Belfast Mountain: Difference between revisions
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'''BELFAST MOUNTAIN'''. Irish, Air (4/4 time). E Flat Major. Standard tuning. One part. A variant of the air is claimed by one authority as a Sussex song. | '''BELFAST MOUNTAIN'''. Irish, Air (4/4 time). E Flat Major. Standard tuning. One part. The name Belfast means 'crossing place by a sandbank'. A variant of the air is claimed by one authority as a Sussex song, however it is a variant of the popular air "Banks of Claudy." "Belfast Mountain", written by P.J. MacColl (who wrote "Boulavogue") commemorates a Presbyterian-born leader of the Society of United Irishmen in Ulster during the 1798 rebellion, Henry Joy McCracken (1767-1798). | ||
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''It was on Belfast Mountain I heard a maid complain,''<br> | |||
''And she vexed the sweet June evening with her heartbroken strain;''<br> | |||
''Crying, 'Woe is me, life's anguish is more than I can dream,''<br> | |||
''Since Henry Joy McCracken died on the gallows tree.'' | |||
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Revision as of 01:21, 29 April 2010
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BELFAST MOUNTAIN. Irish, Air (4/4 time). E Flat Major. Standard tuning. One part. The name Belfast means 'crossing place by a sandbank'. A variant of the air is claimed by one authority as a Sussex song, however it is a variant of the popular air "Banks of Claudy." "Belfast Mountain", written by P.J. MacColl (who wrote "Boulavogue") commemorates a Presbyterian-born leader of the Society of United Irishmen in Ulster during the 1798 rebellion, Henry Joy McCracken (1767-1798).
It was on Belfast Mountain I heard a maid complain,
And she vexed the sweet June evening with her heartbroken strain;
Crying, 'Woe is me, life's anguish is more than I can dream,
Since Henry Joy McCracken died on the gallows tree.
Source for notated version: "From Mr. P. MacDowell R.A., March, 1859" [Stanford/Petrie].
Printed source: Stanford/Petrie (Complete Collection), 1905; No. 558, p. 141.
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