Annotation:Captain John's Hornpipe

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X:1 T:Captain John's Hornpipe M:C L:1/8 R:Hornpipe S:Joyce - Old Irish Folk Music and Songs (1909) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:D fg | afge dfed | ceAA ABAG | FA df gfed | ceAA A2 fg | afge dfed | ceAA ABAG | FA df gedc | d dd d2 :| |: cd|eAAA fdfd | eAAA fdfd | gfed dcBA | GBBB B2AG | FAAA dcBA | cdef gedc | dfaf bgec | d2dd d2 :||



CAPTAIN JOHN'S HORNPIPE. AKA and see "Bonnie Annie (4)," "Brown's Hornpipe (2)," "Captain Corbett's Hornpipe," "Copenhagen Hornpipe (1)," "Duke of Brunswick's Hornpipe (The)," "Durham Hornpipe (2) (The)," "Jones's Hornpipe (3)," "Mairs Hornpipe," "Malthouse Hornpipe (The)," "Miss Spence's Hornpipe," "Quick's Hornpipe," "Princes Hornpipe," "Reel du Goglu," "Stephenson's Monument." Irish, English; Hornpipe. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. "Learned in childhood from fiddlers" (P.W. Joyce, 1827-1914), which would have been in County Limerick where Joyce was raised. The tune also was entered into the 1865 music manuscript of the Gunn family of County Fermanagh under the title "Duke of Brunswick's Hornpipe (The)," and as an untitled hornpipe in volume 1 (p. 245) of the large mid-19th century music manuscript collection of County Cork cleric and uilleann piper James Goodman. O'Neill prints the tune as "Captain Corbett's Hornpipe" in Waifs and Strays of Gaelic Melody (1922). See also the French-Canadian variant "Reel du Goglu" (Goblin's Reel). Researcher Conor Ward finds cognates in England and Ireland in the music manuscript collections of Stephen Grier (c. 1883, County Leitrim, as an untitled tune), George Spencer (c. 1831, Leeds, Yorkshire, as "Princes Hornpipe", and George H. Watson (Norfolk, c.1850-80 as "Mairs Hornpipe"). Yorkshire fiddlers Lawrence Leadley (1827-1897) and Joshua Burnett entered a version into thier music manuscript books as "Quick's Hornpipe." Versions of the tune were printed in Boston in Ryan's Mammoth Collection (1883) under the names "Bonnie Annie (4)," and "Copenhagen Hornpipe (1)." Researcher Conor Ward finds another version was entered into the c. 1909 music manuscript collection in the possession of Rev. Luke Donnellan (Oriel region, south Ulster) under the title "Miss Spence's Hornpipe."


Additional notes



Printed sources : - Corfield (Tunes from New Brunswick), 2024; p. 17. Joyce (Old Irish Folk Music and Songs), 1909; No. 51, p. 28. Miller & Perron (Irish Traditional Fiddle Music, vol. 1), 1977; No. 27. Miller & Perron (Irish Traditional Fiddle Music), 2nd Edition, 2006; p. 113.






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