Key signature: Gmajor
Submitted on July 23rd 2004 by Kenny.
This tune has been added to 20 tunebooks.
Also known as The Boys Of Dublin, The Dublin Lads, Hould The Reins, My Mother Drowned In A Pool At Lourdes.
Recordings of a tune by this name:
X: 1
T: Hold The Reins
M: 4/4
L: 1/8
R: reel
K: Gmaj
g3 d BG G2 | ABcA defd | g2 dc BG G2 | AdcA GABd |
gedc BG G2 | ABcA defd | g2 dc BG G2 | AdcA G4 :|
df f2 dg g2 | df f2 edcA | df f2 dg g2 | fdcA GABc |
df f2 dg g2 | dffd edcA | g2 ga bgag | fdcA G4 :|
Hold The Reins
From a very early and obscure recording of Mary Bergin. I'd forgotten about this tune until it came up a few times in Miltown Malbay.
It then turns up on the new Catherine/John McEvoy CD, [ "The Boys Of Dublin"], and has also been recorded by "The Bowhouse Quintet" [ "Thornton's ]and Seamus Egan. A great reel for flutes and whistles.
# Posted on July 24th 2004 by Kenny
This tune appears on Jimmy Noonan's recording "The Maple Leaf." He calls it Upstairs in a Tent, but I know at least two other tunes by that name. Whatever the name, his version is terrific - the set starts with the Humours of Castlefin and ends with Sporting Nell and the West Wind.
# Posted on July 26th 2004 by jdicarlo
Hold the Reins
This is in Geraldine Cotter's book as the Kilfenora Reel. I play The Boys of Ballinahinch into this one as a set. Thanks a lot for the name - that's another question mark removed.
# Posted on July 26th 2004 by Peter Piper
The Dublin Lads
I didn't know this tune is already in the database with the correct title "Hold the Reins." It appears on two recent flute and fiddle duet albums: Catherine and John McEvoy's "The Kilmore Fancy" as Kenny pointed out, and Maeve Donnelly and Peader O'Loughlin's "The Thing Itself." Both are among the best recordings of the last year. As for the alternative title, Pat Mitchell, the author of The Dance Music of Willie Clancy, writes: "I named The Dublin Lads. After recording Willie Clancy playing it I asked him for the title: 'I don't know what it's called, I got it from the Dublin lads.'"
Here's the version on the two great recordings mentioned above:
K: Gmaj
g2dc BG~G2|ABcA defd|g2dc BG~G2|1 BdcA GABd:|2 BdcA G2Bc||
df~f2 dg~g2|defd edBA|df~f2 dg~g2|fdcA G2Bc|
df~f2 dg~g2|defd edBc|dg~g2 bgag|fdcA GABd||
This tune really sounded familiar to me, and I felt obliged to learn it. Now I see why. I once tried to learn it from John Williams' first solo recording around a year ago.
# Posted on February 6th 2005 by slainte
Kenny, I much prefer this as a single. It gets a bit repetitive as a double.
# Posted on December 15th 2006 by Dow
Kilfenora Reel
There is a lot of Kilfenora Reels. This happens to be another as a chap I know got this tune from his teacher as "The Kilfenora Reel".
# Posted on December 17th 2006 by PaddyCmusic