Annotation:Dillon Brown's Fancy (2)
X:1 T:Dillon Brown T:Dillon Brown's Fancy [2] T:Laington's B:Traditional Irish Guitar, Paul de Grae Z:Transcribed by Paul de Grae R:reel M:4/4 L:1/8 K:A cB|AFEF A3 e|fece fgaf|e2 ce afec|BAFA BdcB| AFEF A2 ce|fece fgaf|(3efe ce afec|BdcB A2 cB|| AFEF A3 e|fecf fgaf|ec=c^c afec|afec BdcB| AFEF A=c^ce|fece faaf|(3efe ce afec|BcdB A2 ed|| ceAe ceAc|BE (3EFE EGBd|cAAG Acec|BABc dcBd| (3cdc Ac (3cdc Ac|B2 GB EBGB|ABce fefa|ecc=c ^cdcB|| AFEF A4||
DILLON BROWN'S FANCY [2] (Diolún de Brún). AKA - "Dillon Brown." AKA and see "Laington's Reel," "Langton's Favorite," "Miss Laington's." Irish, Reel. A Major. Standard or ADae (Cape Breton) tunings (fiddle). AABB. Appears not to be related to version #1. Perlman (1996) presents his set as "Irish with Cape Breton 'twists'." The tune is sometimes played in 'raised bass' tuning on Cape Breton island; the late fiddler Jerry Holland (1955-2009), for one, recorded it this way (he learned it as a teenager, in Boston), and indeed, the tune has some currency among modern Cape Breton fiddlers. Paul Stewart Cranford believes the tune entered Cape Breton repertory through the recordings of Sean Maguire. The alternate title, "Langton's Favorite" comes from the Paddy Killoran 78 RPM recording of 1939 (in a classic medley, preceded by "Mason's Apron (The)"). The tune was recorded by New York fiddler Paddy Reynolds and accordion player Charlie Mulvihill in 1971 (see Rego Records album Sweet and Traditional).