Annotation:Andy Kerrin's Hornpipe: Difference between revisions
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The second strain is a member of a wide-spread schottische family. In Ireland the tune was sometimes called a hornpipe, although usually as a barn dance. The melody was popularised by Boys of the Lough flute player Cathal McConnell, who had it from a Derrylin, County Fermanagh, musician named Andy Kerrin. | The second strain is a member of a wide-spread schottische family. In Ireland the tune was sometimes called a hornpipe, although usually as a barn dance. The melody was popularised by Boys of the Lough flute player Cathal McConnell, who had it from a Derrylin, County Fermanagh, musician named Andy Kerrin. | ||
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Recorded sources: Flying Fish FF-058, Cathal McConnell - "On Lough Erne Shore" (1978). | <br> | ||
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Recorded sources:<font color=teal> | |||
Flying Fish FF-058, Cathal McConnell - "On Lough Erne Shore" (1978). | |||
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Revision as of 05:59, 15 December 2016
Back to Andy Kerrin's Hornpipe
The second strain is a member of a wide-spread schottische family. In Ireland the tune was sometimes called a hornpipe, although usually as a barn dance. The melody was popularised by Boys of the Lough flute player Cathal McConnell, who had it from a Derrylin, County Fermanagh, musician named Andy Kerrin.
Recorded sources: Flying Fish FF-058, Cathal McConnell - "On Lough Erne Shore" (1978).
Back to Andy Kerrin's Hornpipe