Annotation:Molly Brallaghan (1)

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MOLLY BRALLAGHAN [1]. AKA and see "Bold Sportsman (The)," "Captain Rock(e's) [1]," "Carpenter's March (The)," "Charming Molly Brannigan," "Cossey's Jig," "Copey's Jigg," "Grand Conversation of Napoleon (The)," "Greenfields of America (1) (The)," "Jimmy O'Brien's Jig," "Maid in the Meadow (1)," "McKenna's Dream," "Miss Wedderburn's Reel (1)," "Napoleon's Farewell to Paris," "Old Mother Flanagan" (Pa.), "Pretty Molly/Judy/Miss Brallaghan/Brannigan," "Purtie Molly Brallaghan," "Pratie Apples," "Under the Rose." Irish, Reel. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. A large tune family which apparently began with a jig, first printed in Jackson's Celebrated Tunes (1774) under the title "Cossey's Jig" (see also "Stone in the Field (2)"). Reel time settings seem to stem from earlier 6/8 versions. At some point (latter 19th century?) words were set to the tune; the famous Irish tenor John McCormack recorded the song "Charming Molly Brannigan" on January 3, 1913, at the Victor studios in Camden, New Jersey, with Spencer Clay at the piano. The original 78 RPM was reissued by Murray Hill, 920344). Words to the tune begin:

Man did you ever hear of purty Molly Brannigan?
She stole away my heart and I'll never be a man again.
There's not a spot on my hide will another summer tan again,
Since Molly's gone and left me all alone for to die.
Dee idle diddley dootle [etc]

There's a hole in my heart you could easy round a turnip in,''[etc]
As big as any pavin' stone from Dublin to the Divil's lin.''[etc]
If she chose to take another sure she might have left mine back again,''[etc]
And not to leave me here all alone for to die.''[etc]
Dee howdle duddley dootle [etc][etc]

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Roche (Collection of Traditional Irish Music, vol. 1), 1982, vol. 1; No. 157, p. 62.

Recorded sources: Claddagh 4CC 32, Willie Clancy - "The Pipering of Willie Clancy, vol. 1" (1980. Appears as "Pretty Molly Brannigan"). Topic TSCD 602, K. Scanlon - "Irish Dance Music" (1995. A reissue of the 1929 original recorded as the 3rd tune in a medley under the title "Molly Brannigan").

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




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