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'''HUMORS OF CASTLE LYON(S)/CASTLELYONS''' (Sugra Caislean Ua Leaocain/Liatain). AKA and see "[[Killashandra Lasses (The)]]," "[[Judy McFadden's]]." Irish, Double Jig. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB (Cole, Kerr): AABB' (O'Neill). O'Neill (1910) says the tune is "probably not a very ancient composition. It was not known, evidently, to any collectors of Irish folk music before Dr. Hudson obtained a setting of it from a noted piper named Sullivan, in the County of Cork (a rival of another musician called Reilaghan). The tune has found its way into American collections of harmonized melodies." The jig appears in '''Ryan's Mammoth Collection''' (1883) as "[[Judy McFadden's]]."  
'''HUMORS OF CASTLE LYON(S)/CASTLELYONS''' (Sugra Caislean Ua Leaocain/Liatain). AKA and see "[[Killashandra Lasses (The)]]," "[[Judy McFadden's]]." Irish, Double Jig. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB (Cole, Kerr): AABB' (O'Neill). O'Neill (1910) says the tune is "probably not a very ancient composition. It was not known, evidently, to any collectors of Irish folk music before Dr. Hudson obtained a setting of it from a noted piper named Sullivan, in the County of Cork (a rival of another musician called Reilaghan). The tune has found its way into American collections of harmonized melodies." The jig appears in '''Ryan's Mammoth Collection''' (1883) as "[[Judy McFadden's]]." See also "[[Rakes of Invercairn]]," a reworking of similar melodic material in major mode and reel time.
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Revision as of 12:00, 21 July 2017

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HUMORS OF CASTLE LYON(S)/CASTLELYONS (Sugra Caislean Ua Leaocain/Liatain). AKA and see "Killashandra Lasses (The)," "Judy McFadden's." Irish, Double Jig. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB (Cole, Kerr): AABB' (O'Neill). O'Neill (1910) says the tune is "probably not a very ancient composition. It was not known, evidently, to any collectors of Irish folk music before Dr. Hudson obtained a setting of it from a noted piper named Sullivan, in the County of Cork (a rival of another musician called Reilaghan). The tune has found its way into American collections of harmonized melodies." The jig appears in Ryan's Mammoth Collection (1883) as "Judy McFadden's." See also "Rakes of Invercairn," a reworking of similar melodic material in major mode and reel time.

Source for notated version: A piper named Sullivan [The Dublin Magazine]:

Another pipe-jig--a regular Munster man, by name and by nature--"The Humours of Castle Lyons,"-- picked by at Glean-na-b-fraocan last summer, in the time of the rick-making, from one Sullivan, a piper.

Printed sources: Cole (1000 Fiddle Tunes), 1940; p. 65. The Dublin Magazine, August, 1842; No. 28. P.M. Haverty (One Hundred Irish Airs vol. 1), 1858; No. 72, p. 31. Howe (Musician's Omnibus, No. 2), c. 1865; p. 107. Kerr (Merry Melodies, vol. 2), c. 1880's; No. 259, p. 28. O'Neill (Music of Ireland: 1850 Melodies), 1903; No. 959, p. 178. O'Neill (Dance Music of Ireland: 1001 Gems), 1907; No. 182, p. 44. Ryan's Mammoth Collection, 1883; p. 96.

Recorded sources:




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