Annotation:Maurice O'Connor (1): Difference between revisions
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Carolan composed this air and song on the occasion of O'Connor's purchase of Coote Hall, County Roscommon, from the Coote family. It was a home where Carolan was a welcome guest in his travels, although by 1729 O'Connor have moved to a new residence, Gortnamona, in County Offaly, where he died in 1740. His wife Mary survived until 1759. See O'Sullivan's extensive note ('''Carloan''', 1958, pp. 265-266) and Alice Stopford Green's '''Old Irish World''' (1912, pp. 100-129) for more on O'Connor and his family. | Carolan composed this air and song on the occasion of O'Connor's purchase of Coote Hall, County Roscommon, from the Coote family. It was a home where Carolan was a welcome guest in his travels, although by 1729 O'Connor have moved to a new residence, Gortnamona (named Mount Pleasant during O'Conner's tenure), in County Offaly, where he died in 1740. His wife Mary survived until 1759. See O'Sullivan's extensive note ('''Carloan''', 1958, pp. 265-266) and Alice Stopford Green's '''Old Irish World''' (1912, pp. 100-129) for more on O'Connor and his family. | ||
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Revision as of 01:16, 8 September 2013
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MAURICE O'CONNOR [1]. "O Connor." Irish, Planxty (6/8 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABC. Composed by blind Irish harper Turlough O'Carolan (1670-1738), one of several airs he composed in honor of Maurice O'Connor, head of the O'Connors of Offaly in Carolan's era.
The stronghold of the O'Connors during Elizabethan times was Daingean Ui Fáilghe (Fortress of Offaly), until the lands were broken up under the English, and given English names. His father died young, and Maurice, head of a now penniless family, sought his fortune in London, where he did indeed strike it rich as a member of the English Bar (although he had to maintain an expedient conversion to Protestantism because of the penal laws that excluded Catholics from practicing law). Having invested wisely in real estate and other ventures, O'Connor retired from the English bar and returned to Ireland, where, in 1725 he married Lady Mary Plunkett, youngest of three sisters and co-heirs of the 5th Earl of Fingall, a distinguished Irish Catholic family.
Carolan composed this air and song on the occasion of O'Connor's purchase of Coote Hall, County Roscommon, from the Coote family. It was a home where Carolan was a welcome guest in his travels, although by 1729 O'Connor have moved to a new residence, Gortnamona (named Mount Pleasant during O'Conner's tenure), in County Offaly, where he died in 1740. His wife Mary survived until 1759. See O'Sullivan's extensive note (Carloan, 1958, pp. 265-266) and Alice Stopford Green's Old Irish World (1912, pp. 100-129) for more on O'Connor and his family.
Source for notated version: Samuel, Ann and Peter Thompson's Hibernian Muse (London, c. 1786, p. 24) [O'Sullivan]. It was also printed by John Lee (1780), although O'Sullivan believed the third part to be defective.
Printed sources: Complete Collection of Carolan's Irish Tunes, 1984; No. 115, p. 84. O'Sullivan (Carolan: The Life, Times and Music of an Irish Harper), 1958; No. 115, p. 162.
Recorded sources: