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''Printed sources'': Bunting ('''Ancient Music of Ireland'''), 1796; p. 7. Clinton ('''Gems of Ireland: 200 Airs''), 1841; No. 98, p. 49. Heymann ('''Legacy of the 1792 Belfast Harp Festival'''), 1992; p. 7 (appears as "Old Trugh"). O'Neill ('''Music of Ireland: 1850 Melodies'''), 1903; No. 123, p. 22. | ''Printed sources'': Bunting ('''Ancient Music of Ireland'''), 1796; p. 7. Clinton ('''Gems of Ireland: 200 Airs'''), 1841; No. 98, p. 49. Heymann ('''Legacy of the 1792 Belfast Harp Festival'''), 1992; p. 7 (appears as "Old Trugh"). O'Neill ('''Music of Ireland: 1850 Melodies'''), 1903; No. 123, p. 22. | ||
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Revision as of 04:15, 3 December 2014
Back to Old Truagh
OLD TRUAGH (Sean Truag). Irish, Slow Air (3/4 time). E Minor (O'Neill): F Sharp Minor (Clinton). Standard tuning (fiddle). One part (Clinton, Heymann): AB (O'Neill): ABB' (Bunting/1796). The air (which begins in the relative minor and ends in the major) was published by Edward Bunting in his Ancient Music of Ireland (1796 & 1809), collected from the County Leitrim harper Charles Byrne (1712-c. 1810), who had played it at the 1792 Belfast Harp Festival. As "Ye Trugh" it had previously been published by the Neals in 1724, and Ann Haymann (1992) says it was quite popular, with many instrumental and vocal variants. Byrne was Bunting's source for several Carolan tunes, and had a wealth of stories. Arthur O'Neill (1734-1818), a blind harper who also played at the Belfast Harp Festival and who was one of the last of the old itinerant harpers, mentions the tune in his memoirs. As a young man he toured Ireland several times and related meeting other famous harpers:
I met a Charles Byrne, who was taught by his uncle to be a harper. I may be thought too severe when I made use of the word 'tol-lol' in my account of the Irish harpers. Others may say the same of myself, but the fellow, not being blind, had many advantages over those who had not that first of gifts, sight, and as he had a tolerable memory he could recount all that happened to him during the time he led his blind uncle through the Kingdom, and I must conclude my biography of him and set him down a tol-lol (i.e. a so-so or mediocre player). I know myself, besides what I am creditably informed, that he could [play] and sing a good variety of real Irish songs in a pleasing style with a pleasing voice.
Source for notated version: Harper Charles Byrne [2] [Bunting]; Chicago Police Sergeant James O'Neill, originally from County Down, Francis O'Neill's collaborator [O'Neill].
Printed sources: Bunting (Ancient Music of Ireland), 1796; p. 7. Clinton (Gems of Ireland: 200 Airs), 1841; No. 98, p. 49. Heymann (Legacy of the 1792 Belfast Harp Festival), 1992; p. 7 (appears as "Old Trugh"). O'Neill (Music of Ireland: 1850 Melodies), 1903; No. 123, p. 22.
Recorded sources: