Annotation:Spirit of New Orleans: Difference between revisions
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|f_annotation='''SPIRIT OF NEW ORLEANS.''' AKA and see "[[Spirit of Ireland]]," "[[Spirits of France | |f_annotation='''SPIRIT OF NEW ORLEANS.''' AKA and see "[[Spirit of Ireland (The)]]," "[[Spirits of France]]." American (?), Schottische or Reel. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCCDDEE. Coincidently (probably), the title is also the name of a famous passenger train, memorialized in the song popularized by folksinger Arlo Guthrie. Ford's melody is of unknown provenance and is generic enough to have come from Britain, Ireland, or elsewhere in North America. The first and third strains correspond with those of the Irish march "[[Spirit of Ireland (The)]]" printed in 1912 by Frank Roche (although the third strain is quite distanced from Roche's strain). Elias Howe's "[[Spirits of France]]", a two-part tune, provides the second and third strains of "Spirit of New Orleans." | ||
|f_printed_sources=Ford ('''Traditional Music in America'''), 1940; p. 68. | |f_printed_sources=Ford ('''Traditional Music in America'''), 1940; p. 68. | ||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 22:11, 15 January 2022
X:1 T:Spirit of New Orleans M:2/4 L:1/8 B:Ira Ford – Traditional Music in America (1940, p. 68) Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:C (3G/A,/B,/|CD/E/ F/G/A/B/|c/d/c/B/ cd/e/|f/g/a/g/ f/e/d/c/ |B/c/d/B/ GE/D/| CD/E/ F/G/A/B/|c/d/c/B/ cd/e/|f/e/d/c/ B/c/d/B/|[Ec][Ec][Ec]:| |:g/e/|cc B/c/d/B/|c/B/c/d/ ca/e/|dd d/e/d/c/ |B/c/d/B/ G>E| F<d d>F|E<c cG/E/|FG/A/ B/c/d/B/ |[Ec][Ec][Ec]:| |:E/F/|G/F/E/F/ GG|F/E/D/E/ FF|E/C/E/G/ c/G/E/C/|D/C/D/E/ DE/D/| Cc Ge|cg gf/e/|dd/c/ B/c/d/B/ |c/B/c/d/ c:| |:e/f/|g/f/g/a/ gg/f/|e/f/e/d/ cd/e/|f/e/f/g/ ff/e/|d/e/d/c/ Be/f/| g/f/g/a/ gg/f/|e/f/e/d/ cd/e/|f/g/f/e/ d/c/B/d/|[Ec]e [Ec]:| |:B/c/|dd/B/ Ge/f/|gg/e/ cd/e/|f/e/f/g/ a/g/f/e/|d/c/B/A/ G/A/B/c/| dd/B/ Ge/f/|gg/e/ cd/e/|f/g/f/e/ d/c/B/c/|[Ec]e [Ec]:|]
SPIRIT OF NEW ORLEANS. AKA and see "Spirit of Ireland (The)," "Spirits of France." American (?), Schottische or Reel. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCCDDEE. Coincidently (probably), the title is also the name of a famous passenger train, memorialized in the song popularized by folksinger Arlo Guthrie. Ford's melody is of unknown provenance and is generic enough to have come from Britain, Ireland, or elsewhere in North America. The first and third strains correspond with those of the Irish march "Spirit of Ireland (The)" printed in 1912 by Frank Roche (although the third strain is quite distanced from Roche's strain). Elias Howe's "Spirits of France", a two-part tune, provides the second and third strains of "Spirit of New Orleans."