Notes on the
Tunes
Harp CD, Between the
Showers
Gráinne
Hambly
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| Tracks
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~ Notes
The Crib of Perches / Garrett
Barry's (Reels)
The Crib of Perches was printed in Breathnach's
2nd volume of Ceol Rince na hEireann, where he
attributes it to Paddy O'Brien of Offaly.
The second reel was associated with the playing of the
renowned piper, Willie Clancy. Clancy's father, Gilbert, was
a great friend of the blind piper, Garrett Barry from Inagh,
Co. Clare, who died in 1900. Willie Clancy attributed this
reel to Garrett Barry. It is quite similar to the well-known
Miss McLeod's reel.
Download
330K RealAudio file (lasts 2 min 49sec)
Flying to the Fleadh (Slip
Jig)
This slip jig is one of the compositions of uilleann
piper Patrick Davey, from Belfast. It was composed in August
1995, on the occasion of the All-Ireland Fleadh Cheoil held
in Listowel, Co. Kerry.
Download
156K RealAudio file (1 min 20 sec)
Eleanor Plunkett (Carolan
Piece)
This is one of the most popular and widely played airs by
the famous Irish harper-composer Turlough O'Carolan
(1670-1738). It was written in praise of Eleanor Plunkett of
Robertstown, Co. Meath (near Carolan's birthplace of
Nobber). She is said to have been the only survivor of her
family, the rest having reputedly been killed by boiling
water in their castle at Castlecome. There is no factual
evidence to support this, however. The piece was collected
but never published by Edward Bunting. As is the case with
most of Carolan's compositions, the piece was originally
written as a song with Gaelic words.
Download
333K RealAudio file (lasts 2 min 50 sec)
The Tailor's Twist / Cooley's
(Hornpipes)
The Tailor's Twist was one of a set of two
hornpipes recorded by James Morrisson on August 10th 1935,
for Colombia. This Sligo fiddle player was born in Drumfin
near Collooney and died in New York in 1947. It was also
transcribed by Breathnach from the piper Tommy Reck, and
published in his 3rd volume.
Cooley's. This tune was composed by the accordion
player, Paddy O'Brien of Nenagh, and was made popular by
accordion player Joe Cooley. The version played here is that
recorded by Noel Hill and Tony Linnane in 1978. The second
part is different in places from the original version, which
was published in 1992 as part of a collection of
Amhrán na
Leabhar (Slow
Air)
Amhrán na Leabhar ('The Song of the Books'), which
is often referred to as Cuan Bhéil Inse ('Valencia
Harbour'), was composed by the poet Tomás Ruadh
O'Súilleabháin (1785-1848) of Derrynane, Co.
Kerry. The song contains eleven verses in all. Tomás
Ruadh had been acting as schoolmaster near Caherdaniel and
was forced to find a new position when another master was
appointed. The poet sought a similar post in Portmagee and
put all his books and other possessions on a boat at
Derrynane harbour to be sent to the Goilin (Valencia
Harbour). He himself made the journey by foot. When he
reached Portmagee, Tomás Ruadh heard that the boat
containing his books had been ship-wrecked on its way out of
the harbour. He composed this song lamenting the fate of his
books. This version was arranged by the renowned harper
Janet Harbison.
O'Farrell's Welcome to Limerick
/ Whelan's (Slip Jig/Jig)
O'Farrell's Welcome to Limerick appears in one of
the later volumes of O'Farrell's 'Pocket Companion for the
Irish or Union Pipes', published in 1810. O'Farrell
published four volumes of tunes (most of which were Irish)
between 1804 and 1810, as well as a treatise with
instructions for playing the pipes. Francis O'Neill states,
without evidence however, that this tune is one of
O'Farrell's own compositions.
Whelan's Jig is named after Tommy Whelan who was a
flute player with the early recording group 'the Ballinakill
Ceili Band'. The tune was one of the tracks recorded on 'A
Selection of Irish Dance Music' featuring Aggie Whyte on
fiddle and Peadar O'Lochlainn on flute. This was one of the
first tunes I learned from Bernie Geraghty.
Inis Oirr (Air)
This beautiful air was composed by
Thomas Walsh. It is named after one of the Aran Islands off
the west coast of Galway.
The Gold Ring
(Jig)
There are two tunes known by this title. This one was
recorded by Sligo fiddle player Paddy Killoran, from
Ballymote, in the 1930s. It also appears in Breathnach's
1st volume, having been collected from the
accordion player Sonny Brogan. I am joined on this track by
my sister Róisín, who also had a large input
into the arrangement of this tune.
Soft Mild Morning / Her Golden
Hair Hanging Down Her Back (air / hornpipe)
Soft Mild Morning (or 'Maidin Bhog Aoibhinn') was
collected by Edward Bunting, from Denis Hempson of
Magilligan, Co. Derry. Although collected in 1796, it was
not published until Bunting's 3rd volume of
Ancient Music of Ireland, in 1840. Bunting classifies the
tune as being 'very ancient, author and date unknown'.
Hempson was the only harper visited by Bunting who still
played in the old style, with long crooked fingernails on
strings of brass.
Her Golden Hair is a composition of the
Clare fiddle and concertina player, Junior Crehan,
who died in August 1998. It is one of his less well-known
compositions, which was recorded by the uilleann piper Mick
O'Brien on 'May Morning Dew' (1996).
The Tosa Waltz
This tune was composed in 1996 by Michael Cassidy, fiddle
player with the group Craobh Rua. It was composed
during a trip to America, for friends in Wauwatosa,
Wisconsin.
Splendid Isolation (slow air /
reel)
This tune was composed by the well-known fiddle player,
Brendan McGlinchey. It was originally composed as a reel, in
1972, as the result of "an outpouring of intense emotion",
following the end of a tour when everyone had to go their
separate ways. It was reworked as a slow air 20 years later,
when Brendan started playing it again after a long break. I
learned the tune from Brendan himself, while on the 1996
Comhaltas tours of Ireland and North America.
Tonra's / Jig 'gan ainm' / The
Woods of Old Limerick (Jigs)
Tonra's. This jig is perhaps the most well known
composition of Boston-based fiddler, Brendan Tonra. He wrote
this tune, his third composition, in the early 1950s while
still living in his native Gowlaun, Co. Mayo. Tonra played
the tune himself during a Longford Fleadh in the 1950s and
it became particularly well known after being recorded by
the Liverpool Ceili Band and the fiddler, Sean McGuire. My
father learned this tune from the noted Sligo fiddle player,
Fred Finn, who died in 1986.
I have no name for the second jig in this set, but I
learned it on a Comhaltas Tour in 1996.
The Woods of Old Limerick. O'Neill included this
jig in his 1922 collection 'Waifs and Strays', which
included many tunes not published by him previously,
together with different versions of tunes as notated from
specific performers. O'Neill gives the source of this tune
as a Mr. John Kelly, San Francisco. However no information
about this man is found in any of O'Neill's other works. I
learned this tune from the harp playing of Michael
Rooney.
The Blackbird
(set-dance)
This tune played here as a set-dance is also found as a
slow air, and probably originated as a song. The blackbird
or 'An Londubh' is one of many allegorical names used by the
poets and bards to refer to Ireland. The title was also
understood to apply to King James III. It is one of the
earliest Irish lyrics written in English; Grattan Flood
found reference to this Jacobite song in 1709. The words
were printed by Bunting in 1840, along with a setting of the
tune transcribed from D. O'Donnell, a harper from Co. Mayo,
in 1803. A less florid version had been published in the
early 1800s, by both Paul Alday and O'Farrell. The version
published in Bunting has much in common with the setting
included by O'Neill in his 1903 collection, where a Long
Dance setting also appears. Today, this tune is most
commonly known as a set dance, and is one of the few
set-dances danced with the same steps all over the
country.
Madge Malone / McIntyre's Fancy
(Carolan Piece / Jig)
Bunting notated this air by O'Carolan from the blind
harper Rose Mooney of Co. Meath, and it was published in his
first collection in 1796. The subject of the piece is
probably Margaret, daughter of John Malone of Cartrons,
Kilcleagh, Co. Westmeath.
McIntyre's Fancy was composed by Offaly flute-player
and composer John Brady for the Longridge Ceili band, when
competing in an All-Ireland Fleadh Cheoil in the 1980s. He
dedicated the tune to his wife's niece, a girl then in her
early teens, called Arlene McIntyre, who had been a child
film star. This jig is one of the tunes to be included in
John's forthcoming collection of compositions.
John Roche's Favourite / Kitty
Sheain's Barndance (Fling / Barndance)
John Roche's Favourite. The oldest written record of
this fling is in Volume-2 of Francis Roche's collection of
traditional Irish music, published in 1912. It is likely
that Francis Roche called this fling after his father John
Roche who was a dancing master of note and also a classical
violinist. This tune has been recorded by Matt Molloy, on
'Stony Steps'.
Kitty Sheain's Barn Dance is firmly rooted in the
Southwest Donegal tradition. It is named after Kitty Sheain
Ui Chuinneagain, a noted singer and lilter from Teelin, who
recalled that this was a very popular tune at local house
dances in the early decades of this century. I learned the
tune from Róisín Harrigan, a fiddle player
from Co. Donegal.
Counsellor MacDonough's
Lamentation (or Turlough Óg MacDonough) (Carolan
Piece)
Two different versions of this Carolan piece are played
here. The first is taken from the collection of John and
William Neal, 'The Most Celebrated Irish Tunes, proper for
violin, German flute and hautboy' published in c.1724. The
second version was taken from Bunting's 1796 volume, 'A
General Collection of the Ancient Music of Ireland'. The air
was composed by O'Carolan on the death of Counsellor Terence
MacDonough, from Creevagh, Co. Sligo in 1713. MacDonough
(who was generally referred to in Irish as Toirdhealbheach
Og or Toirdhealbheadh Caech) had been the only Catholic
counsellor-at-law to be admitted to the Irish bar after the
conditions of the Treaty of Limerick (1691).
The Mist Covered Mountain /
Kilfenora (Jigs)
The Mist Covered Mountain was one of the first tunes
composed by Junior Crehan. According to the composer, the
tune was inspired by an early morning scene. The birds were
singing and Mount Callan was covered in a dawn mist as he
was returning home from a dance one morning.. Crehan said
that the "sight worked itself into his mind, and as it sank
in the notes of the tune began to form". Many of his other
compositions were also inspired by sounds, different scenes,
and various legends and traditions.
A Kilfenora Jig - this is another Clare tune. It
is associated with the Kilfenora Céilí band
having been recorded by them in 1973. There are also other
"Kilfenora" Jigs including a popular 5 part tune.
Between the Showers (Peter
Ratzenbeck)
This piece was composed by the Austrian guitar-player
Peter Ratzenbeck in 1997, the title having been inspired by
a visit to Glasgow in 1995. I adapted his arrangement to
suit the harp, and play it here with Peter on guitar.
The Glass of Beer / The Bucks of
Oranmore (Reels)
The Glass of Beer was recorded in 1976 as part of
the first set of reels on the Bridge Ceili Band's first
recording. It is also known as 'The Listowel Lasses'.
The Bucks of Oranmore:
O'Neill includes a setting of this tune, received from
McFadden, in his 1903 collection. He associates it with
Patrick Flannery, a blind piper from Ballinasloe, Co.
Galway, who emigrated to America c.1845. Flannery, according
to O'Neill, died while playing the "lively strains of The
Bucks of Oranmore", while entertaining an audience in
Brooklyn in 1855. This tune is very popular at
sessions.
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