Annotation:Tie the Bonnet
X:1 T:Tie the Bonnet M:C| L:1/8 R:Reel S:O’Neill’s Dance Music of Ireland. 1001 Gems, 1907, no. 606 Z:François-Emmanuel de Wasseige N:The same tune has an A major key – which doesn’t work – in O'Neill's Music of N:Ireland. 1850 Melodies, 1903, p. 252, no. 1351 K:Ador A2(Ag) fdec|A2(Ac) BGGB|A2(Ag) fdef|gfge dBGB:| A2(af) gfed|cAeA cAce|a2(af) gfef|gfge dBGB| a2(af) gfed|cAeA cAce|afge fdef|gfge dBGB|]
TIE THE BONNET ("Neasg An Biread" or "Ceangal an Boinead"). AKA and see "The Cottage in the Grove [2]," "Down with the Mail," "The Faraway Wedding [1]," "The Gravelled Walks to Granny," "The Highland Man that Kissed his Grannie [1]," "In and Out (of) the Harbour," "Jenny Lace your Tight," "Jenny Tie your Bonnet," "Lassie(s) tie your Bonnet(s)," "Lizzie's Bonnet," "The Rambler's Rest," "Upstairs in a Tent [2]." Irish, Reel (cut time). A Mixolydian (O'Neill/1903): A Dorian (O'Neill/1909). Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB (O'Neill/1850): AABB (Mulvihill, O'Neill/Krassen). “Gravel Walks (to Granny)” is a related tune. The first strain is similar to that of the old English reel "Haud the Lass Till I Come at Her" but the second strains differ.