Key signature: Amajor
Submitted on June 21st 2008 by D.J.F..
This tune has been added to 11 tunebooks.
Recordings of a tune by this name:
X: 1
T: Banks Of The Allan
M: 6/8
L: 1/8
R: jig
K: Amaj
c3 cBA | cee e2 a | faa eaa | faa eaa |
c3 cBA | cee e2 a | faf ecA | cBB B3 :|
|: c3 cBA | cee e2 d | cdc cBA | dff fed |
cde Bcd | ABc cBA | faf ecA | cBB B3 :|
Tune
Nice Jig found on that virtual session thing
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio2/r2music/folk/sessions/swf/folkmenu.html
Good recording that
# Posted on June 21st 2008 by D.J.F.
Banks Of The Allan
I've come across it in a tune-book under the name "The Banks Of Allan Water", in the key of D Major: this gives room for the second part to be played an octave up on the first - otherwise, it's the same tune.
Great tune, unaccountably seldom heard.
# Posted on June 21st 2008 by nicholas
It's not the same tune though! It's pretty different I think, but oh well
# Posted on June 21st 2008 by D.J.F.
It has already been posted here in D, and a slightly different setting:
http://www.thesession.org/tunes/display/2118
It seems to be more popular among Scottish musicians than Irish.
# Posted on June 21st 2008 by ragaman
Banks of the Allan
I gave it a try, as I have some relatives by that last name.
I enjoyed it, but like it a 'tad better with the last three notes dropped down a tone to "A". Its the first time I've encountered a jig with such a long sequence of eighth notes at the end. I didn't get the phrasing initially because of this.
Thank you.
# Posted on June 21st 2008 by Arthur Nordstrom
Definitely agree with your commant on the last bar in both 'A' & 'B' musics. certainly | BAA A3 :||
I already play this tune in a set of Scottish jigs and do so in the key of 'D' Musically I think this is better, more exciting. The last four bars of the 'B' music descends to the end from top 'b' to bottom 'D' quite dynamic I feel. A good tune to finish a set with.
# Posted on June 21st 2008 by hetty
This is my take on it in 'D'. Somewhat different to that already here.
M: 6/8
L: 1/8
K: D
FGF FED | FAA A2d | Bdd Add | Bdd Add | FGF FED | FAA A2d | BdB AFD | EDD D3 :||
fdf fed | faa a2g | fgf fed | gbb b2a | fga efg | def fed | BdB AFD | EDD D3 :||
# Posted on June 21st 2008 by hetty
Yeah the last bar (CBB B3) is like that probably to give the tune a more circular never-ending feel to it.
Coz you would play an E chord instead of the more final sounding A chord if the last bar was BAA A3
# Posted on June 21st 2008 by D.J.F.
I realise that but when did that change happen? was it deliberate or an accident? Who was the culprit or do we put it down to the aural tradition and the passing of time??
# Posted on June 22nd 2008 by hetty
Banks of the Allan
I play it the same as you, hetty, with one major difference: the last bar in each part ends on aa E. I.e. | FEE E2 | See
http://www.nigelgatherer.com/tunes/tab/tab10/bnkal.html
There is a River Allan near to where I live in Perthshire.There's also a pub called The Allanbank, at which there used to be a regular session. However, if I'm not mistaken, there are a few River Allans around!
# Posted on June 22nd 2008 by nigelg
Theres Lough Allen in Co. Leitrim and a Glen Allen (with a tune named after it) somewhere, so possibly a River Allen as well.
Hetty - I don't think that ending was an accident. It's the only way I've ever heard it played, and it's the way NigelG plays it - which must count for something. If you think of it as being in B dorian (or E dorian) instead of A (or D), then the final B (or E) brings resolution.
# Posted on June 22nd 2008 by ragaman