Key signature: Cmajor
Submitted on February 9th 2008 by Horse Badorties.
This tune has been added to 9 tunebooks.
Recordings of a tune by this name:
X: 1
T: Northside Kitchen
M: 6/8
L: 1/8
R: jig
K: Cmaj
|: E | DGG GAG |FDE {G}FDC | "Var -------------------------------------------------------------"DGG ABc | dgg ^fdc|
{c}BAB G^FG|FDE F2 d| {d} cAG ^FGA| BGG G2:|
|:A| {D}G2 g def|{d}cAF FGA|{D}G2 g def|"Var-------------------------------"~edc de^f|
"-------------------------------------------"{a}g^fg BAB| ~A2 G FGA| {c}BAB {d}cA^F|GAG G2:|
|"Var A3& A4" {c} BAB {e}cBc| def gdc|"Var B4 & B5" efc de^f| ~a3 B2 G|
Here's where I got this tune
Z: transcribed from version at Natalie MacMaster's website
Z: http://www.nataliemacmaster.com/recordings/sheetmusic.htm
# Posted on February 9th 2008 by Horse Badorties
I could be wrong... but is this not just a different version of this: http://www.thesession.org/tunes/display/808
# Posted on February 10th 2008 by creathana
Duplication ~
Yes!!!
# Posted on February 10th 2008 by ceolachan
This is not only a duplication, it's a direct note-for-note rip-off from Natalie MacMaster's website ~ definitely not considerate. Linking to another transcription in the 'comments' is OK, but to grab her transcription off of her site, right down to the ornaments and variations, is a bit tacky...
# Posted on February 10th 2008 by ceolachan
"Northside Kitchen" ~ who's ripped off who with this chimera of a jig?
Note-for-note, ornament-for-ornament, including variations ~ this transcription was made by Paul Stewart Cranford for the following:
"Brenda Stubbert's Collection of Fiddle Tunes"
Edited by Paul Stewart Cranford
Cranford Publications
ISBN: 0-9691181-4-7
http://www.cranfordpub.com/
http://www.cranfordpub.com/books/stubbert.htm
Page 41: "Norside Kitchen" ~ exactly as given here, including the variations... The name was coined by Paul. Here are the notes from that entry ~
This setting of an old Irish jig came from a long line (at least four generations of Northside Irish fiddlers) starting with Henry Fortune > Joe Confiant > Robert Stubbert > Brenda. Henry was gone long before my time and Old Joe was about 80 when I met him. Joe, Robert and Brenda all have slightly different variations (Joe varied almost all of his tunes with each repetition), so I included a couple of extra twists from those sources.
Although previously an untitled traditional jig, the first turn of 'Northside Kitchen' is closely related to another well-known Irish jig, 'The Cook in the Kitchen', so I came up with the above title. First appearing in 'O'Neill's Music of Ireland (1903), 'The Cook in the Kitchen' is a traditional 3-part jig which came from uillean piper James Early. ~ Paul Stewart Cranford
Chimera ~ I recognize both parts, the A-part from "The Cook in the Kitchen" and the B-part from another, but I haven't yet been able to shake the name out for that other jig... Maybe slainte or someone else will remember. I guess, because it is two parts thrown together over time and renamed by Paul Cranford, this one remains, despite it all...
# Posted on February 13th 2008 by ceolachan