David of the White Rock Dafydd y Garreg Wen High Voice - Digital Sheet Music

According to tradition, the Bard David lived in a house called "Y Garreg Wen" (The White Rock) in a remote situation in North Wales. He was commonly called by his Christian name followed by the name of his house, a common custom in Wales, and one which survives to the present day.Like many other Welsh Bards, David was also a harpist, and is reputed to have had his harp continually at his side. On his death-bed, he is supposed to have asked that his harp be once more placed in his hands in order that he might play just one more tune.The melody he played was afterwards called by his name "Dafydd Y Garreg Wen" (David of the White Rock), and this same melody was performed on a single Welsh harp at his funeral, as was his dying wish.The Welsh words were subsequently added by Ceiriog Hughes in the nineteenth century. Words and melody are now inseparably linked, and are together widely known and regarded as one of the most popular of Welsh Traditional Songs.Richard Bowen (1963)

Digital Download
$3.99
$4.99
You save: $1.00 ~ 20%

WELCOME20 activated

Access Instantly
Download and print your PDF sheet music right away.
Quantity save 5% on 2 or more
1
Get a 10% discount with SMP Plus subscription

Details

High voice and piano - Digital Download

SKU: S9.Q20009

Dafydd y Garreg Wen. This edition: Sheet music. Score. Duration 2 minutes. Schott Music - Digital #Q20009. Published by Schott Music - Digital (S9.Q20009).

Welsh.

According to tradition, the Bard David lived in a house called "Y Garreg Wen" (The White Rock) in a remote situation in North Wales. He was commonly called by his Christian name followed by the name of his house, a common custom in Wales, and one which survives to the present day.Like many other Welsh Bards, David was also a harpist, and is reputed to have had his harp continually at his side. On his death-bed, he is supposed to have asked that his harp be once more placed in his hands in order that he might play just one more tune.The melody he played was afterwards called by his name "Dafydd Y Garreg Wen" (David of the White Rock), and this same melody was performed on a single Welsh harp at his funeral, as was his dying wish.The Welsh words were subsequently added by Ceiriog Hughes in the nineteenth century. Words and melody are now inseparably linked, and are together widely known and regarded as one of the most popular of Welsh Traditional Songs.Richard Bowen (1963).

About Digital Downloads

Digital Downloads let you instantly access sheet music on your computer, tablet, or mobile device. Print your sheet music anywhere, anytime, or play it straight from your device—no internet connection is required after download.

Each Digital Download includes a watermark with your name, purchase date, and the number of copies purchased. You may only print or use the number of copies purchased. Redistribution or unauthorized printing is prohibited.