Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

The Sunset

reel

Key signature: Dmajor

Submitted on August 20th 2002 by gian marco.

This tune has been added to 145 tunebooks.

Also known as The Space Shuttle.

Recordings of a tune by this name:

Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

X: 1
T: Sunset, The
M: 4/4
L: 1/8
R: reel
K: Dmaj
ed|cF~F2 c2dc|BGBd (de)ed|=cdeg d2Ad|dfed (3Bcd ed|
cF~F2 c2dc|BG (3Bcd (de)ed|=cdeg fde^c|dfec d2:|
|ag|fdfg (ga)gf|e=cef g3a|fggf gfec|dfed (3Bcd ed|
cF~F2 c2dc|BG (3Bcd (de)ed|=cdeg fde^c|dfec d2ag|
=f=cfg (ga)gf|e=ce=f g3a|fggf gfec|dfed (3Bcd ed|
cF~F2 c2dc|BG (3Bcd (de)ed|=cdeg fde^c|dfec d2||

Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments
The Sunset sheetmusic
Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

The Sunset

Composers: Cathal McConnell and Seamus Quinn
Rhythm: SLOW reel
Source: Frankie Gavin & Mairead Ni Mhaonaigh - ( Altan )
Transcription: Gian Marco Pietrasanta

# Posted on August 20th 2002 by gian marco

One doesn't come across many tunes in ITM attributed to two composers - perhaps either one OR the other, but not both (although all trad tunes are, over time, the work of many hands and many ears).

Cathal McConnell plays this tune on whistle ('In The Tradition', Boys of the Lough) with bars 1-8 of the B-part simply repeated intstead of continuing to bars 9-16. I don't know whether that is the 'original' version or if he just simplified it slighlty to make it more whistle friendly. He'd be entitled to - he half wrote it, after all.


# Posted on August 21st 2002 by CreadurMawnOrganig

I was among the first people to hear this tune well over 20 years ago. Then it was provisionally known as "The Accompanist's Nightmare" due to its little quirks. However, i seem to recall McConnell threatening to call it "Mrs McConnell's Shakin' Ould House". I think they eventually found the best name.

# Posted on August 22nd 2002 by LongNote

I spent days/months of blood sweat and tears last year learning this one by ear.I would have pulled my hair out if I wasn,t already bold.But it was worth it in the end!

# Posted on August 25th 2002 by Christopher Reynolds

Ballad or reel?

I've never heard Sunset played by anyone, but was recently told that it is to be played like a ballad. I see that it's listed here as a "slow reel". (What's the diff between a ballad and slow reel?)Anybody got any comments to this?

# Posted on July 24th 2003 by sgbenne

I think what your pal was getting at is that this tune has a lyrical quality, not to be hurried along. Everyone I've heard play it (including Cathal) keeps the momentum and beat going, though, so it's not as loose as a song or air.

To me, slow reels are a category unto themselves--reels in meter, and with a certain degree of pulse, but spread out more leisurely than typical session speed. The point is to let them flow, rather than push or drive them. The Sunset is a great tune for this.

# Posted on July 24th 2003 by Will Harmon

Half-holing

This tune is probably my favorite tune for flute that I play. I love the way it has those F naturals in the second part. They are quite hard to play, though. Does anyone have any suggestions about how to half hole so as to get a better sound?

# Posted on August 21st 2004 by Sam2

Half-holing

www.chiffandfipple.com is a great place to see many different fingering methods. Sam2, you were talking about playing it on a flute. I'm sure it varies instrument to instrument. I have to assume you're talking about something keyless.

Anyhow, at a glance, any sideways movement that low on the instrument means your whole hand will have to shift that much more. As I said it depends on the instrument, but my High D Kildare Susato pennywhistle did a good and comfortable F natural when I covered the bottom section of the hole in question. So I just extended my ring finger down a bit instead of shift my hand away from the instrument.

If you are talking about a keyless flute, I'm not sure if you finger with the mid parts of you fingers, as you might do on a low whistle, or what.

Good luck.

# Posted on June 21st 2005 by songs4pints

Half-holing

ok.... correction.... I meant my middle-finger..... not ring finger

# Posted on June 21st 2005 by songs4pints

The wind beneath my fingers ~

Classic approach, to slide into the accidental, as from E to =F, some folks are pullers and some are pushers, as far as musculature, the 'pull', that is pulling/curling the finger top toward the palm and creating the 'half-hole', creates the highest tension, while the 'push' or straightening of the finger until the front of it angles upto open the hole partially creates the least tension and is in my opinion the better for it. Once you've achieved the right tone for your instrument, either way, but you know my preference, then you can drop the finger to the hole in whichever style you choose, worth practice either way, sliding or not.

On my preference, with winds of all types, the worst habit is to play 'claw fashion', that is with the fingers curled and attempting to cover the holes of an open system instrument with your finter tips, literally. If you shake your hands out and just allow your fingers to go limp, take note, unless you've something wrong, they don't curl and are almost flat. This is you 'relaxed state' and what you should try to emulate with your playing, avoiding tension at all cost. Tension will literally cramp your style, and I've known a few people where it was serious enough that they had to give up their music because of either pain or loss of control. Don't play with your finger tips, play with the pad of the fingers, like the pad in keyed flutes, finger relatively flat and 'relaxed'... With all holes covered, whatever the woodwind, someone should be easily able to pull the instrument from your hands with little effort. If you are clinching it, you are holding it too tightly and need to ease up.

# Posted on June 22nd 2005 by ceolachan

It is possible to do either 'push forward' or 'pull back' with or without tension, and it will also depend on the finger or the shape and structure of your hand. Find the 'easiest' and most 'relaxed' way for you...

# Posted on June 22nd 2005 by ceolachan

Dervish-Sunset-Chord

Anyone know the chord at the start of the 2nd part of 'The Sunset' by Dervish? it should be a 'D' but the bass seems to be playing a B flat or something giving it a nice edge ....

# Posted on June 12th 2006 by Frulator

I was taught this tune by Cathal many years ago at Girvan Folk Festival where The Boys Of The Lough were regularly booked.

Twenty five years on and I have rarely heard a decent accompanyment for the tune.

Well done for posting the thread and getting some chords sorted out for accompanyists.

Oh, by the way, I play it on an eight key flute.

Regards........curlew.

# Posted on July 10th 2007 by curlew

Chords

Each group represents a line of music (see sheetmusic)

first 2 notes pickup then:

change every 2 beats exept when mentioned:
f#minor, AMajor/ GMajor, CMajor/ CMajor, GMajor/ DMajor, DMajor

/f#minor, AMajor/ GMajor, CMajor/ CMajor for 3 beats then AMajor for 1 beat/ DMajor, DMajor/

pick up 2 notes then:
DMajor, DMajor/ CMajor, AMajor/ DMajor, AMajor/ DMajor, DMajor/

f#minor, AMajor/ GMajor, CMajor/ CMajor, AMajor/ DMajor, DMajor/

FMajor, FMajor/ CMajor, AMajor/ DMajor, DMajor/ DMajor, DMajor/

f#minor, AMajor/ GMajor, CMajor/ CMajor, GMajor/ DMajor, DMajor

Someone mentioned that they like Aminor instead of Major in the FMajor section - but I still prefer the brightness of A Major.

# Posted on July 11th 2007 by morning star

Chords to The Sunset

| F#m | G Em | C G | D |
| F#m | G Em | C DA |DA D:|
|: D | C G/B | D A | G D |
| F#m | G Em | C DA|DA D|
|: F | C G/B | D A | G D |
| F#m | G Em | C DA|DA D|

# Posted on January 16th 2008 by gian marco

Chords

This tune was driving me nuts for a while, because I couldn't figured out the harmony. Now the rescue came: a friend of mine, a fiddle player with a perfect pitch is staying over today. I asked him to write the precise chords of the Altan version of the tune, here it is:

|F#m|G Em|C G/B|D Em7|
F#m| G Em|C G/B-A/C#|D A/E D| x2
D | Am G| D/F# A/E | D Em |
F#m | G Em| C G/B-A/C#| D A/E D|
F | C G/B | D G/E | D Em |
F#m | G Em| C G/B-A/C#| D A/E D|

Not many people figured out the Amin in the second part. I played it, it's definitely there. Also the G/B between C and A/C# is unexpected, and so is G/E. The rest is what you guys have already posted.

# Posted on December 23rd 2010 by obzabor

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