Annotation:Queen of the Rushes (1)
X:1 T:Queen of the Rushes [1] R:double jig M:6/8 L:1/8 Z:Paul de Grae K:Dmix AG ||: F2 D DAF | G2 E EAG | F2 D DAF | GED DAG | F2 D DAF | GEE EFG | ABA GEA |1 DED DAG :|| 2 DED D2 B | ||: c2 A Bcd | ecA AGE | d2 e fed | e^cA A2 B | cBA Bcd | ecA AGE | FEF GEA |1 DED D2 B :|| 2 DED DFG | ||: A2 A dAF | AFA dAF | G2 G EFE | cBc EFG | A2 A dAF | AFA dAG | FEF GEA |1 DED DFG :|| 2 DED D3||
QUEEN OF THE RUSHES [1], THE (Banríon na Luachra). AKA and see “Battering Ram (2) (The),” “Ladies of the Ballroom (The) (A Connaught Jigg)” {Petrie}, “Ladies March to the Ball-Room (The).” Irish, Double Jig. D Major (Mulvihill): D Mixolydian (Breathnach): G Major (Sullivan). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABBCC. The 'low' version (see second version, below). “Battering Ram (2) (The)” is a closely related melody. “Queen of the Rushes” was one of the first tunes recorded by the Ballinakill Céilí Band (East Galway) for Parlophone of London in July 1930 (the band’s founding members were Anna Rafferty, Stephen Maloney, Tommy Whelan, Tommy Whyte, Jerry Maloney). Similarities to “Chorus Jig (3)” and “Chorus Jig (4),” and to the very large family of tunes that includes: “Bliven’s Favorite,” “Butchers of Bristol (1) (The)”, “By Your Leave Larry Grogan,” “Coppers and Brass (2),” “County Limerick Buckhunt,” “Finerty's Frolic,” “Greensleeves (3),” “Hartigan's Fancy,” “Humors of Ennistymon (1) (The),” “Humors of Milltown (2) (The),” “Larry Grogan (1),” “Lasses of Melrose (The),” “Lasses of Melross,” “Little Fanny's Fancy,” “Lynn's Favourite,” “Lynny's Favourite,” “Pingneacha Rua agus Pras,” “Waves of Tramore (The),” “Willie Clancy's.” The first strain of “Queen of the Rushes [1]” is similar to, and perhaps cognate with, the first strain of Canon James Goodman’s “Farewell to the Highlands (2).”