Annotation:Duke of Leinster (2) (The): Difference between revisions

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[[{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Tune properties and standard notation]]
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'''DUKE OF LEINSTER [2], THE'''. Irish, Reel. G Major ('A' part) & A Dorian ('B' and 'C' parts). Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB'C (Carlin). Carlin's version comes from Michael Kennedy, a melodeon player from Covington, Kentucky, who was an elderly man in the mid-20th century. The liner notes to his 1977 June Appal album give:
|f_annotation='''DUKE OF LEINSTER [2], THE'''. Irish, Reel. G Major ('A' part) & A Dorian ('B' and 'C' parts). Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB'C (Carlin). Carlin's version comes from Michael Kennedy, a melodeon player from Covington, Kentucky, who was an elderly man in the mid-20th century. Kennedy was an emigree from County Galway, where he had been born on a farm near Flaskagh, a village in the north east part of the county in the Dunmore area. Prior to his arrival in the U.S., he had never been more than a few miles from his home. He ws inspired to learn the melodeon after hearing the playing of two girls in his village, and he himself walked to Dunmore and bought an inexpensive one-row, ten-button instrument in the key of 'G'.  
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|f_source_for_notated_version=
''Michael was born and raised on a farm near the village of Flaskagh, three miles northeast of Dunmore in North-East County Galway.'' ''Until emigrating to the U.S. he had never traveled beyond a ten mile radius of his home. At age 11, greatly inspired by the'' ''melodeon playing of two village girls, Maggie McGee and Winnie Dowd, Michael went to Dunmore and bought a melodeon for the'' ''equivalent of $1.50. He always played a one-row, ten-button melodeon in the key of G. Michael used to say, "There was never'' ''anybody as crazy for a melodeon as I was."''
|f_printed_sources=Carlin ('''Master Collection'''), 1984; p. 120, No. 202.
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|f_recorded_sources=Folkways 8847, Richard Carlin - "The Poppy Leaf" (1978. Learned from Grey Larsen)
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''Source for notated version'':
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''Printed sources'': Carlin ('''Master Collection'''), 1984; p. 120, No. 202.
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''Recorded sources'': <font color=teal>Folkways 8847, Richard Carlin - "The Poppy Leaf" (1978. Learned from Grey Larsen)</font>
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[[{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Tune properties and standard notation]]

Latest revision as of 04:14, 10 September 2022




X:1 T:Duke of Leinster [2], The M:C| L:1/8 S:Michael Kennedy K:G G2 BG gGBG|d2 (3efe dBGA|G2 BG gGBG|A2 AG GF D2| G2 BG gGBG|d2 (3efe dBGA|G2 (3Bdg edBG|A2 AG GF D2|| A2 cA dAcA|d2 (3efe dBGA|G2 BG gGBG|A2 AG GF D2| A2 cA dAcA|d2 (3efe dBGA|G2 (3Bdg edBG|A2 AG GF D2|| Aaab ageg|a2b2 ag e2|dgga bg g2|edce dBGg| dgga bgdg|a2 bb agea|bgga bgg|edce dBGA||



DUKE OF LEINSTER [2], THE. Irish, Reel. G Major ('A' part) & A Dorian ('B' and 'C' parts). Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB'C (Carlin). Carlin's version comes from Michael Kennedy, a melodeon player from Covington, Kentucky, who was an elderly man in the mid-20th century. Kennedy was an emigree from County Galway, where he had been born on a farm near Flaskagh, a village in the north east part of the county in the Dunmore area. Prior to his arrival in the U.S., he had never been more than a few miles from his home. He ws inspired to learn the melodeon after hearing the playing of two girls in his village, and he himself walked to Dunmore and bought an inexpensive one-row, ten-button instrument in the key of 'G'.


Additional notes



Printed sources : - Carlin (Master Collection), 1984; p. 120, No. 202.

Recorded sources : - Folkways 8847, Richard Carlin - "The Poppy Leaf" (1978. Learned from Grey Larsen)




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