Annotation:Dennis Ryan's Slip Jig: Difference between revisions

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'''DENNIS RYAN'S SLIP JIG'''. AKA and see "Cathal McConnell's (Slip Jig)," "Cock and the Hen." Irish, Slip Jig. B Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Dennis Ryan is a fiddler from Co. Offaly. It has been changed in the process. The third note in the first part was a high G in the original. Cathal (McConnel) learned it as F# putting the tune into the key of B Minor rather than G and thus changing it's whole nature" (Boys of the Lough). The group Lunasa recorded the tune on their album "Otherworld" as "Cathal McConnell's." The tune seems to originally have been called "The Cock and the Hen."  
'''DENNIS RYAN'S SLIP JIG'''. AKA and see "Cathal McConnell's (Slip Jig)," "Cock and the Hen." Irish, Slip Jig. B Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Dennis Ryan is a fiddler from Co. Offaly. A note in '''Music and Song from the Boys of the Lough''' (1977) indicates that Ryan's original had a 'g' note instead of an 'f#' note as the third note of the tune, putting it into a different tonality and character. However, the tune was popularized by the band in the minor mode and it is the version played today. The group Lunasa recorded the tune on their album "Otherworld" as "Cathal McConnell's." The tune seems to originally have been called "The Cock and the Hen."  
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Revision as of 18:12, 14 January 2011

Tune properties and standard notation


DENNIS RYAN'S SLIP JIG. AKA and see "Cathal McConnell's (Slip Jig)," "Cock and the Hen." Irish, Slip Jig. B Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Dennis Ryan is a fiddler from Co. Offaly. A note in Music and Song from the Boys of the Lough (1977) indicates that Ryan's original had a 'g' note instead of an 'f#' note as the third note of the tune, putting it into a different tonality and character. However, the tune was popularized by the band in the minor mode and it is the version played today. The group Lunasa recorded the tune on their album "Otherworld" as "Cathal McConnell's." The tune seems to originally have been called "The Cock and the Hen."

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Boys of the Lough, 1977; p. 12. Miller & Perron (Irish Traditional Fiddle Music), 1977; vol. 1, No. 62.

Recorded sources:




Tune properties and standard notation