Key signature: Gmixolydian
Submitted on January 8th 2007 by errik.
This tune has been added to 12 tunebooks.
Recordings of a tune by this name:
X: 1
T: Paddy Fahey's
M: 4/4
L: 1/8
R: reel
K: Gmix
_B2 dB DFBd|c=BcA FAcA|_B2 dB DFBd|c=BcA _BGGA|
BDGA BDGB|ADFA c2 =Bc|d~g3 dcBd|1c=BcF DGGA:|2c=BcF DGBd||
g2 dg Bdge|f2 cf Acfa|g^fgd BcdB|dg (3fga g3 a|
(3bag (3agf gfdc|(3Bcd BG D2 =FA|d~g3 dc (3Bcd|1c=BcF DGBd:|2c=BcF DGGA||
One of my fave Fahey tunes... fookin' dead-leh, as my friend from Bray would put it. ;o)
Liz and Yvonne Kane play this as Paddy Fahey's/Man of the House (in D Min)/Paddy Fahey's. Track #4 on their first CD, "The Well Tempered Bow". Great tunes, great set, great fiddlers.
# Posted on January 8th 2007 by errik
Hate to say it, but it's already somewhere on the session.... BUT I LOOOOVE this freakin' setting.
I love the Kane Sisters.
I love Paddy Fahey.
I love insane fiddle keys that no else can play but us fiddlers!! XD
Well.. concertina.. Accordion.. OH WELL.
Cheers,
Armand
# Posted on January 9th 2007 by fiddlinviolinin
I had no idea it was on here. I really didn't feel like searching through all the Fahey tunes. hehe...do ya blame me?
This seemed "obscure" enough to submit.
# Posted on January 9th 2007 by errik
The great thing about this tune, though, is how it moves between G Mixolydian, G Dorian, G Major, and B-flat Major. The set that the Kane sisters play it with is great... the tunes are in C Mixolydian/D Dorian/and finally this tune.
# Posted on January 9th 2007 by errik
I dunno, Armand. I searched for it here a year or so ago and came up blank.
This is my fave Fahey tune, but I was startled by the B nats in measure 5 of the A part. Is it normally played that way? The only recording I have is the Kane Sisters' and they don't go to major there. And I think maybe they play the F sharp in measure 5 of the B part.
Can't say I like it with the shift to major. That hardly ever works for me. There's another Fahey tune here and on the same Kane Sis CD that does that and it just annoys me.
# Posted on January 10th 2007 by Bob himself
Bob,
Those B's in measure 5-A are flat, if I'm not mistaken. I thought that the flat sign on the B in measure 4-A established that. And the F in measure 5-B is definetely sharp, as established in the third measure of the B-part. It doesn't go back to natural until the 6th measure.
# Posted on January 10th 2007 by errik
Posted here in 2004:
http://www.thesession.org/tunes/display.php/2940
I found it using the advanced search option and an abc fragment of the tune: "bdga bdgb".
# Posted on January 10th 2007 by Bleedin' Heart
Notation problems?
Re accidentals!!!! I am not Classsically trained, but I do read dots tolerably well. The standard convention with "accidentals" is that they apply at the pitch shown only (i.e. not in other octaves) for the whole of the bar they are in AFTER being stated and unless cancelled, but ONLY as far as the bar-line, which automatically cancels them! The key signature given at the beginning of each stave otherwise applies throughout, regardless of octave - and in ABC the stated key signature of course has the same effect , but any accidentals have to be specified EVERY time they occur. I don't want to seem stuffy, but conventions like these (e.g. standardised spelling) developed for very obvious, practical reasons. If you don't come to terms with them, you just misrepresent your own intentions and confuse or mislead others. I'm lookng forward to trying the tune when I get it home form the Library. Cheers!
# Posted on January 12th 2007 by Jemtheflute
Well, I guess the classical theory that I was taught in school is somewhat off, then... either way, this music is best learnt by ear, to get all those quirks and accidentals in the natural way.
# Posted on January 14th 2007 by errik