Bank of Turf (2) (The)
<abc float="left">
X: 1
T: Bank of Turf [HP]
T: M\'ointe\'an
S: B.Breathnach:"Ceol Rince na hEireann" III/209
Z: B.Black
L: 1/8
M: 4/4
R: hornpipe
K: G
(3DEF|G2 GF GABc|(3dcB cA GBAG|EF (3FGE FEDE|F2 fe dcAF|
G2 (3AGF GABc|(3dcB cA GBAG|EF (3gfe dcAF|(3ABA G2 G2 :|
Bc|dg g2 g3a|bg g2 gbag|f2 dc d2 dc|(3Bcd BG (3ABc AF|
Gg g2 dg g2|bg g2 gbag|f2 dc dAFG|(3ABA G2 G2 :|
(3DEF|G2 GA B3c|d2 GF G2 AB/c/|d2 G2 (3cdc Bc|AD (3FED dcAF|
GFGA B3c|(3dcB cA GBAG|F2 g/f/e/d/ cAFD|(3ABA G2 G2 :|
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BANK OF TURF [2], THE (An Móinteán). AKA and see "The Concertina Hornpipe," "The Blacksmith's Charm." Irish, Hornpipe. G Major. Standard tuning. AABBCC. Breathnach (1985) says the tune is related to O'Neill's "The Groves." The alternate titles "Concertina Hornpipe" and "Blacksmithe's Charm" come from fiddler John Kelly Sr. (Dublin). Sean Keane relates the story of the naming of the tune, when the late Kerry fiddler Denis Murphy was working in a bog one day, when "who should cycle by but the famous Pádraig Ó Caoimh. The music suddenly struck Pádraig but the only means to hand on which to notate the resulting tune was the bank of turf." O'Keeffe scratched the tune into the peat, at the title was born.
Source for notated version: fiddler Seán Keane (Ireland) [Breathnach].
Printed source: Breathnach (CRÉ III), 1985; No. 209, pg. 96. Claddagh
Recorded source: Claddagh CC17, Seán Keane - "Gusty's Frolics" (1975). Topic Records, John Kelly Sr. (1975. appears as "The Blacksmith's Charm").
See also listing at:
Alan Ng's Irishtune.info [1]
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