Scots Musical Museum

E651812

Scots Musical Museum is a landmark late-18th-century Scottish song collection, closely associated with Robert Burns, that preserved and popularized traditional Scottish music and lyrics.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Scottish cultural work
music anthology
song collection
aim popularization of Scottish music
preservation of Scottish traditional song
associatedWith Robert Burns NERFINISHED
bibliographicCategory historical music collection
containsWorkType air
ballad
song
contributionByRobertBurns collected traditional songs
revised existing lyrics
wrote new lyrics
countryOfOrigin Scotland
culturalSignificance key source for Scottish national song tradition
editor James Johnson NERFINISHED
genre folk music
traditional Scottish music
hasLegacy important source for musicologists studying Scottish folk music
major reference for performers of Scottish song
hasNotableSong Auld Lang Syne NERFINISHED
My Love is Like a Red, Red Rose NERFINISHED
Scots Wha Hae NERFINISHED
Ye Banks and Braes NERFINISHED
hasPart Scots Musical Museum, Volume 1 NERFINISHED
Scots Musical Museum, Volume 2 NERFINISHED
Scots Musical Museum, Volume 3 NERFINISHED
Scots Musical Museum, Volume 4 NERFINISHED
Scots Musical Museum, Volume 5 NERFINISHED
Scots Musical Museum, Volume 6 NERFINISHED
historicalPeriod late 18th century
includes melodies with figured bass
song texts
influenced 19th-century folk song scholarship
later collections of Scottish song
language English
Scots
medium printed music
notableContributor Robert Burns NERFINISHED
numberOfItems over 600 songs
numberOfVolumes 6
placeOfPublication Edinburgh NERFINISHED
publicationPeriodEnd 1803
publicationPeriodStart 1787
publisher James Johnson NERFINISHED
subject Scottish folk tradition
Scottish national identity
targetAudience Scottish public
collectors of national music

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Auld Lang Syne collectedIn Scots Musical Museum