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<p>[QUOTE="all_fakes, post: 269541, member: 55"]I forget what year he wrote it, but it has become so popular that a lot of musicians learned it from others who neglected to mention that it was not a traditional tune, but a composed piece; and as a result a lot of recordings exist calling it "the Canadian Waltz" and listing it as traditional....I imagine that means that Rodgers' estate gets no royalties from those recordings.</p><p> (My wife and I did pay him the appropriate fee. I might be able to link to our version, but I'd have to get it online first....maybe I'll just post one of the photos of our stuffed Ookpik sitting on top of the mandolin and autoharp from the CD graphics).</p><p>In the meantime, here's another nice version.</p><p>[MEDIA=youtube]6t0O6FPKVoQ[/MEDIA]</p><p><br /></p><p>This kind of thing has been going on forever.....a lot of musicians know the traditional Irish tune "Fisher's Hornpipe." It was actual written by fiddler James Fishar in 1790, and is correctly called "Fishar's Hornpipe." By 1800, most musicians were calling it by the incorrect name, and believed it to be traditional.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="all_fakes, post: 269541, member: 55"]I forget what year he wrote it, but it has become so popular that a lot of musicians learned it from others who neglected to mention that it was not a traditional tune, but a composed piece; and as a result a lot of recordings exist calling it "the Canadian Waltz" and listing it as traditional....I imagine that means that Rodgers' estate gets no royalties from those recordings. (My wife and I did pay him the appropriate fee. I might be able to link to our version, but I'd have to get it online first....maybe I'll just post one of the photos of our stuffed Ookpik sitting on top of the mandolin and autoharp from the CD graphics). In the meantime, here's another nice version. [MEDIA=youtube]6t0O6FPKVoQ[/MEDIA] This kind of thing has been going on forever.....a lot of musicians know the traditional Irish tune "Fisher's Hornpipe." It was actual written by fiddler James Fishar in 1790, and is correctly called "Fishar's Hornpipe." By 1800, most musicians were calling it by the incorrect name, and believed it to be traditional.[/QUOTE]
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