Annotation:Promenade (1) (The): Difference between revisions
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|f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Promenade_(1)_(The) > | |||
'''PROMENADE [1]''' (Sleaschéim an Promenade). AKA and see “[[Coleman's Slip Jig (1)]].” Irish, Slip Jig. A Dorian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A note with this in the manuscript reads: “Ml. Coleman who danced as he played this tune. Wm. Clancy 4/2/57.” However, researcher Brendan Breathnach could find no recording of the tune by the great Sligo/New York fiddler Michael Coleman (1891-1945). Irish fiddler Michael Gorman (who spent much of his life in London) did record the tune, and Breathnach interestingly notes that Coleman and Gorman both had the same fiddle teacher in County Sligo, James Gannon. The slip jig appears in Bulmer & Sharpley's '''Music from Ireland, vol. 3''', No. 77 as “Coleman’s 1.” | |f_annotation='''PROMENADE [1]''' (Sleaschéim an Promenade). AKA and see "[[Coleman's Favorite (2)]]," “[[Coleman's Slip Jig (1)]].” Irish, Slip Jig. A Dorian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A note with this in the manuscript reads: “Ml. Coleman who danced as he played this tune. Wm. Clancy 4/2/57.” However, researcher Brendan Breathnach could find no recording of the tune by the great Sligo/New York fiddler Michael Coleman (1891-1945). Irish fiddler Michael Gorman (who spent much of his life in London) did record the tune, and Breathnach interestingly notes that Coleman and Gorman both had the same fiddle teacher in County Sligo, James Gannon. The slip jig appears in Bulmer & Sharpley's '''Music from Ireland, vol. 3''', No. 77 as “Coleman’s 1.” | ||
|f_source_for_notated_version=from a manuscript obtained from Ennis, County Clare, piper, piano player and fiddler Sean Reid (1907-1978) [Breathnach]. | |||
|f_printed_sources=Breathnach ('''Ceol Rince na hÉireann vol. IV'''), 1996; No. 46, p. 23. | |||
|f_recorded_sources=Folkways FP6819, Michael Gorman & Willie Clancy - “Irish Jigs, Reels and Hornpipes” (mid-1950’s). Mulligan LUN 028, Kevin Burke & Mícheál Ó Domhnaill – “Promenade” (1979). | |||
|f_see_also_listing= | |||
}} | |||
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Revision as of 04:10, 24 January 2022
X: 1 T:Promenade [1], The R:slip jig D:Tommy Keane & Jacqueline McCarthy: The Wind among the Reeds. Z:id:hn-slipjig-36 F:http://www.norbeck.nu/abc/ M:9/8 K:Ador e2A A2G E2D|E2A A2B c2d|e2A A2G E2D|E2G G2F G2d:| |:e2a a2g a2g|e2a a2a g2e|d2g g2f g2g|a2f g2e d2g:|
PROMENADE [1] (Sleaschéim an Promenade). AKA and see "Coleman's Favorite (2)," “Coleman's Slip Jig (1).” Irish, Slip Jig. A Dorian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. A note with this in the manuscript reads: “Ml. Coleman who danced as he played this tune. Wm. Clancy 4/2/57.” However, researcher Brendan Breathnach could find no recording of the tune by the great Sligo/New York fiddler Michael Coleman (1891-1945). Irish fiddler Michael Gorman (who spent much of his life in London) did record the tune, and Breathnach interestingly notes that Coleman and Gorman both had the same fiddle teacher in County Sligo, James Gannon. The slip jig appears in Bulmer & Sharpley's Music from Ireland, vol. 3, No. 77 as “Coleman’s 1.”