Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

Farewell To Erin

reel

Key signature: Adorian

Submitted on May 21st 2001 by Jeremy.

This tune has been added to 441 tunebooks.

Also known as Farewell To Éire, Farewell To Ireland, Goodbye To Ireland.

Recordings of a tune by this name:

Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

X: 1
T: Farewell To Erin
M: 4/4
L: 1/8
R: reel
K: Ador
A,3 C E3 F|GEDB, G,B,DB,|A,3 C E3 F|GEDF EA,A,G,|
A,3 C E3 F|GEDB, D2 g2|edeg a2 ba|gedB BA A2:|
K:AMix
a2 ag agef|g2 ga gede|a2 ag agef|gedB BA A2|
agef gage|d2 dB GABd|cAeA Bdef|gedB BA A2 :|
eABA eABA|d2 dB GABd|eABA eAAa|gedB BA A2|
eABA eABA|d2 dB GABd|c2 BA Bdef|gedB BA A2:|
aece aece|gdBd gdBd|aece a2 af|gedB BA A2|
agef g2 ge|dedB GA B2|cAeA d2 ef|gedB BA A2:|

Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments
Farewell To Erin sheetmusic
Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

Anyone who's heard the Bothy Band's version of this tune knows just how much this tune can "rock".

If you don't have a bouzouki player handy to play a power chord over with the opening note then try a double stop with an E on the D string to go with that low A on the G string...if you play fiddle; if you play whistle then I'm afraid you'll just have to hum along with the first part.

This tune isn't as difficult as it might first appear. The 2nd, 3rd and 4th parts all have the same ending. I've shown it here with three variations. I find that C sharp often throws me. Try to find a way of playing it that you're most comfortable with.

# Posted on June 1st 2001 by Jeremy

Farewell to Erin

It appears that the version Kevin Burke performs is very different than the one that Micheal Coleman does. So much so, it seems like they may be different tunes. Also, check out the Boston College Irish Festival CD, "My Love Is In America". Brian Conway plays this tune very faithfully to what Micheal Coleman does. Did the Bothy Band take some liberties with the tune? Is the Sligo version simply a radically different interpretation?

# Posted on October 20th 2001 by Caoimghgin

I believe the first version of this that I ever came across was A dorian all the way through. That was about 1981. I had tried to learn it then but wasn´t up to it at that time. Years later (ca. 1990) I heard it again played in sessions. The first three parts were still in dorian but the fourth had changed to mixolydian, like it´s written here. Played like that the last part really stands out. That´s the way it is still played in my circles. It´s been one of my favourites since I at last mastered it. And when more than one fiddle is present in the session I like to play parts 2 to 4 on the G and D strings as well, at least from the 2nd time through onwards...

Once I saw a Scottish hornpipe with this title in a collection for the highland bagpipes. The structure was roughly similar, so maybe this reel has a predecessor or a close relative in the highland pipes tradition (taken over maybe via Donegal?). That would also explain the mixolydian scale all the way through.

# Posted on October 20th 2001 by Joerg Froese

Farewell to "Erin"

This is actually called "Farewell to Ireland". Farewell to Erin is a different tune completely (O'Neill's 701). The Bothy Band confusingly called it Farewell to Erin. Whatever, it's a great tune! Tommy Peoples does a great version of it on The High Part of The Road when he prefixes the reel with the first part played as an air. It gets everyone going in sessions especially when you go back to the low A for the start of the first part and give it a bit of stick!

# Posted on July 19th 2002 by Geoff Pollitt

Farewell to Ireland

Eileen Iver's version of this is tune, done live, is the most dynamite performance, coupled with the Noisy Curlew. She carries the energy to a high that is unbelievable. Worht a listen.

# Posted on February 5th 2003 by fiddlerpaul

I also know this tune as farewell to Ireland, which I heard Barney Mckenna of the Dubliners play. He plays it through solely in a minor and personally i think it sounds much better this way.
the dubliners have recorded this tune as a banjo solo piece, well worth a listen!

# Posted on December 3rd 2003 by Hugo Chavez

We play this tune every week at out session, with
PV O'Donnell, and occasionally Tommy Peoples, when he visits Connecticut, both PV and Tommy. It's a wonderful tune and enjoy playing it

# Posted on September 21st 2004 by bonzplayer

This is one of my favorites (hence the name haha)...I've a;ways started it double stopping the A on G and E on D...definitely a great high energy tune, everyone seems to like it that I play it for...

When I learned it (under the name Farewell to Erin, not Ireland, I have no clue which is the "correct" one), I was told it was a Scottish tune...I'm not sure if that's right or not... anybody know?

# Posted on July 31st 2006 by possumawesome

Someone told me that the first low A represented the horn being sounded on the departing ship.

# Posted on September 3rd 2006 by nicholas

Scottish origin

This tune comes from an old Scottish strathspey called "The Highland Watches Farewell to Ireland".

# Posted on January 9th 2007 by Beheader

Farewell To Erin

Going by memory, I also think that there is a song associated with the tune, corresponding with the 3rd and 2nd parts as written here. "Highland Harry":

http://www.worldburnsclub.com/poems/translations/highland_harry.htm

The tune is given as "Highlander's Lament", which I believe is basically the same tune as "Highland Watch's Farewell to Ireland" (Neil Stewart's Collection of 1762).

# Posted on January 9th 2007 by nigelg

Also related to The Ballydesmond Polka?

# Posted on January 9th 2007 by slainte

Farewell To Erin

http://www.thesession.org/tunes/display/238

Yes, I see what you mean, there's possibly something in that, slainte.

# Posted on January 9th 2007 by nigelg

Especially in the second part. Maybe they both derived from the same Scots tune?

"Highland Watch's Farewell to Ireland" is already here: http://www.thesession.org/tunes/display/2695

# Posted on January 9th 2007 by slainte

Reference correction...

Hey all,

Just a quick hello. Dave Cory and I never recorded this version of Farewell to Ireland in A mix. We recorded another tune with the same title played in D.

...just for the record...

Best,
Eliot

# Posted on May 10th 2007 by illenpypr

NAME............

well....Martyn Bennett (God bless) included it in his tune "Erin" and in the sleeve notes and his website it states...."the first tune is Farewell to Erin......so...it's one of those tunes that has many names....and one of those names that has many tunes.......
afterall..... Erin and Ireland do mean the same thing

ROB

# Posted on June 11th 2007 by rob_heron

Adore this. what do whistle players do for the first section? is there a choreographed dance, do we twiddle our thumbs, or sing?

# Posted on March 11th 2008 by mehitabel23

Play the low notes up an octave, or something within the whistles range that fits as a 5th, 4th or 3rd...but if you want to entertain us with a little dance number, well, I'm not going to say no... :-D

# Posted on March 12th 2008 by ceolachan

At it's simplest, without changing a note ~

K: Ador
|: A3 c E3 F | GEDB GBDB | A3 c E3 F | GEDF EAAG |
A3 c E3 F | GEDB D2 g2 | edeg a2 ba | gedB BA A2 :|

# Posted on March 12th 2008 by ceolachan

After all these years of it being here, I just come across it now. I was taught it many years ago, in Clare, and the way I was taught it was in Amix throughout. Of course, I think that's the best way with it.

:-)

# Posted on March 12th 2008 by benhall.1

Yeah, I quite like it in Mixolydian too... Now put that whistle away before you wear out the fipple... ;-)

# Posted on March 12th 2008 by ceolachan

One of the reasons I do prefer it in Amix is that, if you can persuade a guitarist to play Amaj chords instead of boring old Amin, it has *so* much more of an achey, yearning feel to it.

Having said which, obviously I still play it in Amix even if I'm playing it solo.

# Posted on March 12th 2008 by benhall.1

Oh, I do love a good fipple. :-P

# Posted on March 12th 2008 by benhall.1

Although I reaaly like the great Barney McKenna's version, especially since I play the banjo, I have to admit that the Bothy Band's version is THEE version. Masterpeice, one of the only traditional tunes I've ever felt the urge to headbang to!

# Posted on March 29th 2008 by Conchúir Ó hÓgáin

Bouzouki Chords?

Anyone know the chords for this one? Pleeeeeease!!! If you've heard the Bothy Bands version you'll know exactly why i want them!! ;)

# Posted on April 8th 2008 by Conchúir Ó hÓgáin

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