Annotation:Phis fhliuch (An)
X:1 T:Pis Fliuc M:9/8 L:1/8 S:"From P. Carew's MS" B:Stanford/Petrie (1905, No. 1084) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:D FGA AFA =c3|BAG F/G/AG FED|FGA AFA d3| dfe dcB AFD|d3 f/g/af d2A|ddd f/a/af gec| f/g/af ged =c2A|BAG F/G/AF GED|FGA AFd AFd| AFd AFd GED|FGA AFd =c3|BAG F/G/AF GED| DFD DFD =c3|=c3 c2A GED|DFD DFD d3| dfe dcB AFD|d3 e/f/ge c2A|ddd f/g/af gec| aba ged =c2A|BAG F/G/AF GED||
PHIS FHLIUCH, AN (The Wet Pussy). AKA - "Pis fhluic." AKA and see “Boy in the Bush (The),” “Choice Wife (The),” “O'Farrell's Welcome to Limerick,” “Perfect Wife (The),” "Pir fliuc," “Virgin Mary.” Irish, Slip Jig. D Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). ABBCCDDEE. “The Choice Wife” is Willie Clancy’s polite translation of the obscene title. As “O'Farrell's Welcome to Limerick,” it is the composition of one O’Farrell, an Irish uilleann piper based in London who published three important collections of Irish music between 1797 and 1810, and the first to publish a tutor for the improved Irish instrument. The tune appears as "Pir fliuc" in collector George Petrie's manuscripts, collected from the manuscript collection of Patrick Carew, an uilleann piper from County Cork active in the first half of the 19th century. Researcher Nicholas Carolan of the Irish Traditional Music Archive records that P. Carew (or, as collector William Forde gave his name, 'Paddy Carey') was a musically literate professional uilleann piper living in Lag Lane, St Finbarre’s parish, Cork, in the mid-1840's. The area, notes Carolan, was near a military barracks, and was the location of shebeens (illicit bars) and brothels, notorious for poverty and crime. A number of harper Turlough O'Carolan's compositions were in his repertoire, and were the object of collectors. Breathnach (1996) says the tune was given a new lease on life when Seán Ó Riada leafed through Stanford/Petrie, playing occasional tunes which caught his eye for a group of traditional players.