Annotation:Little Harvest Rose (The): Difference between revisions

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'''LITTLE HARVEST ROSE, THE''' (Ros Beag an Fogmair). AKA - "[[Fomhar Rósin]]." Irish, Air or Planxty (4/4 time). F Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. The composition is included in a section of tunes credited to blind Irish harper Turlough O'Carolan (1678-1736) by O'Neill, however, it does not appear in Donal O'Sullivan's seminal 1958 volume on the bard, and its attribution to the harper is highly questionable.  Thomas Moore's song "In the Morning of Life" ('''Irish Melodies, vol. 6''') is set to this tune, as is "Go Edmund join the martial throng", from Smollet Holden's '''Holden's collection of the most esteem'd old Irish melodies''' (c. 1808). A song by the title "Little Harvest Rose", dated c. 1745, appears in Patrick Joseph McCall's 1894 collection of folksongs '''Irish nóiníns''' (daisies). It begins:
'''LITTLE HARVEST ROSE, THE''' (Ros Beag an Fogmair). AKA - "[[Fomhar Rósin]]." AKA and see "[[Morning of Life (The)]]." Irish, Air or Planxty (4/4 time). F Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. The composition is included in a section of tunes credited to blind Irish harper Turlough O'Carolan (1678-1736) by O'Neill (as both "Little Harvest Rose" and "[[Morning of Life (The)]]"), however, it does not appear in Donal O'Sullivan's seminal 1958 volume on the bard, and its attribution to the harper is highly questionable.  Thomas Moore's song "In the Morning of Life" ('''Irish Melodies, vol. 6''') is set to this tune, as is "Go Edmund join the martial throng", from Smollet Holden's '''Holden's collection of the most esteem'd old Irish melodies''' (c. 1808). A song by the title "Little Harvest Rose", dated c. 1745, appears in Patrick Joseph McCall's 1894 collection of folksongs '''Irish nóiníns''' (daisies). It begins:
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''There's a ripple in the waters of our four wide seas;''<br>
''There's a ripple in the waters of our four wide seas;''<br>
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Revision as of 21:06, 21 January 2014

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LITTLE HARVEST ROSE, THE (Ros Beag an Fogmair). AKA - "Fomhar Rósin." AKA and see "Morning of Life (The)." Irish, Air or Planxty (4/4 time). F Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. The composition is included in a section of tunes credited to blind Irish harper Turlough O'Carolan (1678-1736) by O'Neill (as both "Little Harvest Rose" and "Morning of Life (The)"), however, it does not appear in Donal O'Sullivan's seminal 1958 volume on the bard, and its attribution to the harper is highly questionable. Thomas Moore's song "In the Morning of Life" (Irish Melodies, vol. 6) is set to this tune, as is "Go Edmund join the martial throng", from Smollet Holden's Holden's collection of the most esteem'd old Irish melodies (c. 1808). A song by the title "Little Harvest Rose", dated c. 1745, appears in Patrick Joseph McCall's 1894 collection of folksongs Irish nóiníns (daisies). It begins:

There's a ripple in the waters of our four wide seas;
There's a murmur on the mountains, like at dawning hour;
There's a whisper 'mong the ash trees, as they shake their keys,
And a thrill stirs all the sleepin gland with wond'rous power.
For, the sowing time is coming, with its lingering days,
When the fields no longer slumber 'neath the winter snows,
When we'll plant the Tree of Liberty, 'mid hymns of praise,
And greet, again, our long-lost, little Harvest Rose!

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Bunting (The General Collection of the Ancient Irish Music, vol. 1), 1796; No. 43, p. 24. MacLean (The Amateur's Companion), c. 1810-15; No. 13. O'Neill (Krassen), 1976; p. 232. O'Neill (Music of Ireland: 1850 Melodies), 1903; No. 646, p. 116.

Recorded sources: Columbia 33491-F (78 RPM), John Griffin (the Fifth Avenue bus man) (1931)




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