Annotation:Miss Birmingham's Hornpipe

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X:1 T:Miss Birmingham’s Hornpipe M:C L:1/8 R:Hornpipe B:James Goodman music manuscript collection (County Cork, mid-19th century, Book 2, p. 181) F: http://goodman.itma.ie/volume-two#?c=0&m=0&s=0&cv=184&z=-172.5422%2C730.0393%2C9906.4379%2C3446.5021 F:at Trinity College Dublin / Irish Traditional Music Archive goodman.itma.ie Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:G D2|G2GF GBdB|cBcd efge|dBGB AGFG|A2 D2 D3A| G2 GF GBdB|cBcd efge|dgec BGAF|G2G2G2|| Bc|d2 Bd (Bd)(Bd)|e2 (ce) (ce)(ce)|d2 (Bd) (Bd)(Bd)|A2 (FA) (FA)(FA)| d2 (Bd) (Bd)(Bd)|e2 (ce) (ce)(ce)|egec BGAF|G2G2G2||



MISS BIRMINGHAM'S HORNPIPE. AKA and see "Gipsy Hornpipe (1)," "Lakeside Road (The)," "Shippool Castle Hornpipe," "Worcester Hornpipe" Irish, Hornpipe (whole time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. "Miss Birmingham's Hornpipe" was entered into Book 2 (p. 181)[1] of the large mid-19th century music manuscript collection of County Cork cleric and uilleann piper, Canon wikipedia:James_Goodman_(musicologist). Goodman researchers Hugh and Lisa Shields find the tune cognate with O'Neill's "Lakeside Road (The)" and P.W. Joyce's "Gipsy Hornpipe (1)"[2]. See note for "annotation:Worcester Hornpipe" for remarks on this tune family.


Additional notes
Source for notated version : - James Goodman (1828-1896) obtained the hornpipe from the music manuscript collections of Seán Ó Dálaigh (John O'Daly, 1800-1878), the great nineteenth-century scribe; compiler and collector of manuscripts; editor; anthologist; publisher of Gaelic verse and stories and founder of societies for the publication of Gaelic literature, best-known today for his volume Poets and Poetry of Munster (1849). O’Daly was born in the Sliabh gCua area of west Waterford and was, like Goodman, a teacher of Irish.

Printed sources : - s






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