Annotation:Shamus O'Brien: Difference between revisions
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|f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Shamus_O'Brien > | |f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Shamus_O'Brien > | ||
|f_annotation='''SHAMUS O'BRIEN.''' AKA - "Sheamus O'Brien," “[[Seamus McManus]].” AKA and see "[[Shamus O'Brien's Waltz]]," [[James O'Brien]]. American, Canadian, Irish; Waltz and Air (3/4 time). USA; Michigan, Missouri, Arkansas, Arizona. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Johnson, O'Neill): ABB (Ford). “Shamus O’Brien” was a song composed by Kentucky-born William Shakespeare (“Will S.”) Hays (1837-1907), a prolific writer of popular songs in the mid-to-latter 19th century, although none of his over 300 published songs have been enduring<ref>Hays also wrote "The Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane," "Mollie Darling" and "I'll Remember You Love, in My Prayers", absorbed into old-time repertory. </ref>. It was published in New York in 1867 under the title “Sheamus O’Brien; Answer to Nora O’Neal,” referring to an earlier song also written by Hays, in 1866. The song air became popular as an instrumental waltz and was in the repertoires a number of fiddlers under different variations of the title; Arizona fiddlers Kenner C. Kartchner and Viola “Mom” Ruth knew it as as “Chamois O’Brien.” The spelling is often given as "Shamus O'Brien," and is presumably a corruption of the Gaelic name ''Séamus''. Francis O'Neill, perhaps on the strength of the Irish sounding name, gave the waltz the titles "[[James O'Brien]]" ('''Music of Ireland''', 1903) and "[[Chamois O'Brien]]" ('''O'Neill's Irish Music''', 1915), and the Irish-sounding name has prompted suggestions (unsubstantiated, so far) that the melody was originally Irish. There is no evidence that O'Neill picked it up from Irish sources, however. | |f_annotation='''SHAMUS O'BRIEN.''' AKA - "Sheamus O'Brien," “[[Seamus McManus]].” AKA and see "[[Shamus O'Brien's Waltz]]," [[James O'Brien]]. American, Canadian, Irish; Waltz and Air (3/4 time). USA; Michigan, Missouri, Arkansas, Arizona. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Johnson, O'Neill): ABB (Ford). “Shamus O’Brien” was a song composed by Kentucky-born William Shakespeare (“Will S.”) Hays (1837-1907), a prolific writer of popular songs in the mid-to-latter 19th century, although none of his over 300 published songs have been enduring<ref>Hays also wrote "The Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane," "Mollie Darling" and "I'll Remember You Love, in My Prayers", absorbed into old-time repertory. </ref>. It was published in New York in 1867 under the title “Sheamus O’Brien; Answer to Nora O’Neal,” referring to an earlier song also written by Hays, in 1866. The song air became popular as an instrumental waltz and was in the repertoires a number of fiddlers under different variations of the title; Arizona fiddlers Kenner C. Kartchner and Viola “Mom” Ruth knew it as as “Chamois O’Brien.” The spelling is often given as "Shamus O'Brien," and is presumably a corruption of the Gaelic name ''Séamus''. Francis O'Neill, perhaps on the strength of the Irish sounding name, gave the waltz the titles "[[James O'Brien]]" ('''Music of Ireland''', 1903) and "[[Chamois O'Brien]]" ('''O'Neill's Irish Music''', 1915), and the Irish-sounding name has prompted suggestions (unsubstantiated, so far) that the melody was originally Irish. There is no evidence that O'Neill picked it up from Irish sources, however<ref>O'Neill often listed his sources for tunes in his '''Music of Ireland''' (1903), but he gave no reference for this one. </ref>. | ||
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Revision as of 06:38, 15 January 2021
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SHAMUS O'BRIEN. AKA - "Sheamus O'Brien," “Seamus McManus.” AKA and see "Shamus O'Brien's Waltz," James O'Brien. American, Canadian, Irish; Waltz and Air (3/4 time). USA; Michigan, Missouri, Arkansas, Arizona. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Johnson, O'Neill): ABB (Ford). “Shamus O’Brien” was a song composed by Kentucky-born William Shakespeare (“Will S.”) Hays (1837-1907), a prolific writer of popular songs in the mid-to-latter 19th century, although none of his over 300 published songs have been enduring[1]. It was published in New York in 1867 under the title “Sheamus O’Brien; Answer to Nora O’Neal,” referring to an earlier song also written by Hays, in 1866. The song air became popular as an instrumental waltz and was in the repertoires a number of fiddlers under different variations of the title; Arizona fiddlers Kenner C. Kartchner and Viola “Mom” Ruth knew it as as “Chamois O’Brien.” The spelling is often given as "Shamus O'Brien," and is presumably a corruption of the Gaelic name Séamus. Francis O'Neill, perhaps on the strength of the Irish sounding name, gave the waltz the titles "James O'Brien" (Music of Ireland, 1903) and "Chamois O'Brien" (O'Neill's Irish Music, 1915), and the Irish-sounding name has prompted suggestions (unsubstantiated, so far) that the melody was originally Irish. There is no evidence that O'Neill picked it up from Irish sources, however[2].
For a long time it was a popular waltz in the Mid-west, and it sometimes appears in New England and Canadian Maritime repertory under the "Shamus" title variant, thus probably not received from O'Neill's publications.