Annotation:Morgan Rattler: Difference between revisions
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Loughran & Gammon ('''Sussex Tune Book'''), 1982; no. 72, p. 27. | Loughran & Gammon ('''Sussex Tune Book'''), 1982; no. 72, p. 27. | ||
Wilson ('''A Companion to the Ballroom'''), 1816; p. 88. | Wilson ('''A Companion to the Ballroom'''), 1816; p. 88. | ||
Geoff Woolfe ('''William Winter’s Quantocks Tune Book'''), 2007; No. 67, p. 33 (ms. originally dated 1850). | |||
|f_recorded_sources= | |f_recorded_sources= | ||
|f_see_also_listing=Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [http://www.ibiblio.org/keefer/m11.htm#Morra1]<br> | |f_see_also_listing=Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [http://www.ibiblio.org/keefer/m11.htm#Morra1]<br> |
Revision as of 15:46, 7 July 2023
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MORGAN RATTLER (Murcada Rocalloir). AKA and see "Cordal Jig," "Five Hundred a Year," "Idle Road (The)," "If I Had in the Clear," "Jackson's Bouner Bougher," "Land of Potatoes," "Marsden Rattler." Scottish, English, Irish, American; Double Jig (6/8 time). England, North-West. D Major (most versions): C Major (O'Neill/1850 & 1001): G Major (Clinton, Haverty, Kerr): F Major (Galwey, Harding, O'Flannagan). Standard tuning (fiddle). One part (Galwey): AABB (Clinton, Cole, Haverty, Kerr): AABBCC (Hardings, Kennedy, Knowles, O'Farrell, Doyle): ABC (O'Flannagan): ABCD (Manson): AABBCCDD (Gow): AABBCCDDEE (O'Neill/Krassen): AABBCCDEEFFGGHHIIJJ (O'Neill/1850 & 1001). "Morgan Rattler" was one of the most popular dance tunes of the 19th century, judging from the number of appearances in both published and musicians' manuscript collections throughout Britain, Ireland and North America.
Partridge's Dictionary of the Underworld defines a 'morgan-rattler' as a loaded club, stick or cane. The phallic association was made clear in a bawdy once-popular 18th century song called "Morgan Rattler" about a virile weaver. Although only fragments of the song survive, the refrain goes:
I lathered her up with my Morgan Rattler,
The reference and song were well-known enough to be referenced in other songs. One was printed in a chapbook by W. Goggin in Limerick about 1785:
Great boasting of late we have heard of the fates,
Of the comical rake called Morgan Rattler,
But now we have found one will cut him down
Well known by the name of young Darby O'Gallagher.
The verses become rather crude. The fourth goes:
If you would see him dandle that yellow sledge handle,
As stiff as the leg of a stool in a wallet, sir,
Each maid with surprise does twinkle their eyes,
At the wonderful size of his D. O'Gallagher.
Perhaps not surprisingly, Morgan Rattler was the name attached to several racehorses. Seán Donnelly notes that "The services of a bull named (very appropriately) Morgan Rattler were advertised in the Dublin Evening Post, 12 July 1788"[1].
O'Neill (Irish Minstrels and Musicians, 1913) states the original of "Morgan Rattler" (before the embellishments) is a two-strain melody called "Jackson's Bouner Bougher" (found in Jackson's Celebrated Irish Tunes, Dublin, c. `1774, and in James Aird's Selection of Scotch, Irish, English and Foreign Airs, vol. 3, 1788) which carries the name of the Irish composer, uilleann piper and fiddler Walker "Piper" Jackson. Brendan Breathnach suggests that the title "Bouner Bougher" may be a corruption of the Irish Bonn ar bóthar meaning "A step in the road". The jig was entered into the mid-19th century music manuscript collection of uilleann piper and Church of Ireland cleric biography:James Goodman [1], and it can also be found in Book 3 of County Leitrim fiddler and piper biography:Stephen Grier's (c. 1824-1894) large c. 1883 music manuscript collection (in three parts). Francis O'Neill's version (obtained from James O'Neill's father's manuscripts, but also played often by James himself) runs ten parts:
Sergeant O'Neill's setting, copied from his father's music books, is much superior to all, having been embellished by a skillful hand, according to the custom prevailing a century ago, until a total of ten strains display his versatility[2].
Paul de Grae notes that modern Irish version are played in two parts, corresponding to the first two parts of O'Neill's setting, but is more commonly known as "Cordal Jig[3].
In volume five of his Selection (Glasgow, 1797) Aird printed the same tune, in four parts, as "The Morgan Rattler" (Paul de Grae points out that the version in Ryan's Mammoth Collection, 1883, is the first and fourth parts of Aird's later version [4]). This same latter Aird version was reprinted in John Preston's Entire New and Compleat Instructions for the Fife (London, 1796), Petrie's Third Collection (1790), McGoun's Repository of Scots and Irish Airs, and in McFadyen's Selection (1797). A three-strain version appears in dancing master Thomas Wilson's Companion to the Ball Room (London, 1816), and Barry Callaghan (Hardcome English, 2007) notes that three strain versions are the norm for modern playing in England, "with the 'B' part showing the most variation.". English versions of "Morgan Rattler" are several, many from 19th century fiddlers' manuscripts including those of William Aylmore (West Wittering, Sussex, 1796), Joshua Gibbons (Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, 1820), Ellis Knowles, John Clare (Helpston, Northants, c. 1820), William Mittel (New Romney, Kent, 1799), Joshua Jackson (Harrogate, north Yorkshire, 1798), Yarker and British army fifer biography:John Buttery (Lincolnshire, early 19th century). It was also entered in the mid-19th century music manuscript of William Winter (1774-1861), a shoemaker and violin player who lived in West Bagborough in Somerset.
"Morgan Rattler" appears in many North American musicians' copybooks as well, including: William Patten (Philadelphia, 1800), Daniel Henry Huntington (Onondaga, N.Y., 1817), fluter Thomas Molyneaux (Shelburne, Nova Scotia, in a volume that indicates he was an Ensign with the 6th Regiment), and P. Van Schaack (Kinderhook, N.Y., 1820). Dance instructions for "Morgan Rattler" were published in the Phinney's Select Collection of the Newest and Most Favorite Country Dances (Ostego, N.Y., 1808) and in Henry Moore Ridgely's commonplace book of 1799.
O'Neill's "Lame Crowley" shares a version of the first strain, with a different second strain. The alternate titles "Five hundred a year" and "If I had in the clear" are lines from a song set to the melody.
- ↑ Seán Donnelly, "A German Dulcimer Player in Eighteenth-Century Dublin", Dublin Historical Record Vol. 53, No. 1 (Spring, 2000), p. 83.
- ↑ Francis O'Neill, Irish Folk Music: A Fascinating Hobby, 1910, pp. 92-93.
- ↑ Paul de Grae, "Notes on Sources of Tunes in the O'Neill Collections", 2017.
- ↑ Paul de Grae, "Notes to Sources of Tunes in the O'Neill Collections," 2017.