- ^ "Notes". The Builder. Vol. 48. 1885-06-13. p. 824.
- ^ Underwood, Peter (1973). Gazetteer of Scottish and Irish Ghosts. p. 94. ISBN 9780285620896.