Annotation:Get Up Old Woman and Shake Yourself
X:1 T:Get Up Old Woman and Shake Yourself M:6/8 L:1/8 R:Single Jig S:O'Neill - Dance Music of Ireland: 1001 Gems (1907), No. 394 Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:Emin E/F/|G2B BAB|G2E E2G|F2A AFA|F2D DEF| G2B BAB|def gfe|dcB BAB|G2E E2:| |:B/c/|d2B BAB|d2B ABc|d2B BAB|G2E E2 B/c/| d2B BAB|def gfe|dcB BAB|G2E E2:||
GET UP OLD WOMAN AND SHAKE YOURSELF (Eirig A Sean Bean's Corraig Tu Fein). AKA and see "Captain Thornton's Delight," "Conor O'Sullivan's Vision," "Donogh O'Sullivan's Reply," "Go to the Devil and Shake Yourself (3)," "Growling Old Woman," "Irish Whim (1)," "Last Night Amid Dreams," "O'Tuomy's Drinking Song," "O'Tuomy's Carousal," "Tickle Her Leg (with the Barley Straw," "When Sick is it Tea You Want?" Irish, Single Jig or Slide (12/8 time). E Minor. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB (O'Neill/Krassen): AABB (O'Neill/Krassen, 1915 & 1001). Not "Go to the Devil and Shake Yourself" despite being so miss-named in Haverty's Three Hundred Irish Airs (New York, 1858) and Alday's Pocket Volume of Airs, Duets, Songs, Marches, etc. (Dublin, 1800). The jig is one of the earliest tunes compiler Francis O'Neill remembered hearing from his boyhood in County Cork. It is often played as a slide in County Kerry and Cork.