Annotation:Maid Behind the Bar (1) (The): Difference between revisions
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Lynn "Chirps" Smith finds early recordings by accordion player Edward Herborn with banjo player James Wheeler, | Lynn "Chirps" Smith finds early recordings by uilleann piper and stage entertainer [[Patrick J "Patsy" Touhey]] (1865-1923) recorded on cylinder records made between 1901-1919 ("Maid behind the Bar", paired with the jig "[[Humors of Glin]]")<ref>This has been reissued on NPU 001 (cassette).</ref>. A few years later accordion player Edward Herborn with banjo player James Wheeler recorded "The Maid Behind the Bar (1)" and paired it "The Rambler Jig", a close version of the "[[Kesh Jig (1) (The)]]"<ref>Apparently, Jig & reel medleys were not uncommon pairings in the early 20th century. </ref>. Ellen O'Byrne was an entrepreneur who saw an opportunity supplying early commercial 78 RPM recordings to the niche market of the Irish community in America. She convinced Columbia to take a chance recording Irish musicians with the Herborn and Wheeler accordion/banjo duo as the first musicians to record Irish dance tunes. "Since the deal required O'Byrne to buy 500 to 1,000 copies in advance to sell through the O'Byrne Dewitt store, she went door-to-door in the Irish neighborhoods to announce the impending release of the recording. The disc sold out in no time and proved there was a market for Irish music in America"<ref>See accompanying note from the Ward Irish Archives [https://soundcloud.com/ward-irish-music-archives/sets/edward-herborn-and-james].</ref>. Further early 78 RPM recordings include accordion player James Murphy in 1920 and accordion player John "Dutch" Kimmel (who recorded the reel the same year, calling it "The Bartender"). Kimmel also included it in his 1920 cylinder recording for Edison as the last tune in a medley of Irish reels called "[[Oh gee!]]" Philippe Varlet notes that flute player John Sheridan waxed it as "Maid Behind the Barrel" in 1928. Much later, County Clare fiddler Vincent Griffin recorded the tune in 1977, played in the rather unusual key of 'C' major. | ||
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Revision as of 01:47, 29 June 2021
X:1 T:Untitled T:Maid behind the Bar [1] M:C L:1/8 R:Reel B:Stephen Grier music manuscript collection (Book 2, c. 1883, No. 278, p. 58) B: http://grier.itma.ie/book-two#?c=0&m=0&s=0&cv=57&z=-464.6511%2C313.344%2C3106.4674%2C1258.8443 N:Stephen Grier (c. 1824-1894) was a piper and fiddler from N:Newpark, Bohey, Gortletteragh, south Co. Leitrim. Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:G F|A3B AFED|FAAB ABde|fBBA Bdeg|fdec dBAG| FAAB AFED|FAAB ABde|fBBA BcdB|AFGE D3|| a3g fddg|fdad fddf|gfga beef|gebe geeg| fgaf bgaf|defd dcBc|dcBA BcdB|AFGE D3||
MAID BEHIND THE BAR [1], THE (An Gearrchaile taobh thiar den Bheár). AKA and see "Barmaid (The)," "Bartender (The)," "Green Mountain (2)," "Haymaker Reel (1) (The)," "Honeycomb (The)," "Indy's Favorite," "Little Judy," "Long Island Reel," "Judy's Reel," "Maid Behind the Barrel (The)," "Maid Behind the Counter (The)," "Maids of Castlebar (The)." Irish, Reel. D Major (most versions): C Major (Cranitch). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB (most versions): AA'BB (Bain). The tune was popularlized through the recording by Sligo fiddle master James Morrison (and piper Tom Ennis) and has become (along with its variants) one of the most ubiquitous tunes in modern Irish sessions. "Maid behind the Bar [1]" was entered as an untitled reel in Book 2 (No. 278) of the large c. 1883 music manuscript collection of County Leitrim fiddler and piper biography:Stephen Grier (c. 1824-1894). Versions of the melody appear earliest in published collections as "Indy's Favorite" and "Judy's Reel" in Ryan's Mammoth Collection (1883). O'Neill prints the tune also under the title "Maid of Castlebar," but title may be a corruption of "Maid Behind the Bar," or vice-versa.
Lynn "Chirps" Smith finds early recordings by uilleann piper and stage entertainer Patrick J "Patsy" Touhey (1865-1923) recorded on cylinder records made between 1901-1919 ("Maid behind the Bar", paired with the jig "Humors of Glin")[1]. A few years later accordion player Edward Herborn with banjo player James Wheeler recorded "The Maid Behind the Bar (1)" and paired it "The Rambler Jig", a close version of the "Kesh Jig (1) (The)"[2]. Ellen O'Byrne was an entrepreneur who saw an opportunity supplying early commercial 78 RPM recordings to the niche market of the Irish community in America. She convinced Columbia to take a chance recording Irish musicians with the Herborn and Wheeler accordion/banjo duo as the first musicians to record Irish dance tunes. "Since the deal required O'Byrne to buy 500 to 1,000 copies in advance to sell through the O'Byrne Dewitt store, she went door-to-door in the Irish neighborhoods to announce the impending release of the recording. The disc sold out in no time and proved there was a market for Irish music in America"[3]. Further early 78 RPM recordings include accordion player James Murphy in 1920 and accordion player John "Dutch" Kimmel (who recorded the reel the same year, calling it "The Bartender"). Kimmel also included it in his 1920 cylinder recording for Edison as the last tune in a medley of Irish reels called "Oh gee!" Philippe Varlet notes that flute player John Sheridan waxed it as "Maid Behind the Barrel" in 1928. Much later, County Clare fiddler Vincent Griffin recorded the tune in 1977, played in the rather unusual key of 'C' major.
The second strain of 'Maid' was employed as the third strain of the French-Canadian tune "Ronfluse Gobeil/Snoring Gobeil/Snoring Mrs. Gobeil/Reel St-Siméon," recorded by Jos Bouchard in 1938. See also note for "Annotation:Long Island Reel."