Burke's Jig (1)

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 Theme code Index    1H5 1H5 5L4 5L4
 Also known as    Baby Gavin, Charlie Mulvihill's Jig (1), Connie O'Connell's Jig (2), Coughlan's, Gallagher's (2), Lad O'Beirne's Jig, Matt Molloy's Jig, Short Road (The), Silver Vale (The)
 Composer/Core Source    
 Region    Ireland
 Genre/Style    Irish
 Meter/Rhythm    Jig/Quadrille
 Key/Tonic of    D
 Accidental    NONE
 Mode    Dorian
 Time signature    6/8
 History    
 Structure    AABB
 Editor/Compiler    Biography:Bulmer & Sharpley
 Book/Manuscript title    Book:Music from Ireland vol. 2
 Tune and/or Page number    No. 42
 Year of publication/Date of MS    1974
 Artist    Biography:Andy McGann Joe Burke & Felix Dolan
 Title of recording    Funny Reel (The)
 Record label/Catalogue nr.    Shanachie 29012
 Year recorded    1979
 Media    
 Score   ()   


BURKE'S [1] AKA and see "Baby Gavin," "Charlie Mulvihill's (Jig) [1]," "Connie O'Connell's Jig [2]," "Coughlan's," "Gallagher's [2]," "Lad O'Beirne's (Jig)," "Matt Molloy's (Jig)," "The Short Road," "The Silver Vale." Irish, Jig. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Musicologist and fiddler Philippe Varlet suspects the tune was called by this title in the 1970's Bulmer and Sharpley collection due to its appearance on the Joe Burke/Andy McGann/Felix Dolan c. 1965 record "Funny Reel" (Shanachie CD 34016). A hand-written note in my copy Mulvihill's collection reads: "a Donegal tune from Lad O'Beirne's crowd." New York fiddler Paddy Reynolds, according to New York musician and researcher Don Meade, maintained that Philadelphia fiddler Ed Reavy brought it to New York, and Reynolds believed it was Reavy's composition. However, Don finds that the jig was recorded as "Neil Doherty's" by Donegal fiddler John Gallagher on O'Riada's "Our Musical Heritage" LP's in the 1960's. Neil Doherty was also a fiddler from County Donegal (which ties in with Mulvihill's note in the margins of his book), who is known to have visited New York to play with Lad O'Beirne, Reavy, and others, so it seems likely the jig has a Donegal provenance. According to Bill Black [Irtrad], fiddler Pete Kelly, originally from County Galway, has laid claim to composing the tune which he called "The Shannonaires Jig," named for the Shannonaires Ceili Band, a children's group organized in NYC in the 1960's for a tour. Kelly lately plays with the Premier Ceili Band, with button accordion player Martin Mulhaire. However, the Donegal provenance appears to have more traction.

Sources for notated versions: Brendan Mulvihill (Baltimore, Md.) [Mulvihill]; Joe Burke [Bulmer & Sharpley].

Printed sources: Bulmer & Sharpley (Music from Ireland), 1974, vol. 2, No. 42. Mulvihill (1st Collection), 1986; No. 79, p. 81.

Recorded sources: Green Linnet SIF 1058, Matt Molloy (with Artie McGlynn and Sean Keane) - "Contentment is Wealth." See also listings at: Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources [], Alan Ng's Irishtune.info [1].


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