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100 Popular Irish Session Tune

100 Popular Irish Session Tune
100 Popular Irish Session Tune
  • Stock: In Stock
  • Model: GM08052
  • UPC: 9781899512232
  • EAN: 9781899512232
  • Stock Level UK Warehouse: 1
  • Next delivery date: 0000-00-00
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€16.95
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GM08052: 100 Popular Irish Session Tune
With chords, suitable all for melody instruments. By Dave Mallinson. Made in United Kingdom


    Product Specifications
  • Made in: United Kingdom
  • Product Identifier: 9781899512232
  • Bearing in mind that one of my life rules is “Never say never”, 100 Popular Irish Session Tunes is the last in the series. Although the series comprises 600 tunes, this last book is still packed with popular standards. The Green Mountain, George White’s and The Bank of Turf are all perfect examples. Reels, jigs, hornpipes, polkas, slides, slip jigs, and barn dances are to be found in the book with the usual importance given to reels followed by jigs.
    Six books of 100 Irish tunes plus six accompanying CDs has been a mega project. I think that if I had known at the outset what an enormous task I was setting myself, I would never have started. It has taken around 20 years to complete plus 15 years before that studying the music, when producing books such as these would never have entered my head. 
    To be fair, the books’ development was nothing like as precise as this. I didn’t wake up one morning and say to myself “I think I’ll produce six Irish music books”. The books developed steadily over time, born out of my impatience to learn more and more tunes as quickly as possible. I found I kept forgetting tunes I had learned earlier, particularly the setting I had worked out to suit myself and my instrument, (I still forget nowadays but on a larger scale). Because of this, I started jotting the tunes down for easy revision. Then I saw a gap in the market and I published 100 Essential Irish Session Tunes from my crib sheets. It was a much bigger success than I had imagined, so I continued the series. I didn’t intend to bring out accompanying CDs but I had such a lot of requests for them that, in the end, I relented and produced the recordings, that took 13 years. Now the project is finished, I’m glad I’ve done it and I’m pleased with the end product although I would have liked to have had more talent to put into the soundtracks, but it’s difficult when you don’t start young. However, I feel that I have been paid a great compliment by the fact that companies in Ireland have copied my products, some tunes note for note.
    The tune settings in this book are all ‘session friendly’, i.e. you can learn them exactly as written and know that you will have a perfectly acceptable version. However, I consider it unwise to learn a tune from only one source and I would suggest strongly that, when learning a new tune, you pay heed to other books, recordings and live performances. It is important to note that the settings in this book are greatly influenced by the instrument I play, the D/G melodeon (an accordion system rarely found in Irish music circles - B/C and C sharp/D are the norm). I’ve made a conscious effort to allow this to happen in order to give the book its own unique character. When choosing books, take care not to be put off by the title; some of the best sources of tunes are from tuition books. Just because the book cover says ‘Learn to Play the Banjo’, don’t think it’s of no use if you play the tin whistle.
    Books will only help you to learn the notes of a tune. To pick up the rhythm of Irish music you must devote a large amount of time listening to both recordings and live musicians. Of greatest importance, you must practise; the value of this book is directly proportional to the number of hours a day you spend practising.
    Chord arrangements are more or less as played on the soundtrack, but nevertheless, are only suggestions. The dominant chords (i.e. D in the key of G, A in the key of D and E in the key of A etc.) throughout this book are noted as plain major chords, whereas many musicians prefer to play the seventh (D7, A7, E7 etc.). Feel free to play either type of chord as the mood takes you.
    Suggested ornamentation has been kept to a minimum and is indicated by the symbol ~.
    To help those whose music reading skills only extends as far as finding the notes, a separate, optional CD has been produced (DMPCD1101), so you can familiarise yourself with a tune before learning it.

     

    Contents

     

    Reels


    Ambrose Maloney's
    Bag of Potatoes, The
    Belles of Tipperary, The
    Boys of Malin, The
    Castle Kelly
    Colonel Frazer
    Dairy Maid, The
    Dinkie's
    Drunken Tinker, The
    Dublin Reel, The
    Eel in the Sink, The
    Farewell to Erin
    First Month of Summer, The
    Foxhunters' Reel
    Galtee Rangers
    Gatehouse Maid, The
    George White's Fancy
    Green Mountain, The
    Jackson's
    Jenny Picking Cockles
    Kilrush Polka No. 1, The
    Kilrush Polka No. 2, The
    King of the Clans
    Laington's
    Liffey Banks, The
    Lucky in Love
    Mamma's Pet
    Mayor Harrison's Fedora
    McDonagh's
    McFadden's Handsome Daughter
    Michael Creamer's
    Michael Reilly's
    Milliner's Daughter, The
    Molloy's
    Monsignor's Blessing
    Mountain Top, The

    Mullingar Races
    Music in the Glen
    My Love and I in the Garden
    Paddy Cronin's
    Peter Street
    Piper's Despair, The
    Rattigan's
    Reconciliation, The
    Red Haired Lass, The
    Stenson's
    Stoney Steps, The
    Swinging on a Gate
    Tom Ward's Downfall
    Union Reel, The
    Volunteer, The


    Jigs


    Bank of Turf, The
    Bill Collins'
    Brian O'Lynn
    Bush on the Hill, The
    Butchers' March, The
    Come Have a Drink With Me
    Con Cassidy's
    Get Up Old Woman and Shake
    Hole in the Hedge, The
    Jerry's Beaver Hat
    Kinnegad Slashers
    Leg of the Duck, The
    Leitrim Fancy
    Old Man Dillon
    Orphan, The
    Paddy Taylor's
    Rambler, The
    Richard Brennan's Favourite
    Rose's Delight
    Scatter the Mud
    Seamus Cooley's

    Sliabh Russell
    Trip to Sligo, A
    Visit to Ireland, A


    Hornpipes


    Byrne's
    Derry, The
    High Level, The
    Poppy Leaf, The
    Showman’s Fancy


    Polkas


    Annaghbeg, The
    Gullane No. 2, The
    Johnny O'Leary's
    Many a Wild Night
    Pete Bradleys
    Timmy O'Connors


    Slides


    Ceanngulla, The
    Con Carthy's Favourite
    Dan Cronin's
    Dennis Enright's
    Glountane Frolics
    Kishkeam, The
    Scart, The


    Slip Jigs


    Cock and the Hen

    Dever the Dancer

    Fig for a Kiss

    Give Us a Drink of Water

    Swaggering Jig


    Barn Dances


    Hills of Tara, The
    Peach Blossoms

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