Key signature: Dmajor
Submitted on March 11th 2003 by lefthander al.
This tune has been added to 50 tunebooks.
Also known as Donegal Lass, The Donegal Lassies.
Recordings of a tune by this name:
X: 1
T: Donegal Lass, The
M: 6/8
L: 1/8
R: jig
K: Dmaj
Ace aed|edB A3|GBd G3|FAd F3|
Ace aed|cdB A2a|aed cdB|ABG A3:|
GBd G3|FAd F3|e2e ecA|e2e ecA|
GBd G3|FAd F2a|aed cdB|ABG A3:|
The Donegal Lass
A lively jig from Brian Finnegan,flute player from Armagh.Kathryn Tickell plays it on her "Signs" cd.
# Posted on March 11th 2003 by lefthander al
Tune's in A
..with G's natural in 3rd, 9th and 13th bars. Not Dmaj.
# Posted on May 14th 2003 by pchaffee
...or Amix
Since there are more Gnats than G#s, it might be better to say it's in Amix, with G#s in bars 8 and 16. Amix is just a mode of D major, so lefthander wasn't wrong about the key.
# Posted on May 14th 2003 by Dow
Just a Minute--
First, by an unqualified "A" I do mean some mode of A or other, not necessarily Amaj--but Amaj definitely could be used except for the 3rd and fourth bars in the A part.
Second, Amix is not a mode of Dmaj. The chords that work with the tune tell you what mode you're in. If you told an accompaniest "D major" when you went into this tune, it would sound way wrong. I don't see any way this tune could be called Dmaj
# Posted on May 16th 2003 by pchaffee
Okay,
1) I was quoting Amix as an *alternative* to Amaj for writing this tune in sheetmusic format. (By the way I think it would be more suitable to write it in Amix, if only because it involves writing less accidentals in, but it really doesn't matter - A's fine too).
2) The accepted terminology is that if you say "unqualified A", you mean "A major" - that's just a musical fact.
3) Amix *is* a mode of the D major scale - actually the 5th mode. It is the same key signature (2#'s) and is therefore more closely related to D major than it is to A major, which is a completely different key with 3#'s.
4) The chords that work with Amix tunes are exactly the same chords as work with D major tunes (A, Bm, D, Em, F#m, G) it's just that a guitarist would use them in a different order. In a D major tune, 99% of the time you'll start on a chord of D. In an Amix tune, 99% of the time you'll start on a chord of A.
5) The chords that work for Amaj tunes are a similar but different set (A, Bm, C#m, D, E, F#m).
"Key" is a different thing from "mode". Key has to do with how many sharps or flats you've got in the key signature. Modes have to do with what chord you start on.
Dow
# Posted on May 16th 2003 by Dow
Okay on your 1 and 2.
Still disagree about the rest tho. Right, so a tune in Amix will share some chords in common with a tune in Dmaj. I suppose they're related in some technical sense (it is the "5th mode")--i don't know. I don't see how that makes this tune Dmaj rather than A or Amix.Amix also shares the same notes (as you point out--two sharps) with Dmaj, but that doesn't make it Dmaj.
I still say that if you tell your guitar or piano player "D!" when you play this tune, they'll get it all wrong. That sounds like good enough reason to say this tune is definitely not in D. You sound like you know your music theory--the facts you present don't seem to me to make a D tune out of this, however. Not meaning to be contentious here, just knowing what i hear, and I stand by my correction.
# Posted on May 16th 2003 by pchaffee
First of all, I've never said that it would be okay to shout "D major" to the guitarist. That would be the *right key* (2#'s), but the *wrong mode*. If you're going to call anything, it would be "A", of course, because that's you're first chord, and the fundamental of your mode (which is Amix). However, it is a bit misleading to tell the guitarist beforehand that "this tune is in A major", because he or she would start using chords of A, D and E, which would be the wrong key. You'd want your main chords to be A, D and G or Em - which are the main chords you'd use to back Amix tunes. If you put these in a different order with the D first - you get D, G, Em and A. It's no coincidence that these are the chords you'd use to back D major tunes, because Amix and Dmaj are the same key. Key is about how many sharps or flats are in the scale. It has nothing to do with letters of the alphabet.
So you're right to say that if you shout "D", the backer will get it all wrong. But my point is that (s)he'll be playing the right chords, but in the wrong order. When this problem crops up and people post tunes in the right key but the wrong mode, Jeremy tends to leave it be because it's the number of sharps and flats that's the important thing. The modes within each key are often interchangeable and ambiguous (not in this case tho').
Also, you said 'by an unqualified "A" I do mean some mode of A or other'. The whole point to what I'm saying is that Amix is *not* a mode of A, it just so happens that both scales start on the same note. I'm going to stop now because I know that some people on this site hate it when people go on about theory. I don't want to make myself unpopular
# Posted on May 17th 2003 by Dow
The Donegal Lass
This was apparently Brian Finnegan's first tune, and it's excellent, in my opinion. I first learnt it at a session in Edinburgh, and I didn't know anything about it - afterwards I found out it was written by Brian (of Flook fame). A little later, Brian and I were fellow tutors on a day of workshops in Edinburgh, and I told him that I taught the tune in many of my classes; he was quite pleased and interested, and went off wit one of my hand-out sheets.
The day ended with a tutors' concert, and we did seperate acts - me with my guitarist, Brian with Sarah Allan, and Amy Geddes with Sandy Wright. We finished off by all coming onto the stage and doing - not "The Donegal Lass" - two or three reels. I can't remember what they were, although I think the last one was "Cooley's". An absolute thrill for me.
# Posted on June 24th 2007 by nigelg