Key signature: Amajor
Submitted on December 23rd 2003 by jdicarlo.
This tune has been added to 71 tunebooks.
Recordings of a tune by this name:
X: 1
T: Larry Get Out Of The Bin
M: 4/4
L: 1/8
R: reel
K: Amaj
EAB|: cA~A2 FAEf | ecfe cAFE | cA~A2 FAEC | EFAB ~A3B |
cA~A2 FAEf | ecfe cAFE | BccA FAEC | EFAB ~A3c |
GA~A2 ecfa | gecA GAGE | GA~A2 ecAE | EFAB ~A3c |
GA~A2 ecfa | gecA GAGE | GA~A2 ecAE | EFAB ABcd |
|: eAAG ~A2Gc | fAAG ~A2GA | FGAB dcAE | FAdF GBec |
eAAG ~A2Gc | fAAG ~A2GA | FGAB dcAE | FABc A2z2 :|
Larry
This tune was recorded in C - played on an F whistle wih A major "fingers".
# Posted on December 23rd 2003 by jdicarlo
I believe this was actually played in G major as I received the dots from Sarah Allen herself and it was written in G. I think its a G whistle although I could be wrong. Its much easier to play with "G" fingers as well. I'll see if I still have it somewhere and post it.
# Posted on January 3rd 2007 by michael_coleman
I'm a convert to G
I have to admit that after transcribing this tune in A and working to play it for dances, I gave up and switched to G where it just feels so much better. It's a fantastic tune for dancing but you need the groove and the speed, and the gymnastics involved in playing in A simply ruin the zen of the tune for me.
I'm happy to hear that herself Sarah thinks of it as a G tune. I imagine Brian could have played the tune on a G whistle with G fingers and had it come out in C as it is on the recording.
# Posted on December 8th 2008 by jdicarlo
Yeah, probably that way... It wouldn't surprise me if it was played in A on an F flute, though.
# Posted on August 9th 2009 by JosephC
It's a G flute- Another of Pat Olwell's bamboo flutes.
# Posted on February 4th 2010 by JosephC