The Silver Spear
reel
Key signature: Dmajor
Submitted on July 1st 2001 by Will CPT.
This tune has been added to 1163 tunebooks.
Also known as Joe Mhaire Mhicilin, Nancy Whiskey, The Old Silver Spear, Silver Spear, The Silver Tip.
Recordings of a tune by this name:
- 3(three) by Birkin Tree
- A Dance Visit To Ireland by McCusker Brothers Ceilidhe Band
- A Language I Understand by Annwn
- A Sound Skin by Junior Davey And Friends
- Across The Waters - Irish Traditional Music From England by Various Artists
- Ae Spark O Nature's Fire by Deaf Shepherd
- An Mileoidean Scaoilte by Johnny Connolly
- An Seo by Ragús
- Anarchy And Rapture by Annwn
- Bang On by Oige
- Battlefield Band by Battlefield Band
- Beginning Irish Fiddle by Martin Mulvihill
- Blueprint by Natalie MacMaster
- Bosca Bideach by Micheal Darby O Fatharta
- Ceilidh House Sessions by Various Artists
- Celtic Ceili by Various Artists
- Come To An Irish Dance Party by LaichtÃn Naofa Céilà Band.
- Concertina Music From West Clare by Elizabeth Crotty
- Corvus by Colcannon
- Craic'd! by Atlantic Wave
- Dance Music Of Ireland: Volume 3 by Matt Cunningham
- Dance Music Of Ireland: Volume 3 CD Version by Matt Cunningham
- Dance Music Of Ireland: Volume 5 by Matt Cunningham
- Dance Time In Ireland by Larry McKee And The Shandonairs
- Elftones by The Elftones
- Foinn Seisiun 1 by Ceoltóirà Cultúrlainne
- Fonn Le Fonn by Tomas O'Ceannabhain
- Forty Years Of Irish Piping by Seamus Ennis
- From Leitrim To London by Brian Rooney
- Get Out by Capercaillie
- Gleanntan by Sliabh Notes
- Grianan by Grianan MTC
- Gusty's Frolicks by Sean Keane
- Home Again by The Glengarry Bhoys
- I Feel My Heart Fly by Darcy Nair
- If Ida Been Here, Ida Been There by Craobh Rua
- In Season by Wild Asparagus
- Irish Traditional Pipe Music by Finbar Furey
- Jamie Smith by Jamie Smith
- Jiggin' The Blues by Frankie Gavin, Rick Epping And Tim Edey
- Kitty Lie Over by Mick O'Brien And Caoimhin O'Raghallaigh
- Lamh Ar Lamh (Many Hands) CD 2 by Various Artists
- Last Leaves by Malinky
- Last Night's Fun by John Carty
- Live At Trinity Hall by Trinity Hall Session Players
- Long Roads by Four Men And A Dog
- Lost In The Loop by Liz Carroll
- Mapless Journey by Kathy Buys
- Melodeon by John Gannon
- Merrily Kissed The Quaker by The Blacksmiths
- Milltown Lass by Rose Murphy
- Music Of Dreams by Noel Hill And Tony MacMahon With Iarla O Lionaird
- Music Of Dreams by Tony Mac Mahon, Iarla Ó Lionáird, Noel Hill
- No Doubt by Six Mile Bridge
- One by Murphy Roche Irish Music Club
- One More Time by McComiskey, Mulvihill And McLeod
- Opening Moves by Battlefield Band
- Over The Edge by Moher
- Part II: Fire In Our Hearts by Na Connerys
- Piping Hot by Various Artists
- Promenade by Kevin Burke And MÃcheál O'Domhnaill
- Purgatory Chasm by Skip Healy
- Rabharta by Feenish
- Raise The Rafters by Raise The Rafters
- Real Reels Of Ireland by Various Artists
- Relative Minors by Qristina And Quinn Bachand
- Reprise by Paddy Glackin And Micheal O Domhnaill
- Return To Droim by Colm Gannon
- Rince: Complete Irish Dancing Set - First Steps And Beyond by Various Artists
- Sarah'ndipity by Sarah Burnell
- Sean Potts by Sean Potts And Paddy Moloney
- Set Dances Of Ireland, Volume I by Various Artists
- Set Dancing Downunder by The Coast Ceili Band
- Set The Sails by Bantry Bay
- Seven Streams by The Turloughmore Ceili Band
- Sounds From The Atlantic by Innisheer
- Special Instrumental - Le Fiddle Irlandais Par Ted Furey by Ted Furey
- Suburban Ethnia by Chanter
- Take The Bull By The Horns by Tom Doherty
- Temple House 2 by Temple House Ceili Band
- The Ale Is Dear by Clandestine
- The Blue CD by Irish Session Tunes
- The Clan MacColl by Angus MacColl
- The Dawn by Baal Tinne
- The Drones And The Chanters Vol.2 by Various Artists
- The Flags Of Dublin by Paddy Glackin, Mick O'Brien And Mick Gavin
- The Galway Rambler by John G. Walsh
- The Great Bear Trio by The Great Bear Trio
- The Humours Of Lewisham, Volume Three by Aidan Crossey
- The Kells by The Kells
- The Leg Of The Duck by Joe Burke, Michael Cooney And Noreen Donoghue
- The Maid Of Eirin by Grianan
- The Orkney Sessions From The Ayre Hotel by Various Artists
- The Return From Fingal by Seamus Ennis
- The Ring Sessions by James Kelly
- The Tain by Horslips
- The Three Sisters by Barry Kerr
- Traditional Irish Dance Music by Various Artists
- Traditional Irish Music (traditional Music Session From Belfast) by Various Artists
- Tru The Years by Jim McKillop
- True...Never Been Known To Lie by Knot Fibb'n
- Turas Go Tir Na NOg by Caoimhin O'Raghallaigh
- Unleashed by Wolfstone
- Va by Slainte Mhath
- Warming Up by Martin Mulhaire, Séamus Connolly And Jack Coen
- Where Else Would You Be by The Pub Scouts
- Where I Am by Brendan Callahan
- Wooden Flute Obsession Disk 2 by Various Artists
X: 1
T: Silver Spear, The
M: 4/4
L: 1/8
R: reel
K: Dmaj
A|:FA (3AAA BAFA|dfed BddA|FA (3AAA BAFA|dfed (3BdB AG|
|FA (3AAA BAFA|dfed Bdef|gage fgfe|1 dfed (3BdB AG:|2 dfed BdAd||
|:fa (3aaa bfaf|gfed Bdde|fa (3aaa bfaf|gfed (3BdB A2|
|fa (3aaa bfaf|gfed Bdef|~g3 e ~f3 e|1 dfed BdAd:|2 dfed B2 AG||
The Silver Spear
I learned this version directly from Kevin Burke years ago in Portland. When I quizzed him on the bowing, he played it once using an up-bow to slur three notes and then a down-bow on the accents. Then he changed where the accents fell but kept the three up, one down. Then he played each note in a separate bow stroke, and then slurred long phrases (whole bars) on one bow. He did all this with a casual efficiency while recovering on the sofa from a late gig the night before, and the tune sounded terrific--smooth but with that clear Burke danceable beat throughout--regardless of how he bowed it. The lesson was clear--don't rely on any one bowing pattern. Experiment. Do whatever you need to do to get the rhythm where you want it. And learn to do it with and without slurs. It helps to do this on a fairly simple, reptitive tune such as Silver Spear--I've probably played this reel more than any other in my repertoire, and I still enjoy it.
# Posted on July 1st 2001 by Will CPT
Related jigs and reels
You know, The Sliver Spear has always struck me as being like a reel version of The Connaughtman's Rambles (or vise-versa). Try playing the tunes one after the other and you'll see what I mean - each reel phrase has a corresponding, similar jig phrase.
I've come across this kind of relationship before, the most obvious example being The Swallowtail jig and The Swallow's Tail reel.
# Posted on July 1st 2001 by Jeremy
Related tunes
There is a tune called 'The New Mown Meadow' which, in Scotland, is often played on Bagpipes as a set with 'The Silver Spear', collectively known as 'The Silver Spear Reels'. It is a great tune and does bear some resemblance to 'The Silver Spear'. I'll submit it sometime soon, if somebody else doesn't first.
# Posted on July 4th 2001 by ragaman
Looking for Chords
Anyone know where I can find the backing guitar chords for The Silver Spear?
# Posted on September 14th 2004 by Edja
Re: Looking for Chords
In your head. Listen and you should find that they're there already.
# Posted on September 14th 2004 by Dow
Re: Looking for Chords
Play along with a recording of it and experiment with the chords that would usually fit
in with the key of D ( D, Em, F#m, G, A, Bm, C#m ,D)
Focus on the rhythm maybe around the D Chord, changing a note or two that would imply
chord changes rather than a complete chord change.
Experimanet with a bass line in the tune (using the notes of the key)
Eg going from G to D use base notes G-> F# ->E ->D on 6th string (drop D tuning)
# Posted on September 14th 2004 by BegF
Re: Looking for Chords
Thanks lads!
Ye see, Normally I can figure anything out fairly quickly...but I don't play DADGAD or Drop D, and I'm not sure how to go about it...so I reckoned if I got the chords from somewhere, once I learned them, I was on the path to learning.....desparate I know...
# Posted on September 14th 2004 by Edja
Re: Looking for Chords
You don't have to play DADGAD - stick to standard if you want. A lot of people do. Unless you want the DAGDAD sound of course...
# Posted on September 14th 2004 by Dow
Re: Looking for Chords
There's lots of imaginative "voicings" for chords in standard tuning too.
Playing chords in the "right key" is a great start. It's amazing how many would be backers even fail to manage that.
# Posted on September 14th 2004 by Johannes J
The Old Silver Spear
Taken from a Desi Wilkinson album. I tried to post this as a seperate tune, which, in my opinion, it is, but without success. Anyways, I now post it here as a variation, albeit an extreme one.
eAAG A2(3B=cd|eaaf gedg|ea~a2 ba~a2|ded=c BG(3B=cd|
eAAG A2(3B=cd|eaaf gedg|e~a3 g3z|1ded=c BG(3B=cd:|2ded=c BGG2||
a2fa ba~a2|abag fddf|a2fa bafe|dfed BA~A2|
a2fa ba~a2|abag fdef|g3e f3z|efed BAA2:|
# Posted on September 23rd 2005 by tadhgÃn
= New Mown Meadows
This is already here under it's more common title of "The New Mown Meadows". I agree it is a separate tune, and that's why I posted it.
# Posted on September 23rd 2005 by Kenny
"Silver Spear" - in "A"
Was listening to this on the "Grianan" recording tonight. Their version is in "A".
Try this :
CE E2 FECE | cABA FAED | CE E2 FECE | cABA F2 ED |
CE E2 FECE | cABA FABc | dFBd cEAc | BAFE FA A2 :|
ce e2 df f2 | ecAc BcAB | ce e2 df f2 | ecAc B2 AB |
ce e2 df f2 | ecAc BEAc | dFBd cEAc | BAFE FA A2 :|
# Posted on July 3rd 2006 by Kenny
Just wondering..
Is it true that you should only play the 2nd half of this tune once? Somebody told me it's just one of those weird things that you only play it once before going back and doing the first part twice.
# Posted on May 15th 2007 by horsebox
Not in any session I've been to.
# Posted on May 15th 2007 by Dow
Listen to Mick O'Brien and Kevin O'Reilly's great pipes and fiddle duet playing of this: http://www.myspace.com/kittylieover
# Posted on June 9th 2007 by slainte
Triplets?
I'm new here, so maybe this is just a convention I don't know about, but the notes shown as triplets in the music (and played as triplets in the MIDI file) aren't really supposed to be triplets, are they? It seems like two sixteenths and an eighth would make more sense.
# Posted on April 15th 2008 by Allen McBride
Re: Triplets
The midi triplets don't work, plain and simple - you should definitely avoid using the midi player. Go and get yourself some Tommy Peoples (the iTunes music store and eMusic both have High Part of the Road). Then you can hear what those triplets are supposed to sound like. Basically it's three notes played in the space of two eighth notes - which makes those three notes not quite sixteenth notes, but since it's a bow ornament, you really have to hear it and practice it over and over, and maybe be shown it, and then relearn it since you were doing it wrong before, until you come up with some weird but cool invention of your own like Tommy Peoples....
# Posted on April 15th 2008 by airport
Re: Triplets
Interesting, thanks. I guess it's mostly a difference of definition. What I'm used to calling a triplet is exactly what the MIDI player plays -- a quarter interval evenly divided into three.
# Posted on April 19th 2008 by Allen McBride
Re: Triplets
It's often called a bow triplet, which is probably a better name since it's its own animal. If you're interested in learning more about them, you could go to discussions and search for bow triplets - they've been the topic of many threads here.
# Posted on April 20th 2008 by airport
Need help in reel ID
This was one of the first reels I learned and I just can't get tired of playing it.
In case anybody is still reading this thread, does anyone know what is the name of the reel that is played after silver spear in the album "Piper's Dance" from Ballycastle? It's track number 7 and they call it only the Silver Spear but I really enjoy the reel that is played together with it.
Thanks!
# Posted on August 14th 2008 by cesarpim