Annotation:Sackows: Difference between revisions

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{{TuneAnnotation
{{TuneAnnotation
|f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Sackows >
|f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Sackows >
|f_annotation='''SACKOW'S.'''  AKA and see "[[Jew Jig (The)]]," "[[Pride Of Kildare (The)]]," "[[Syriacus]]," "[[Tripping Upstairs (2)]]," "[[Tripping Up the Stairs]]." Irish, Jig (6/8 time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB'. The first sound recording of the jig was under the title "Tripping up the Stairs" in 1921 by "Patrolman" Frank Quinn, a fiddler and accordion player originally from Ireland who worked as a policeman in New York City. The tune has been attributed to fiddler John McGrath (1900-1955)<ref> Henrik Norbeck, comment on thesession.org [https://thesession.org/tunes/111] and his abc transcription</ref>, although this awaits verification<ref>Several tunes once attributed to McGrath have turned out not have been composed by him, and McGrath attributions need to be vetted thoroughly.</ref>.  
|f_annotation='''SACKOW'S.'''  AKA and see "[[Jew Jig (The)]]," "[[Pride Of Kildare (The)]]," "[[Syriacus]]," "[[Tripping Upstairs (2)]]," "[[Tripping Up the Stairs]]." Irish, Jig (6/8 time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB'. The first sound recording of the jig was under the title "Tripping up the Stairs" in 1921 by "Patrolman" Frank Quinn, a fiddler and accordion player originally from Ireland who worked as a policeman in New York City. The tune has been attributed to fiddler John McGrath (1900-1955)<ref> Henrik Norbeck, comment on thesession.org [https://thesession.org/tunes/111] and his abc transcription</ref>, although this awaits verification. Several tunes once attributed to McGrath have turned out not have been composed by him, and McGrath attributions need to be vetted thoroughly.  
|f_source_for_notated_version=
|f_source_for_notated_version=
|f_printed_sources='''Whistle and Sing''' (c. 1970's).  
|f_printed_sources='''Whistle and Sing''' (c. 1970's).  

Revision as of 03:42, 2 April 2024



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X: 1 T:Sackow's T:Jew Jig, The R:jig C:John McGrath (1900-1955) H:"The Jew Jig" is the original title. Z:id:hn-jig-47 M:6/8 F:http://norbeck.nu/abc/i/hnj0.abc K:D FAA GBB|FAd fed|cBc ABc|dfe dAG|FAA GBB|FAd fed|cBc ABc|1 dfe d2A:|2 dfe d2c|| |:dBB fBB|faf fed|cAA eAA|efe edc|dBB fBB|faf fed|cBc ABc|1 dfe d2c:|2 dfe d2A|| P:Variations: |:FAF GBG|Add fed|cdc ABc|dfe dAG|FAF GBG|Add fed|cdc ABc|1 dfe d2A:|2 dfe d2c|| |:dBB ~f3|fgf fed|cBA ~e3|efe edc|dBB ~f3|fgf fed|cdc ABc|1 dfe d2c:|2 dfe d2A||



SACKOW'S. AKA and see "Jew Jig (The)," "Pride Of Kildare (The)," "Syriacus," "Tripping Upstairs (2)," "Tripping Up the Stairs." Irish, Jig (6/8 time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BB'. The first sound recording of the jig was under the title "Tripping up the Stairs" in 1921 by "Patrolman" Frank Quinn, a fiddler and accordion player originally from Ireland who worked as a policeman in New York City. The tune has been attributed to fiddler John McGrath (1900-1955)[1], although this awaits verification. Several tunes once attributed to McGrath have turned out not have been composed by him, and McGrath attributions need to be vetted thoroughly.


Additional notes



Printed sources : - Whistle and Sing (c. 1970's).

Recorded sources : - AliaVox AVSA 9865, Jordi Savall - "The Celtic Viol" (2008).




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  1. Henrik Norbeck, comment on thesession.org [1] and his abc transcription