Annotation:Johnny Cronin's Reel: Difference between revisions

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Tune properties and standard notation


JOHNNY CRONIN'S REEL. AKA and see "Cronin's Reel (1)," "Johnny Cronin's Fancy," "Kitty O'Neill (4)." Irish, Reel. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCC. The tune was either composed or popularized by the late Gneevguilla, County Kerry, fiddler Johnny Cronin (who lived for some many years in the Bronx, New York), who passed away in 1991. Paddy Ryan, writing in Treoir, says the tune is often paired in sessions with "Johnny Cronin's" after the influential recording of the set on a 1973 Comhaltas EP recording of Portroe, Tipperary, accordion player Paddy O'Brien with Séamus Connolly of Killaloe, called "The Banks of the Shannon." A simpler version of the reel, says Ryan, is O'Neill's "Kitty O'Neill," associated with Johnny's brother, Paddy Cronin. New York accordion player Jim Coogan relates this story about Cronin:

I was with Denis - Jackie Riordan - Joe Mills and Frank Wearity (they are all gone now) one Sunday afternoon when in comes Johnny Cornin (rip) with a full load of booze taken on. Johnny, naturally, was broke and was trying to borrow money and was hard after Denis (knowing he would get it) who shouted down at him (Denis was a big man) in the lovely sing song Kerry accent: "Ooooo - who takes a fit of working everry six months - vants a five dollar bill from me? How do oo intend to pay me back?"

Another Cronin story Jim tells is this:

Joe Burke told me in Milwaukee that when Johnny got his settlement from the injury he received while working construction (somewhere around 8 grand) he hired a cab for the day and took Joe up to Alexander's Department store and went in and got outfitted out - from underwear - shoes - socks pants shirt -jacket etc. - he put them on in the dressing room - pulled off the price tags off and went to the cashier and paid for what was on his back - then told cashier - "If ye know of some poor soul can use the clothes I left in the dressing - give them to him..."

They then went to all the Irish bars in the Bronx and John would leave money for everyone he owed in an envelope as he knew they would be frequenting - Joe said that after they were all done and John paid the cab he had less than $1,000 left - which probably lasted him about a week.

Joel Shimberg remembered this tale:

Danny Collins told me (years ago, so details may be a bit hazy) that a bunch of Chicago guys got a bit of the wet devil in them once and telegraphed Johnny Cronin that Paddy Cronin (who I think was visiting in Chicago at the time) had died and that the funeral would be in three days. He said that Johnny had returned from Boston and had told Danny "It was a long trip up there, and do you know, the son of a bitch wasn't even dead!"

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Black (Music's the Very Best Thing), 1996; No. 266, p. 143. Bulmer & Sharpley (Music from Ireland), 1976, vol. 4, No. 40. Mallinson (100 Enduring), 1995; No. 3, p. 2 (appears as "Johnny Cronin's Fancy"). Miller (Fiddler's Throne), 2004; No. 183, p. 116. Mulvihill (1st Collection), 1986; No. 37, p. 10 (appears as "Cronin's Reel"). Treoir, vol. 35, No. 3, 2003; p. 28. Vallely (Armagh Pipers Club Play 50 Reels), 1982; No. 23, p. 13.

Recorded sources:

See also listings at:
Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [1]
Alan Ng's Irishtune.info [2]




Tune properties and standard notation