Library and Information Services, Royal Conservatoire of Scotland

Monday, 12 September 2011

On this day, 12th September

On this day ... 12th September, 1792



William Tytler (image from ElectricScotland)
William Tytler died at the grand old age of 81.  So what?, you might say. But Scottish musical history owes much to Tytler.


Tytler (1711-92) was an Edinburgh lawyer and historian. A founder member of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland in 1780, his A Dissertation on the Scottish Musick was an influential commentary on the history of Scottish music for antiquarians and collectors of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.


It was first published in Hugo Arnot’s The History of Edinburgh, attributed to ‘a learned and ingenious friend’, in 1779 (and again in 1788).  It also appeared under Tytler's name in 1783 and 1790, and was later read at a meeting, and subsequently published in 1792, in the first Transactions of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland.


Tytler wanted to track down the origins of the earliest melodies, ‘and to trace the history of our music down to modern times.’ His comments were influential upon the song collection compilers who followed him - Johnson, Burns and Ritson. Tytler’s pronouncement about the correct kind of accompaniment for Scottish song became almost a ‘gold standard’ for contemporary antiquarian publishers of song collections.
  • Royal Conservatoire of Scotland - for books on Scottish music history in the Whittaker Library, click here.
  • Check COPAC (UK national and university libraries) to find your nearest copy of a Tytler source.
  • We have a photocopy of Tytler's dissertation in our own library - here.  (We downloaded it from Archive.org)

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