Annotation:Eileen Deelish of Athenry: Difference between revisions

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''Source for notated version'': blind fiddler Michael Daffy (Co. Clare, Ireland) [Darley & McCall].  
''Source for notated version'': blind fiddler Michael Daffy (Co. Clare, Ireland) [Darley & McCall]. Daffy was a teenager at the time this tune was collected, who had been taught music and to play the violin at a school for the blind in Dublin. He was originally from Tulla, and lost his sight at age nine when he and his twin brother were playing in the fields on their father's farm near Tulla. Unaccountably, both boys had their eyes poisoned by some substance (some locals maintained it was by malign fairies or other supernatural circumstances), and, while Michael survived his twin did not. [O'Neill, '''Irish Minstrels and Musicians''', p. 402].  
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''Printed sources'': Darley & McCall (The Collection of Traditional Irish Music), 1914; No. 11, p. 5.
''Printed sources'': Darley & McCall ('''The Feis Ceóil Collection of Traditional Irish Music'''), 1914; No. 11, p. 5.
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Revision as of 02:35, 26 March 2011

Tune properties and standard notation


EILEEN DEELISH OF ATHENRY. Irish, Slow Air (4/4 time). D Dorian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB.

Source for notated version: blind fiddler Michael Daffy (Co. Clare, Ireland) [Darley & McCall]. Daffy was a teenager at the time this tune was collected, who had been taught music and to play the violin at a school for the blind in Dublin. He was originally from Tulla, and lost his sight at age nine when he and his twin brother were playing in the fields on their father's farm near Tulla. Unaccountably, both boys had their eyes poisoned by some substance (some locals maintained it was by malign fairies or other supernatural circumstances), and, while Michael survived his twin did not. [O'Neill, Irish Minstrels and Musicians, p. 402].

Printed sources: Darley & McCall (The Feis Ceóil Collection of Traditional Irish Music), 1914; No. 11, p. 5.

Recorded sources:




Tune properties and standard notation