Annotation:Patsy Hanley's (1): Difference between revisions
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|f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Patsy_Hanley's_(1) > | |f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Patsy_Hanley's_(1) > | ||
|f_annotation='''PATSY HANLEY’S.''' AKA - "Patsy Hanly's," "Hanley's." AKA and see "[[New Line to Loughaun (The)]]," "[[Purty Girls of our Town (The)]]." Irish, Reel. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The tune is named for County Roscommon flute player Patsy Hanly, who composed it in the key of C Major, although it is heard in D also (e.g. by Harry Bradley, Peter Carberry). Patsy himself had the reel from fiddler James Hanly<ref>Fr. Quinn remarks that James Hanly was a pupil of fiddler Thomas ‘Blind’ Kiernan (c.1807-1887) of Cartron, Drumlish. </ref> of Newtowncashel, Co. Longford, who had learned it from a farm laborer named Eavers who was locally known as a whistler and lilter [https://thesession.org/tunes/1664]. The "New Line to Loughaun" title comes from the 2007 recording "Pathway to the Well" by flute player Matt Molloy. | |f_annotation='''PATSY HANLEY’S.''' AKA - "Patsy Hanly's," "Hanley's." AKA and see "[[New Line to Loughaun (The)]]," "[[Purty Girls of our Town (The)]]." Irish, Reel (cut time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The tune is named for County Roscommon flute player Patsy Hanly, who composed it in the key of C Major, although it is heard in D also (e.g. by Harry Bradley, Peter Carberry). Patsy himself had the reel from fiddler James Hanly<ref>Fr. Quinn remarks that James Hanly was a pupil of fiddler Thomas ‘Blind’ Kiernan (c.1807-1887) of Cartron, Drumlish. </ref> of Newtowncashel, Co. Longford, who had learned it from a farm laborer named Eavers who was locally known as a whistler and lilter [https://thesession.org/tunes/1664]. The "New Line to Loughaun" title comes from the 2007 recording "Pathway to the Well" by flute player Matt Molloy. | ||
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Revision as of 03:43, 20 October 2021
X: 1 T:Patsy Hanley's [1] R:reel H:Also played in D, see #729 D:Desi Wilkinson: The Three Piece Flute D:Marcas \'O Murch\'u: \'O Bh\'eal go B\'eal Z:id:hn-reel-668 M:C| F:http://trillian.mit.edu/~jc/music/abc/mirror/kirby98.fsnet.co.uk/ha/Hanlys_1.abc K:C GAEG GAGA|(3Bcd ed cA~A2|EG~G2 A2~A2|cA{c}GE {A}EDD2:| |:eg~g2 {a}gede|g2{c'}ae {a}ged2|1 eg~g2 {a}ged2| (3Bcd ed cA~A2:|2 g2eg {c'}ageg|{a}gede cA~A2|| P:"variations" GAEG ~A2GA|cded cA~A2|GAEG ~A2GA|cA{c}GE {A}EDD2| ~G2EG ~A2G2|(3Bcd {a}ed cA~A2|EG~G2 ~A2GA|cA{c}GE {A}EDD2|| eg{a}ga {b}gede|~g2ag {a}gede|eg{a}ga gede|cded cA~A2| eg{a}ga {b}gede|~g2ag {a}gede|g2ea {c'}agea|{b}gede cA~A2|| P:"more variations" GAEG (3ABA GA|cd{a}ed cAGE|(3GAG EG (3ABA GA|cAGE D3E| (3GAG EG A2{c}AB|c2{a}ed cAGE|~G2EG A2GA|cAGE D4|| eg{a}ga gede|~g2ag {a}ged2|eg~g2 {a}gedB|cded cA{c}A2| g2{a}ga gede|~g2ag {a}ged2|gaeg {c'}age^f|{a}gedB cA{c}A2|| P:"even more variations" EG~G2 A2GA|c2{a}ed cAGE|~G2EG (3ABA GA|cAGE D4| EG~G2 A2{c}AB|cd{a}ed cAGE|GAEG A2{c}AB|cAGE D4|| eg{a}ga gede|ge{c'}ae {a}gedg|eg{a}ga {a}gedB|cded cA{c}A2| ~g3a gede|{a}geae {a}gede|^fg~g2 a3a|{a}gedB cA{c}A2||
PATSY HANLEY’S. AKA - "Patsy Hanly's," "Hanley's." AKA and see "New Line to Loughaun (The)," "Purty Girls of our Town (The)." Irish, Reel (cut time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The tune is named for County Roscommon flute player Patsy Hanly, who composed it in the key of C Major, although it is heard in D also (e.g. by Harry Bradley, Peter Carberry). Patsy himself had the reel from fiddler James Hanly[1] of Newtowncashel, Co. Longford, who had learned it from a farm laborer named Eavers who was locally known as a whistler and lilter [1]. The "New Line to Loughaun" title comes from the 2007 recording "Pathway to the Well" by flute player Matt Molloy.
Fr. John Quinn transcribed a version of the tune from the playing of Jim Donlon of Aghaloughan, Lanesborough, County Longford, in the 1970's, who called the reel "Purty Girls of our Town (The)." Fr. Quinn suspects it is possible Matt Moloy's title, "New Line to Loughaun", may be a mishearing in conversation with Patsy Hanley of Jim Donlon's address (Aghaloughan). He suggests Moloy probably had the tune in the key of 'C' from Patsy Hanly, "who in turn probably got it from Jim Donlon. They often played together."
- ↑ Fr. Quinn remarks that James Hanly was a pupil of fiddler Thomas ‘Blind’ Kiernan (c.1807-1887) of Cartron, Drumlish.