Annotation:Graf Spee (The): Difference between revisions

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"[[Rothiemurchus Rant]]" appears to be the Scottish ancestor of the melody. Flaherty's version is somewhat distanced from O'Neill's. "[[Western Lasses]]" is a variant and is more noticeable in the second and third parts of the tune rather than the first (Alan Ng says: "compare 2nd and 3rd parts with the 3rd and 2nd parts, respectively, of The Western Lasses"). Philippe Varlet finds an early recording of the tune on a 78 RPM disc by an American Irish piper named Martin Beirne (who led the Blackbird Orchestra) on which it is called "The Grand Spy" (see note under that title for more on American versions).   
"<incipit title="load:Rant" width=850 link="https://tunearch.org/wiki/Rothiemurchus Rant">Rothiemurchus Rant</incipit>" appears to be the Scottish ancestor of the melody. Flaherty's version is somewhat distanced from O'Neill's. "[[Western Lasses]]" is a variant and is more noticeable in the second and third parts of the tune rather than the first (Alan Ng says: "compare 2nd and 3rd parts with the 3rd and 2nd parts, respectively, of The Western Lasses"). Philippe Varlet finds an early recording of the tune on a 78 RPM disc by an American Irish piper named Martin Beirne (who led the Blackbird Orchestra) on which it is called "The Grand Spy" (see note under that title for more on American versions).   
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Revision as of 23:21, 2 June 2019

Back to Graf Spee (The)


X:1 T:The Graf Spee S:Paul O'Shaughnessy Z:Juergen.Gier@post.rwth-aachen.de M:C| L:1/8 K:C EDCD EG (3GGG|AGcG AGcG|EDCD EG (3GGG|AGcG ED (3DDD:| efed cBcA|GE (3EEE GAcd|efed cBcA|GECE EDD2| efed cBcA|GE (3EEE GAcd|eaag eged|cAGE EDD2|] |:eg~g2 gedg|eaa^g ~a3=g|eged cBcd|eaag egdg:| |:eccB cAGE|GAcd cAGE|GAcd {e}dcdc|AGcG EDDg| ec~c2 cGAG|~c3d cAGE|GAcd {e}dcdc|AGcG EDDg|: |:egcg egcg|fada fada|egcg ec~c2|ABcd ed~d2| e~a3 gedg|eccB cAGE|GAcd {e}dcdc|1AGcG EDDg:|2AGcG EDDF|]



GRAF SPEE, THE. AKA - "Grand Spey (The)," "Grand Spee (The)," "Grand Spy (1) (The)," "French Spy (The)." AKA and see "Grant of Strathspey," "Rothiemurchus Rant," "Rothiemurcus Rant," "Winnie Greene's Favorite," "Winnie Green's Reel," "Western Lasses." Irish, Reel. C Major (Flaherty, O'Neill, Vallely): D Major (Alewine, Black). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCC (Flaherty): AABCCD (Black): AABBCCD (Alewine): AABB'CCD (O'Neill): AABCCDDE (Mulvihill, Vallely). Seattle (1987) believes the name to be a curious corruption of the title "Grant of Strathspey (The)" (sometimes "Grant's Strathspey") transformed into the name of the famous World War II German battleship (itself named after a famous German admiral, Maximilian Graf von Spee, born in 1861).

"<incipit title="load:Rant" width=850 link="https://tunearch.org/wiki/Rothiemurchus Rant">Rothiemurchus Rant</incipit>" appears to be the Scottish ancestor of the melody. Flaherty's version is somewhat distanced from O'Neill's. "Western Lasses" is a variant and is more noticeable in the second and third parts of the tune rather than the first (Alan Ng says: "compare 2nd and 3rd parts with the 3rd and 2nd parts, respectively, of The Western Lasses"). Philippe Varlet finds an early recording of the tune on a 78 RPM disc by an American Irish piper named Martin Beirne (who led the Blackbird Orchestra) on which it is called "The Grand Spy" (see note under that title for more on American versions).

Additional notes

Sources for notated versions: - fiddler Fred Finn {1919-1986} (Kiltycreen, Kilavil, County Sligo) [Flaherty]; Jim McElhone (County Derry) [Mulvihill]; New York fiddlers Andy McGann and Brian Conway [Black]; Tony Smith [Bulmer & Sharpley].

Printed sources : - Alewine (Maid that Cut Off the Chicken's Lips), 1987; p. 20. Black (Music's the Very Best Thing), 1996; No. 189, p. 100 (appears as "The Grand Spey"). Bulmer & Sharpley (Music from Ireland), 1976, vol. 3, No. 44. Flaherty (Trip to Sligo), 1990; p. 83. Mulvihill (1st Collection), 1986; No. 137, p. 37. O'Neill (Krassen), 1976; p. 162. Vallely (Armagh Pipers Club Play 50 Reels), 1982; No. 50, p. 24.

Recorded sources: -Green Linnett GLCD 1155, Martin Hayes - "Under the Moon" (1995). SIF 3002, Kevin Burke & Jackie Daly - "Eavesdropper" (1981). Green Linnet SIF 3018, "Molloy/Peoples/Brady" (1978).

See also listings at:
Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [1]
Alan Ng's Irishtune.info [2]



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