The Hunter's House
reel
Key signature: Gmajor
Submitted on December 30th 2001 by Josh Kane.
This tune has been added to 253 tunebooks.
Also known as Dowd's Favourite, Ed Reavey's, Ed Reavy's, Ed Reevey's, Ed Reevy's, Hunter's House, The Hunter's House, The Hunter's Hut, Hunters House, Reavey's, Reavy's, Reevey's, Teach An TSealgaire.
Recordings of a tune by this name:
- A Job Of Journeywork: A Tribute To Larry Redican And His Musical Friends by Various Artists
- A Tribute To Michael Coleman by Joe Burke, Andy McGann And Felix Dolan
- An Fhidil by Various Artists
- An Historic Recording Of Irish Traditional Music by Paddy Canny, P.J. Hayes, Peader O'Loughlin, Bridie Lafferty
- An Tris Is A Rian by Claire Keville, John Weir And Eithne Ni Dhonaile
- Augusta: 20 Years Of Irish Music Recorded Live At The Augusta Heritage Center by Various Artists
- Behind The Mist by Various Artists
- Best Of Finbarr Dwyer by Finbarr Dwyer
- Brathar Na NÓl by Monks Of The Screw
- Brian Kelly by Brian Kelly
- Calliope House by Modesty Forbids
- Cape Breton Live - Take 2 by Various Artists
- Celtic Dance by Various Artists
- Celtic Dances by Various Artists
- Champions Of Ireland Concertina by Denise Shiel
- Chasing The Dawn by Jenny Crook And Henry Sears
- Classic Recordings Of Irish Traditional Fiddle Music by Hugh Gillespie
- Come To Dance: A Celtic Tradition by John Whelan
- Crossroads by Máirtín O'Connor, Cathal Hayden, Seamie O'Dowd
- Dance Music Of Ireland: Volume 11 by Matt Cunningham
- Dance Time In Ireland by Larry McKee And The Shandonairs
- Duchas Ceoil “Dance Of The Honeybee” by The Lennon Family
- Each Little Thing by Sharon Shannon
- Familiar Footsteps by Dezi Donnelly
- Farewell To Ireland CD 1 (of A Box Set Of 4) by Various Artists
- Fermanagh Ceili by Pride Of Erin Ceili Band
- Fiddler's Choice by Jerry Holland
- Foinn Seisiun 2 by Ceoltóirí Cultúrlainne
- Folktrax-173: Willie Clancy And Bobby Casey by Willie Clancy And Bobby Casey
- Fortune Favours The Merry by Peter Horan And Gerry Harrington
- From Shetland by Trevor Hunter
- From The Chest by Kevin O'Connor
- Heatin' Up The Hall by Yankee Ingenuity
- Hidden Ground by Paddy Glackin, Jolyon Jackson
- House To House by Randal Bays And Roger Landes
- In Safe Hands by Various Artists
- Inside Out by Mícheál O' Raghallaigh
- Irish Button Accordion by Billy Moran
- Irish Dance Music - Folkways LP by Various Artists
- Irish Traditional Mandoline Ó Life Go Laoi by Fiontán Ó Meachair
- It's A Hard Road To Travel by Andy McGann And Paul Brady
- Jig It In Style by Sean Keane
- Kerry's Own Paddy Cronin by Paddy Cronin
- Last Orders by Liz Doherty
- Live At Lena's by The Lahawns
- Live At The Music Room by Troy MacGillivray
- Live At Trinity Hall by Trinity Hall Session Players
- Live From The Katharine Cornell Theater Traditional Irish Music by Various Artists
- Live In Lisdoonvarna by The Kilfenora Ceili Band
- Macalla 2 by Macalla
- Michael Flatley by Michael Flatley
- Music At Matt Molloy's by Matt Molloy
- Music Of A Champion by Brendan McGlinchey
- Music Of Ireland by Sean McGuire And The Four Star Quartet
- N Keen Affair by Paddy Keenan
- Noel Hill And Tony Linnane by Noel Hill And Tony Linnane
- Northern Lights by Kevin And Seamus Glackin
- Off She Goes by Gerry Hegarty And Claire Watts
- On TSean - Am Anall by Danny O'Donnell
- Over The Moor To Maggie by Oisin
- Prospect by Cuig
- Rogha Scoil Samhraidh Willie Clancy 2008 by Various Artists
- Sean McGuire Plays by Sean Maguire
- Sláinte by Sheevon
- Stranger At The Gate by Paddy O'Brien
- Sunday After Mass by Denis O Connor And Con Moynihan
- Sweet Nyaa by Moving Cloud
- Ten Man Mop Or Mr Reservoir Butler Rides Again by Steeleye Span
- The Banks Of The Shannon by Paddy O'Brien, Seamus Connolly And Charlie Lennon
- The Coming Of Spring by Cliff Moses
- The Flags Of Dublin by Paddy Glackin, Mick O'Brien And Mick Gavin
- The Floating Bowhand by Jim McKillop
- The Home I Left Behind by CCE Tour 1974
- The Iron Man by Tommy Peoples And Daithi Sproule
- The Lark In The Morning by Steeleye Span
- The Music Of Ed Reavy by Various Artists
- The Other Side by Terry Coyne
- The Pipes Are Calling by Peter And Noel Carberry
- The Sligo Champion (CD 2) by Michael Gorman
- The Stool Of Repentance by Donnybrook
- The Tie That Binds by Joe Derrane
- The Tie That Binds by Various Artists
- Traditional Dance Music From County Clare by Ennis Ceili Band
- Traditional Irish Fiddle Music by Vincent Griffin
- Traditional Irish Music by James Kelly
- Traditional Music Of Ireland by Kathleen Collins
- Traditional Music Of Ireland On Button Accordion by Seamus Walshe
- Traditional Music On Fiddle, Banjo, And Harp by Oisin MacDiarmada, Brian Fitzgerald, And Michael O Ruanaigh
- Tru The Years by Jim McKillop
- Up She Flew by Dana Lyn
- Velvet In The Wind by Gerry Strong
- Whistleworks by Phil Hardy
- Women Of Ireland by Ceoltoiri Celtic Ensemble
X: 1
T: Hunter's House, The
M: 4/4
L: 1/8
R: reel
K: Gmaj
|: B2dB cAFA | G2BG DGBG | B2dB cAFA |
GBAG F~D3 |D~G3 BGFG | BGAF GABc |
defg agfd |1 cAFA G2GA :|2 cAFA G2Bc ||
|: d2gB aBgB | B2gf edcB | A~a3 b~a3 | A2ag fedc |
B2gB aBgB | B2gf edcB | cBAg fgaf | gdBd cAFA :|
This is one of the most popular tunes composed by Ed Reavy.
# Posted on December 31st 2001 by radriano
The Hunter's House on Celtic Cafe...
This is part of a nice reel set on track 6 of this CD with instruments that include:celtic harp, uilliann pipes, hammered dulcimer, irish flute, bodran, pennywhistle. this Cd is described in the recordings section.
# Posted on November 3rd 2002 by tilythehon
Reavy's
X: 1
T: Reavy's
M: 4/4
L: 1/8
R: reel
K: Gmaj
B2B2|:BddB cAFD|G2BG DGBG|BddB cAFD|GBAG FDCE|
DGBG cAFA|BGBA GABc|1 defg afge|
dBcA G2GA:|2 defg (3agf (3gfe|dB (3cBA G2GA||
|:B2gB aBgB|~B2gf edcB|A2 (3aaa baaf|dfaf gedc|
B2gB aBgB|~B2gf edcB|cBAg fdaf|1 gedB cAGA:|2 gdBd cAFA|G4||
I was taught this elegant and lively reel a couple of days ago in a lesson and have transcribed it from a recording of my teacher's demonstration play-through.
Trevor
# Posted on May 24th 2003 by lazyhound
Reavy's
My teacher got this tune from her teacher who got it from a source in Ireland. It appears that no one along the line was aware of the Hunter's House connection, otherwise that name would surely have been mentioned. The two tunes are clearly closely related, but with some subtle differences. A good illustration of how tunes can change as they proceed by different routes from a common source.
The "advanced" search I always carry out on this site in respect of a tune I intend to submit didn't come up with Hunter's House.
Trevor
# Posted on May 24th 2003 by lazyhound
Hunter's House
Your pontification has resulted in an obscuration of the foundation in regards to... Give it up Trev, you can call this tune Reavy's & you'll be right, but most folks call it the Hunter's House to separate it from the other 100+ tunes Ed Reavy wrote. Ed named all of his tunes & left up to the rest of us to forget the titles.
# Posted on May 25th 2003 by Brad Maloney
Water from the well
this tune is the first of a set played on this chieftains record exepted they call it tom billys ??
the last of the three tune set is scartaglen i beleive whereas they call it the star about the garter??
the middle tune is played by two fiddles only and gives a very interesting break between the big session sounds of the first and last tunes. They call it the gladstone but i have never seen it or heard it anywhere else
# Posted on May 26th 2003 by timo
Hunter's House
No, really, this really is a common tune, or am I going mad?
# Posted on May 26th 2003 by Dow
Flute recordings??
I love this tune and hear it in more advanced level sessions. Does anyone know of any solo flute recordings of this tune? I would love to learn it by slowing down a flute recording, but I don't know of any.....
Joyce
# Posted on May 27th 2003 by JMH
This is indeed Hunter's House, by Ed Reavy, though it has been widely recorded under other names (or no name at all). I'm surprised Jeremy hasn't deleted this setting (or inserted the abcs in the comments of the original post), since the tune was first submitted more than a year ago.
Joyce, if you learn the basic tune off another instrument, then you can make it your own as you fit it onto flute. It's a bit of a brawl on the Music at Matt Molloy's cd, but the melody is there.
# Posted on May 27th 2003 by Miss Lonelyhearts
Reavy's
Will, I agree with you on this. The variation I was taught is too close to the original to be classed as a separate tune, but I wasn't aware of that at the time. Perhaps Jeremy would indeed like to transfer the abc to the original posting.
Trevor
# Posted on May 27th 2003 by lazyhound
Trevor, I'd vote for preserving your setting in the comments of the original post--it has some nice twists to it.
# Posted on May 27th 2003 by Miss Lonelyhearts
Hunter's House
Only solo flute recording of this I know of for certain is by yer man Flatley - and you might well need "The Amazing Slow-Downer" to get it. I have a feeling Seamus Tansey recorded this one time on an LP on the Belfast "Outlet" label - early 70s? - but they're not on CD as far as I know, and are quite rare these days. Great tune.
# Posted on May 27th 2003 by Kenny
Yes, I can learn the basic tune from another instrument, but I'm just not good enough of a flute player to "make it my own". My tunes turn out best when I can learn from another flute player and get the correct phrasing. I do have the Music at Matt Molloys CD.
Thanks Kenny, I'll look for the Michael Flatley recording. I do have the Amazing Slow Downer and use it all the time to learn tunes.
# Posted on May 28th 2003 by JMH
C'mon Joyce, give yerself some credit! First off, you can pick up phrasing from just listening to the tune, even if it's not on your instrument. Second, there's no such thing as the "correct" phrasing--a big part of what will make the tune your own is finding your own way to tie the notes together. Everyone will have a slightly different spin on this, and that's as it should be. And I bet you can do a fine job of it if you try. I'm not being flippant--the process of learning a basic melody without mimicking someone else's timing, swing, phrasing, variations, etc., is one of the most important steps you can take toward being your own musician, and there's no harm in trying even if you're not a veteran player with years of tunes under your belt. Give it a go!
# Posted on May 28th 2003 by Miss Lonelyhearts
Will's totally right, Joyce! You go, girl, and just play with the thing 'til you find *your* "correct" phrasing. Then you'll hear a recording of it and say to yourself, hey, I like that one phrase/variation/emphasis/note better than my setting, I think I'll pop that into my setting. And you'll hear another recording and say to yourself, hey, I actually like my setting better than that. Except for that note there, I want to use that. *grin* That's the way this stuff works. Go for it!
Zina
# Posted on May 28th 2003 by Zina Lee
Will and Zina - You both are right!! I really need to start learning tunes without copying exactly every phrase, ornament, and variaton of another flute player's setting. I'm very guilty of this. Last Monday, I slowed down Catherine McEvoy's Brendan Tonra jig and shamefully copied EVERYTHING......(I think it's my best jig yet, but that's beside the point)
But I will make an attempt to learn the Hunters House from the Music at Matt Molloys or another recording with PJ Hayes and Paddy Canny...Hopefully I can put my own stamp on it.
Thank you both for your words of wisdom.
Joyce
.
# Posted on May 28th 2003 by JMH
Have fun with it Joyce, and let us know how it works out.
# Posted on May 28th 2003 by Miss Lonelyhearts
Hunter's House / ed
Hi ed,
I had a listen to that "Water From The Well" track. The first tune is usually known as "Far From Home" - it's not the "Hunter's House", (nor is it usually called "Tom Billy's" come to that,) - the second tune "Gladstone's", is common in Donegal, but I'm sure it's a Scottish composition by Scott Skinner. The third tune, I agree with you, is "The Humours Of Scartaglen".
I enjoyed much of that CD - it was reassuring to know that the Chieftains could still play Irish music when they wanted to.
# Posted on May 28th 2003 by Kenny
yes
sorry
i had another listen and hunters house isnt named
but it is definitely played after dowds number 9 track five i beleive
did the chieftains ever show any doubt of not being able to play The Music??
# Posted on June 8th 2003 by timo
This is played as "Reevy's" on the first Na Connery's album, going into Bucks (last track), and a rocking good set it is. Nice version of the tune there, too.
# Posted on September 8th 2003 by Zina Lee
The Hunter's House
Here it is played at a session at Malloy's. It's the last tune in the set
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLBFaqZM2Bc
# Posted on March 31st 2009 by conscientious objector