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''Printed sources'': Cranitch ('''Irish Fiddle Book'''), 1996; No. 32, p. 137. Cranitch ('''Irish Session Tunes: Red Book'''), 2000; 32. Sullivan ('''Session Tunes, vol. 2'''); No. 46, p. 19. Vallely ('''Learn to Play the Tin Whistle with the Armagh Pipers Club'''), vol. 2; 10.  
''Printed sources'': Cranitch ('''Irish Fiddle Book'''), 1996; No. 32, p. 137 ("Port an Deoraí"). Cranitch ('''Irish Session Tunes: Red Book'''), 2000; 32. Sullivan ('''Session Tunes, vol. 2'''); No. 46, p. 19. Vallely ('''Learn to Play the Tin Whistle with the Armagh Pipers Club'''), vol. 2; 10.  
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Revision as of 22:45, 27 May 2016

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EXILE'S JIG. AKA and see "Emigrant's Jig (The)," "New Widow Well Married (1) (The)," "Port an Deoraí." Irish, Jig (12/8 time {'A' part} and 9/8 time {'B' part}). E Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. Not the "Exile's Lament" in Ryan's Mammoth/Cole's 1000. The composition has been attributed to bouzouki player Johnny Moynahan, recorded with his group Sweeney's Men, but the slip jig predates him and appears as "New Widow Well Married (1) (The)" in Frank Roche's Collection of Traditional Irish Music, vol. 2 (1912).

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Cranitch (Irish Fiddle Book), 1996; No. 32, p. 137 ("Port an Deoraí"). Cranitch (Irish Session Tunes: Red Book), 2000; 32. Sullivan (Session Tunes, vol. 2); No. 46, p. 19. Vallely (Learn to Play the Tin Whistle with the Armagh Pipers Club), vol. 2; 10.

Recorded sources: Rounder 3067, Alan Stivell - "Renaissance of the Celtic Harp" (1982).




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