Annotation:Dowd's Favorite (1)
X:1 T:Dowd's Favorite M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel K:Gmin DGGA B2BF | D~F3 CFA,F | DGGA BABd | (3cBA FA BGAF | DGGA BAGB | A~F3 DFCF | DGGA BABd | cAfc BGGA || B2 dB FBdB | ~B3d cAFA | BABd fdBd | cAFA BGGA | B2 dB FBdB | BdBd cAFA | GBAc Bbag | fdcA BGBd || g~d3 gbag | f~c3 fgaf | gddc dbag | fdcd BG G2 | (3gag fa gbag | (3fgf =eg fdcA |GBAc Bbag | fd^cd BG G2 ||
DOWD'S FAVORITE. AKA - "Dowd's Reel," "O'Dowd's Favourite," "O'Dowd's Reel (1)." AKA and see "Braes of Bushbie (1)." Irish, Reel. G Aeolian (Gm) ('A' and 'C' parts) & B Flat Major ('B' part) [Brody, Vallely]. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCC (Brody): ABC (Miller & Perron, Vallely): ABCD (Miller & Perron/2006). The melody is a setting of the Scottish march/strathspey "The Braes of Bushbie," perhaps composed by John Bowie and appearing in his 1789 Collection. It was said to be a favorite of the great Scots fiddler Niel Gow's. Reworked as "O'Dowd's Favourite" (often called "Dowd's Favorite") The melody was famously recorded under the "O'Dowd's Favourite" title by County Sligo fiddler Michael Coleman (1891-1945) in 1922 in New York (where he had emigrated in 1914). The tune was paired with "Star on Munster" and both were played in G dorian. Coleman himself probably obtained the melody from an older Sligo fiddler named John O'Dowd (uncle of Joe O'Dowd {1913-1987}), who also had emigrated to New York from Coleman's district and where Coleman heard him play. He was a member of a musical family from Gurteen that included fiddler Joe O'Dowd (1914-1987) and his son Séamus, a fiddler and guitarist with the group Dervish. Reg Hall (1995) says Dowd is reputed to have been the composer of the melody, and that he was one of Coleman's models, if not one of his teachers. Hall (1995) elsewhere says New York fiddler Lad O'Beirne, son of Philip O'Beirne from Bunninadan, County Sligo, attributed Michael Coleman's variation sets of "Bonnie Kate (1)" to John Dowd.
See also the related tunes "Rover (4) (The)," "Dublin Lasses (2)," "Murtough Molloy/Mulloy" and "Tee Ree Reel;" they have a similar sequence in the first part. "Curragh Races (1)" and "Maid in the Cherry Tree (3) (The)" are also generally related, and like "Dowd's Favorite," shift to the relative major in the second part. Interestingly, for a tune with Scottish origins adapted by Irish musicians as a reel, it has returned to a mostly-Scottish tradition on Cape Breton, where it has entered the repertoire through the playing of fiddlers such as Johnny Wilmot (1916-1993) who was thoroughly versed in both Cape Breton Scottish and Irish music styles. Randy Miller (2006) added a 4th part, "based on the original strathspey," to the usual 3-part version.
See also the related reels "Flowers in May (The)," "Ladies Pantaloons (The)," "Scotch Hunt (The)," and compare with Reb. Like Donnellan's "Miss Cunningham's Reel."
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