Annotation:Paddy Taylor's Reel (1): Difference between revisions
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|f_tune_annotation_title=https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Paddy_Taylor's_Reel_(1) > | |f_tune_annotation_title=https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Paddy_Taylor's_Reel_(1) > | ||
|f_annotation='''PADDY TAYLOR'S REEL [1]''' (Ríl Phádraig Táilliúir). AKA and see "[[Anderson's Reel]]," "[[Lady Gordon]]," “[[ | |f_annotation='''PADDY TAYLOR'S REEL [1]''' (Ríl Phádraig Táilliúir). AKA and see "[[Anderson's Reel (4)]]," "[[Lady Gordon]]," “[[McCabe's Reel (2)]]," "[[Taylor's Reel (1)]].” Irish, Reel. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'B (Breathnach): AABBCC (Black). It is named for, and usually credited, to Paddy Taylor (1914-1976), a London-based flute player originally from Loughill, west County Limerick. Piper Tommy Keane, however, relates that Paddy Taylor's son Kevin told him that the tune was jointly composed by his father and Sligo fiddler Martin Wynne. Paddy Taylor was born into a musical family—his father (who died young) was a singer, his mother a noted concertina player, two cousins played the flute and his maternal grandfather, Patrick Hanley, was a renowned piper and flute player. Hanley even played before Queen Victoria. Taylor learned his music from his mother, Katie or Honora Taylor, a concertina player. He moved to London in 1934, was a founding member of the West London branch of Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann, and played with Frank Lee’s Tara Band Band (19348) and the Garryowen Band (1938 to early 1960s), and with Sligo fiddlers Joe O'Dowd and Martin Wynne. Anthony Buffery says he was a “live wire” who played in all the local Hammersmith (London) ceili bands and was a regular at sessions. | ||
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Revision as of 19:03, 15 July 2021
X:1 T: Paddy Taylor's [1] S: J. O'Sullivan Q: 350 R: reel M: 4/4 L: 1/8 K: D FADF ABAF | GE=cE dEcE | FADF ABAF | GE=cE ED D2 :| || Addc d3 A | Beed e3 e | fgfe d3 A | (3Bcd AF ED D2 | Addc d3 A | Bdef g3 g | afge d2 dA | (3Bcd AF ED D2 || |: FEFG AddF | GddF GddA | FEFG Addc | ABGA ED D2 :|
PADDY TAYLOR'S REEL [1] (Ríl Phádraig Táilliúir). AKA and see "Anderson's Reel (4)," "Lady Gordon," “McCabe's Reel (2)," "Taylor's Reel (1).” Irish, Reel. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'B (Breathnach): AABBCC (Black). It is named for, and usually credited, to Paddy Taylor (1914-1976), a London-based flute player originally from Loughill, west County Limerick. Piper Tommy Keane, however, relates that Paddy Taylor's son Kevin told him that the tune was jointly composed by his father and Sligo fiddler Martin Wynne. Paddy Taylor was born into a musical family—his father (who died young) was a singer, his mother a noted concertina player, two cousins played the flute and his maternal grandfather, Patrick Hanley, was a renowned piper and flute player. Hanley even played before Queen Victoria. Taylor learned his music from his mother, Katie or Honora Taylor, a concertina player. He moved to London in 1934, was a founding member of the West London branch of Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann, and played with Frank Lee’s Tara Band Band (19348) and the Garryowen Band (1938 to early 1960s), and with Sligo fiddlers Joe O'Dowd and Martin Wynne. Anthony Buffery says he was a “live wire” who played in all the local Hammersmith (London) ceili bands and was a regular at sessions.
Brendan McGlinchey remembered the Taylor family in London, and said that “old Mrs. Taylor” used to get Paddy to round up musicians on a Sunday to come over for dinner at the family home in Chiswick. He remembers she had an extensive collection of 78 RPM Irish music records and a lovely concertina, and used both to entertain her guests. “Anybody (i.e. musicians) around London at the time would be in that house.” McGlinchey also recalled that she sent her sons out on Christmas day to Hammersmith Broadway to round up stray Irishmen to come home for holiday dinner! See also the related "Errigal Braes."
According to Marie O’Keeffe (in liner notes to “The Smoky Chimney”), the tune was popularized by the Castle Ceili Band when they played it during the 1966 Fleadh Cheoil in Boyle, County Roscommon. It is sometimes played in two parts, though Black’s setting, and versions recorded more recently, have three parts.