Annotation:Martin O'Connor's
X:1 T:Martin O'Connor's M:2/4 L:1/16 R:Polka D:Mulligan LUN 27, Martin O'Connor - "The Connaughtman's D:Rambles" (1979, 3rd tune of 'Polkas', track 3) K:D "D"F2E2 E2DE|"D"F2D2 D3E|"A7"F2E2 E2A2|"Bm"d2B2 B4|"A7"F2E2 E2DE|"D"F2D2 D3E|"Bm"F2D2"A"d2c2|"G"B6z2:| |:"D"A2d2 d3e|"A7"f2e2 e3f|"Bm"d3e d2B2|"G"B2A2 "A7"A4|"D"A2d2 d3e|"A7"f2e2 e3f|"Bm"d3e "A7"c2A2|"G"B6z2:|
MARTIN O'CONNOR'S. AKA and see "Allistrum's," "MacAlisdrum's March." Irish, Polka (2/4 time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. "Martin O'Connors" is the name given to the tune from the influential 1979 recording by accordion player Martin O'Connor, who recorded untitled as the last tune in a set of polkas. It is an adaptation of the the first two strains of a rather ancient triple-time melody called "MacAlisdrum's March, among other titles and variant spellings. Belfast musician and collector Edward Bunting printed the tune in his Ancient Music of Ireland (1840) as "McDonnell's March".