Annotation:Clay Pipe
X:1 T:Clay Pipe, The M:6/8 L:1/8 R:Jig B:Robbins Collection of 200 Jigs, Reels & Country Dances (NY, 1933, No. 151, p. 48) Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:Emin BGE TE3|BGE FGA|BGE TE3|AFD FGA| BGE TE3|BGE FGA|dcB ABG|TFDF AGF:| |:EGB efg|Tfed edB|EGB dBG|TFDF AGF| EGB efg|fed edB|dcB ABG|TFDF AGF:| |:Tg2e efe|geg bge|Tg2e efg|fdf agf| Tg2e efe|geg bge|dcB ABG|TFDF AGF:|]
CLAY PIPE. AKA and see "Fire in the Mountains (8)," "Monaghan Jig (The)." Irish, American, Canadian; Double Jig (6/8 time). Canada, Cape Breton. E Minor (Harding, Robbins): E Dorian (Cranford). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCC (Harding, Robbins): AA'BB'CC' (Cranford/Fitzgerald): AABBCCDD (Monaghan Jig). Three-turn versions were published in The Harding Collection and O'Neill's. According to Paul Cranford (1997), a four-turn setting first appeared in 1809 in Gow's 5th Collection (with a new variation by Mr. Sharpe of Hoddom). Sligo/New York fiddler Michael Coleman recorded a four-turn version with a different fourth part in the 1920's. Smollet Holden published a version as "Fire in the Mountains (8)" in his Collection of Favorite Irish Airs (London, c. 1841).