Annotation:Rose in the Garden (1) (The)
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ROSE IN THE GARDEN [1] ("Ros annsa n-garad, An" or "Ros san garrda"). AKA and see "Connaught Girl (The)," "Flowery Garden (The)," “A Thaidhg a Rún,” “Jackson's Flowery Garden,” "Primrose Girl (1)," “Smuggler's Reel (The).” Irish, Reel (cut time). A Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (O'Neill/1850, 1001 & 1915): AA'BB' (O'Neill/Krassen). A Cape Breton version of the tune (in ‘A’ Major) goes by the titles “Put Me in the Big Chest” and “Big Coffin Reel”), and William Bradbury Ryan's "Smuggler's Reel (The)" is a related tune. Paul de Grae notes similarities in the first strain with O'Neill's "Irish Hautboy (The)." A version of the reel as "[[Flowery Garden (The)" (with the alternate title "Connaught Girl (The)" is contained in the c. 1909 music manuscript collection of curate and fiddler biography:Rev. Luke Donnellan (1878-1952), Oriel region, south Ulster[1]
"Rose in the Garden (1)" was recorded in New York in November, 1917, by accordion player Peter J. Conlon.
|f_source_for_notated_version=Early [O'Neill]. County Leitrim-born Sergeant James Early (c. 1840-1914) was an uilleann piper, and, like O'Neill, a member of both the Chicago Police and the Chicago Irish Music Club; Rev. Luke Donnellan music manuscript collection [O'Connor].
|f_printed_sources=Breathnach (Ceol Rince na hÉireann vol. II), 1976; No. 150. O'Connor (The Rose in the Gap), 2018; No. 208, p. 209 (as "Flowery Garden"). O'Neill (O’Neill’s Irish Music), 1915; No. 234, p. 124. O'Neill (Krassen), 1976; p. 116. O'Neill (Music of Ireland: 1850 Melodies), 1903; No. 1314, p. 246. O'Neill (Dance Music of Ireland: 1001 Gems), 1907; No. 576, p. 106. Ryan’s Mammoth Collection, 1883; p. 79 (as "Smuggler's Reel").
|f_recorded_sources=Columbia 33032-F (78 RPM), Peter J. Conlon (1917). Oldtime Records OTR 104 & 105, "The Genius of Peter Conlon" (2012).
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- ↑ Donnellan researcher Gerry O'Connor came to believe the ms. is not the work of the curate but rather was originally compiled by an unknown but able fiddler over the course of a playing lifetime, probably in the late 19th century. The ms. later came into the possession of Donnellan, who was also a fiddler.