Interactive Scores
Tunes of the Munster Pipers 101–200
100 Scores
Section:
Interactive Scores
Tagged:
Cork,
Kerry
- Miss Monaghan’s reel
- Betsy Baker
- Miss Johnson
- The wind that shakes the barley
- Reel
- Reel
- The lady’s cup of tea
- ‘What the devil ails you?’
- Miss Pierce’s reel
- The honey moon
- Marsáil an fhiadh .i. The deer’s march
- The Kerry lassie
- The quick reel
- Ellen Rosenburgh
- Johnny is gone to France
- The basket of oysters
- The yeomen’s reel
- The silver top
- ‘Tare the calico’
- The highlander’s kneebuckle
- The bride’s to bed
- Nelson’s hornpipe
- Fitzgerald’s hornpipe
- The Dublin hornpipe
- Fountain’s hornpipe. Miss Lacey’s
- Hanley’s hornpipe
- Hartney’s hornpipe. O’Lyne’s march
- The Newcastle hornpipe
- Sport & pleasure
- Spenser’s hornpipe
- Charlie is welcome home
- Dickey gossip
- The steamboat
- The jockey thro’ the fair
- The humours of Bandon
- The humours of Ballinanty
- Tino Tanto
- The roving siuler
- Hornpipe
- An stáicín eórnaidh
- The drunken gauger
- ‘Trim the velvet’
- Foxy Mary
- Chorus jig (Jackson’s)
- Green sleeves
- The turnpike way
- The yellow wattle
- Timothy Doyle
- Cnocán an Teampuill .i. Church hill
- Bean an leanna
- “A réir as mé ag machdnamh air bheartaibh an t-saoghail” .i. ‘B’fhearr leigean dóibh’
- Prince Eugene
- ‘Oh bhean an tighe’
- The wounded hussar
- Mary Neil
- Pilib an cheóig
- Pol ruaidh
- Peggy’s dream
- ‘“Open the door for three”’
- Slip jig
- Sir Raymond’s frolic
- Slip jig
- ‘Spatter the dew’
- The rocky road
- ‘Ride a mile’
- Sean bhean chríona an dranntáin
- ‘Kiss the widow’
- ‘Nothing in life can sadden us’
- Captain Rock
- Norah Daly
- The joys of wedlock
- An crúisgín lán
- My heart with love is breaking
- To Cashell I’ll go
- Jig
- Jig (Paddy McFadden Vick Phawdeen)
- Brísdín Bréide
- The sweet briar (Coigeálín Cobharthach)
- Seaghan stail
- The banks of the Suir
- Paddy Heagerty’s leather breeches
- The bungalow jig
- Úr chlann na mná ó’n sliabh
- ‘Hurry the jug’
- ‘Shéamuis a mhaoin’
- Humours of brandy (Jackson)
- Lady of the lake
- ‘Pass the joram’, or ‘Bunach, a bhuachaillidhe’
- “Caravat” jig
- Faraway wedding
- Jackson’s family
- Round the world for sport
- Tadhg an dá bheisd
- The green gown
- The green fields of Erin
- Cailleach an t-Súsa (the old)
- Cailleach an t-Súsa (the new)
- The darkgate girl
- Father Murphy’s quick step
- King Charles’s jig (old times). “Seantrúis”
Irish traditional music from the James Goodman manuscripts, Volume 1 / Dr Hugh Shields, ed.
Dublin: Irish Traditional Music Archive / Taisce Cheol Dúchais Éireann, 1998
James Goodman (1828-1896) from the Dingle area of West Kerry, a Canon of the Church of Ireland, Professor of Irish in Trinity College Dublin, and an accomplished performer on the Irish or uilleann pipes, compiled a highly important manuscript collection of Irish traditional music in the 1860s. Drawn to a great extent from the oral tradition of Munster, and partly from other manuscripts and printed sources, the collection has now been published for the first time.
This first volume of over 500 song airs and dance tunes, edited by Dr Hugh Shields from the manuscripts, contains all the melodies which Goodman himself noted down from the pipers and other performers of his native province, together with an essay on his life and career based on new research. These tunes provide musicians and scholars with a unique body of Irish music from the south-west region and give unrivalled insights into the traditional music and song of Irish-speaking pre-Famine Ireland.
Dr Hugh Shields (1929-2008), Fellow Emeritus of Trinity College Dublin and former Senior Lecturer in French in the college, collected and studied traditional music from the 1950s, especially in Ireland and with particular emphasis on Ulster. He published many articles and sound recordings on the subject, and his Shamrock, Rose and Thistle: Folk Singing in North Derry (1981) and Narrative Singing in Ireland: Lays, Ballads, Come-All-Yes and Other Songs (1993) are standard works.

