Annotation:Behind the Bush in Parkhanna: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{TuneAnnotation | {{TuneAnnotation | ||
|f_annotation='''BEHIND THE BUSH IN PARKHANNA.''' AKA and see "[[How are You Mary Geaney?]]." Irish. This tune, variously called a hornpipe, fling, reel and barndance, was recorded around 1977 by Mrs. Ellen O'Dwyer, a concertina player from County Limerick, who was visiting her son in Dublin at the time. She played in the Limerick style on an<span>old German-made double-reeded concertina, </span><span>a “House Brand”, "with terrific vitality and drive" using the "bounce" in the bellows to drive the tunes along. Limerick style that she plays, with lots of staccato, using the “bounce” in </span><span>the bellows to drive the tunes along<ref>Neil Wayne, Liner notes to Topic | |f_annotation='''BEHIND THE BUSH IN PARKHANNA.''' AKA and see "[[How are You Mary Geaney?]]." Irish. This tune, variously called a hornpipe, fling, reel and barndance, was recorded around 1977 by Mrs. Ellen O'Dwyer, a concertina player from County Limerick, who was visiting her son in Dublin at the time. She played in the Limerick style on an<span>old German-made double-reeded concertina, </span><span>a “House Brand”, "with terrific vitality and drive" using the "bounce" in the bellows to drive the tunes along. Limerick style that she plays, with lots of staccato, using the “bounce” in </span><span>the bellows to drive the tunes along<ref>Neil Wayne, Liner notes to Topic 12TRFS506, "Irish Traditional Concertina Styles", 1977. </ref>.</span> | ||
| | |f_see_also_listing=Alan Ng's Irishtune.info [https://www.irishtune.info/tune/655/]<br> | ||
}} | }} | ||
---------- | ---------- | ||
------------- | ------------- |
Latest revision as of 04:35, 25 September 2020
X:0 T: No Score C: The Traditional Tune Archive M: K: x
BEHIND THE BUSH IN PARKHANNA. AKA and see "How are You Mary Geaney?." Irish. This tune, variously called a hornpipe, fling, reel and barndance, was recorded around 1977 by Mrs. Ellen O'Dwyer, a concertina player from County Limerick, who was visiting her son in Dublin at the time. She played in the Limerick style on anold German-made double-reeded concertina, a “House Brand”, "with terrific vitality and drive" using the "bounce" in the bellows to drive the tunes along. Limerick style that she plays, with lots of staccato, using the “bounce” in the bellows to drive the tunes along[1].
- ↑ Neil Wayne, Liner notes to Topic 12TRFS506, "Irish Traditional Concertina Styles", 1977.