Annotation:His Dudeen: Difference between revisions
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'''HIS DUDEEN'''. Irish?, Jig. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A ''dudeen'' was a clay pipe, as illustrated by this somewhat derogatory item in a paper called '''The Daily Dispatch''' of December 27, 1865. | '''HIS DUDEEN'''. AKA and see "[[MacMurrough (The)]]." Irish?, Jig. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A ''dudeen'' was a clay pipe, as illustrated by this somewhat derogatory item in a paper called '''The Daily Dispatch''' of December 27, 1865. | ||
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''--An intoxicated Irishman walked overboard from one of the East Boston ferry boats on Wednesday night. When he went over he had a'' ''short, dirty-looking pipe in his mouth, and when he was fished out of the water he still held the "dudeen" firmly clenched between'' ''his lips. The only damage he sustained was a thorough drenching.'' | ''--An intoxicated Irishman walked overboard from one of the East Boston ferry boats on Wednesday night. When he went over he had a'' ''short, dirty-looking pipe in his mouth, and when he was fished out of the water he still held the "dudeen" firmly clenched between'' ''his lips. The only damage he sustained was a thorough drenching.'' | ||
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The tune is printed twice in Ed Harding's '''All-Round Collection''' (1905), as "His Dudeen" and "The MacMurrough." | |||
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''Source for notated version'': | ''Source for notated version'': | ||
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''Printed sources'': '''Hardings All-Round Collection''', 1905; No. 121, p. 38. | ''Printed sources'': '''Hardings All-Round Collection''', 1905; No. 121, p. 38. | ||
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Latest revision as of 13:24, 6 May 2019
Back to His Dudeen
HIS DUDEEN. AKA and see "MacMurrough (The)." Irish?, Jig. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A dudeen was a clay pipe, as illustrated by this somewhat derogatory item in a paper called The Daily Dispatch of December 27, 1865.
--An intoxicated Irishman walked overboard from one of the East Boston ferry boats on Wednesday night. When he went over he had a short, dirty-looking pipe in his mouth, and when he was fished out of the water he still held the "dudeen" firmly clenched between his lips. The only damage he sustained was a thorough drenching.
The tune is printed twice in Ed Harding's All-Round Collection (1905), as "His Dudeen" and "The MacMurrough."
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Hardings All-Round Collection, 1905; No. 121, p. 38.
Recorded sources:
Back to His Dudeen