Listen to The Earl of Mansfield

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March One title Only 1 transcription Has some stepwise movement major A 2/4 4/4 No chords explore more...

ABC

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X: 3
T: The Earl of Mansfield
C: J. McEwan ()
M: 2/4
L: 1/8
R: march
K: A Major
|: c/B/ |\ 
A>B AE | A/B/c/d/ ed/c/ | B>c BE | G/A/B/c/ dc/B/ | 
A>B AE | A/B/c/d/ ed/c/ | dB GE | A3 :|
|: e/d/ |\ 
c>d cE | A/B/c/d/ ed/c/ | B>c BE | G/A/B/c/ dc/B/ |
c>d cE | A/B/c/d/ ed/c/ | dB GE | A2 A :|
|: e/d/ |\ 
cA Ae/d/ | cA AB/c/ | dB GB |
[1 GE Ee/d/ | cA Ae/d/ | cA AB/c/ | dB GB | A3 :|
[2 GE Ec/B/ | A>B AE | ABcd e2 dc | dB GE | A3 |]
As said previously, I feel that 4/4 (or 2/4) suits these marches much better than the density (blackiness) of transcribing them in 2/4, but that was the 'old' way.  You could also change the meter, K:, to any of these in the ABCs, to 4/4 or 2/4, and set the value length, L:, as 1/4, 1/8 or 1/16...  For this transcription in A, as one example, you could change it so:
M: 4/4
L: 1/4
R: march
K: A Major

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