Annotation:Tarraing go caoin an sgeol

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X:1 T:Consider the Story M:9/8 L:Air R:Air Q:"Quick and Fiercely" B:Bunting – Ancient Music of Ireland (1840, No. 74, p. 54) Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:Dmin "Och"[D3F3A3] "hone"D6|(Dd).d (de)^.c .d2.d|(=cd).e .f2.d (de).c| {de}(f>g).f (fe).d (dc).A|1 {A}(GF).F (.E2F) (GF).E:|2 {A}(GF).F (.E2F) (GF).E|| "Och"[F3c3]"hone"[A6]|{A}(GED) (.D2.D .D2.D)|(G>AG) .G2.G (AcA)| {de}(f>gf) (fed).c2.A|{A}(GFF) .E2."Play over again at pleasure"F (GFE)||



TARRAING GO CAOIN AN SGEOL (Consider the story well). AKA and see "Bunter's Delight (The)," "Plancam Peirbhig." Irish, Air (9/8 time). D Minor/Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). One part. Grattan Flood (History of Irish Music) finds the tune published by Playford in 1713 and by B. Cooke in 1795, and states it was popular in England under the title "Bunter's Delight (The)." It is a variant of "Plancam Peirbhig," notes O'Sullivan (1983), which appears in Poets and Poetry of Munster, volume I, pp. 92-93. The song "Tarraing go caoin an sgeol" was printed in O'Daly's Reliques of Jacobite Poetry (1844, pp. 84-89)


Additional notes
Source for notated version : - the melody was noted by the Belfast musician and collector Edward Bunting (1773-1843) at Tipperary in 1797.

Printed sources : - Bunting (The Ancient Music of Ireland), 1840; p. 54. O'Sullivan/Bunting, 1983; No. 74, pp. 116-117.






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