Annotation:Bantry Bay Hornpipe (1): Difference between revisions
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'''BANTRY BAY HORNPIPE [1]''' (Cuain Beantraige). AKA and see "[[James McKenney's Hornpipe]]," "[[Union Hornpipe (2)]]." Irish, Hornpipe. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB (Miller & Perron, Moylan): AABB (Allan's, Miller & Perron/2006, O'Neill {4 versions}, Tubridy). Collector and compiler Captain Francis O'Neill was quite taken by the tune, calling it "one of the most delightful traditional hornpipes in existence." The name Bantry is derived from the Gaelic ben, meaning 'horn' and refers to mountains; thus, Bantry is 'the peaks by the sea shore.' Bantry Bay is off the west coast of Ireland, at County Galway. The tune closely shares melodic material with "[[tSeanbhean Bhocht (An)]]" and "[[Tomeen O'Dea's Reel]]," with which it is paired in the Tubridy book. Perhaps the earliest appearances of the melody are in the music manuscript collections of Lake District (Cumbria) musician William Irwin (c. 1838) as "James McKenney's Hornpipe", and County Cork Church of Ireland cleric James Goodman's mid-19th century manuscripts, under the title "[[Union Hornpipe]]." | '''BANTRY BAY HORNPIPE [1]''' (Cuain Beantraige). AKA and see "[[James McKenney's Hornpipe]]," "[[Little Stack of Wheat (The)]]," "[[Union Hornpipe (2)]]." Irish, Hornpipe (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB (Miller & Perron, Moylan): AABB (Allan's, Miller & Perron/2006, O'Neill {4 versions}, Tubridy). Collector and compiler Captain Francis O'Neill was quite taken by the tune, calling it "one of the most delightful traditional hornpipes in existence." The name Bantry is derived from the Gaelic ben, meaning 'horn' and refers to mountains; thus, Bantry is 'the peaks by the sea shore.' Bantry Bay is off the west coast of Ireland, at County Galway. The tune closely shares melodic material with "[[tSeanbhean Bhocht (An)]]" and "[[Tomeen O'Dea's Reel]]," with which it is paired in the Tubridy book. Perhaps the earliest appearances of the melody are in the music manuscript collections of Lake District (Cumbria) musician William Irwin (c. 1838) as "James McKenney's Hornpipe", and County Cork Church of Ireland cleric James Goodman's mid-19th century manuscripts, under the title "[[Union Hornpipe (2)]]." | ||
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Revision as of 01:42, 23 January 2019
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BANTRY BAY HORNPIPE [1] (Cuain Beantraige). AKA and see "James McKenney's Hornpipe," "Little Stack of Wheat (The)," "Union Hornpipe (2)." Irish, Hornpipe (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABB (Miller & Perron, Moylan): AABB (Allan's, Miller & Perron/2006, O'Neill {4 versions}, Tubridy). Collector and compiler Captain Francis O'Neill was quite taken by the tune, calling it "one of the most delightful traditional hornpipes in existence." The name Bantry is derived from the Gaelic ben, meaning 'horn' and refers to mountains; thus, Bantry is 'the peaks by the sea shore.' Bantry Bay is off the west coast of Ireland, at County Galway. The tune closely shares melodic material with "tSeanbhean Bhocht (An)" and "Tomeen O'Dea's Reel," with which it is paired in the Tubridy book. Perhaps the earliest appearances of the melody are in the music manuscript collections of Lake District (Cumbria) musician William Irwin (c. 1838) as "James McKenney's Hornpipe", and County Cork Church of Ireland cleric James Goodman's mid-19th century manuscripts, under the title "Union Hornpipe (2)."