Annotation:Lawson's Favorite: Difference between revisions
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|f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Lawson's_Favorite > | |f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Lawson's_Favorite > | ||
|f_annotation='''LAWSON'S FAVORITE''' ("Roga Ui Lauson" or "Roga Mic Laid"). AKA and see "[[Farewell to Leitrim]]," "[[Fiddlers' Frolic (2)]]," "[[Hawthorn's Reel]]," "[[Kennaw's Reel]]," "[[Maude Miller (1)]]," "[[Molloy's Favourite (1)]]," "[[Patsy Campbell's]]," "[[Reidy Johnson's (1)]]," "[[Roll Her in the Haystack]]," "[[Take Her Out and Air Her (2)]]." Irish, Reel. D Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (O'Neill/1850 & 1001): AA'B (O'Neill/Krassen). The tune was recorded under this title by famed County Sligo fiddler Michael Coleman in New York in 1921, the second tune in a set following "[[Reidy Johnson's (1)]]." | |f_annotation='''LAWSON'S FAVORITE''' ("Roga Ui Lauson" or "Roga Mic Laid"). AKA and see "[[Farewell to Leitrim]]," "[[Fiddlers' Frolic (2)]]," "[[Hawthorn's Reel]]," "[[Kennaw's Reel]]," "[[Maude Miller (1)]]," "[[Molloy's Favourite (1)]]," "[[Patsy Campbell's]]," "[[Reidy Johnson's (1)]]," "[[Roll Her in the Haystack]]," "[[Take Her Out and Air Her (2)]]." Irish, Reel. D Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (O'Neill/1850 & 1001): AA'B (O'Neill/Krassen). The tune was recorded under this title by famed County Sligo fiddler Michael Coleman in New York in 1921, the second tune in a set following "[[Reidy Johnson's (1)]]." | ||
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See also the "[[New Demense (1) (The)]]", which, while not a cognate version of "Lawson's," is similar enough to posit derivation from a common ancestor. | |||
|f_source_for_notated_version="Lawson" [O'Neill]. A Robert Lawson is mentioned in O'Neill's '''Irish Minstrels and Musicians''' (1913), in a passage (p. 349) in which O'Neill explains that Lawson, originally a flute player, obtained a set of uilleann pipes from (Chicago Police) Sergeant James Early, an expert piper and member of the Irish Music Club. Early had obtained the set of pipes from Dan O'Keefe, an older immigrant who was a noted dancer and Highland piper, but who had not succeeded with the uilleann set, which, when Early received it, was in poor condition, dried up and disjointed. Early reconditioned the set (which proved to have been made by Egan). Lawson became proficient enough to be hired to play the pipes on the front porch of the McKinley cottage in the Irish Village at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition at St. Louis in 1903. | |f_source_for_notated_version="Lawson" [O'Neill]. A Robert Lawson is mentioned in O'Neill's '''Irish Minstrels and Musicians''' (1913), in a passage (p. 349) in which O'Neill explains that Lawson, originally a flute player, obtained a set of uilleann pipes from (Chicago Police) Sergeant James Early, an expert piper and member of the Irish Music Club. Early had obtained the set of pipes from Dan O'Keefe, an older immigrant who was a noted dancer and Highland piper, but who had not succeeded with the uilleann set, which, when Early received it, was in poor condition, dried up and disjointed. Early reconditioned the set (which proved to have been made by Egan). Lawson became proficient enough to be hired to play the pipes on the front porch of the McKinley cottage in the Irish Village at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition at St. Louis in 1903. | ||
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Latest revision as of 23:45, 29 January 2022
X:1 T:Lawson's Favorite M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel S:O'Neill - Dance Music of Ireland: 1001 Gems (1907), No. 570 Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:D d2 AG FDDF|E>c (3ccc E>c (3ccc|(3edB (3cBA BGAG|FGEF Dgfe| d2 AG FDDF|E>c (3ccc ABce|dBcA BGAG|FGEF D2|| g2|f>d (3ddd fdad|edcd efge|f>d (3ddd fdad|CAGE D2 de| f>d (3ddd fdad|edcd efge|(3fga ge fdec|Agfe defe||
LAWSON'S FAVORITE ("Roga Ui Lauson" or "Roga Mic Laid"). AKA and see "Farewell to Leitrim," "Fiddlers' Frolic (2)," "Hawthorn's Reel," "Kennaw's Reel," "Maude Miller (1)," "Molloy's Favourite (1)," "Patsy Campbell's," "Reidy Johnson's (1)," "Roll Her in the Haystack," "Take Her Out and Air Her (2)." Irish, Reel. D Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (O'Neill/1850 & 1001): AA'B (O'Neill/Krassen). The tune was recorded under this title by famed County Sligo fiddler Michael Coleman in New York in 1921, the second tune in a set following "Reidy Johnson's (1)."
See also the "New Demense (1) (The)", which, while not a cognate version of "Lawson's," is similar enough to posit derivation from a common ancestor.