Annotation:Lad O'Beirne's Hornpipe
X:1 T:Lad O'Beirne's M:4/4 L:1/8 R:Hornpipe K:G Major Bc|(3dcB gd BdcB|Agfa gf (3gfe|dfec BdcA|FGAG (3FED (3CB,A,| G,B,DG BGDB,|(3CCC EG cedc|BDGB ADFA|1GBAF G2:|2Ggfa g2 ga|| (3bag dg bgdg|afdf afdf|+g2d2+ +f2A2+ +e2G2+ +d2F2+|(3cBA (3BAG (3FED (3CB,A,| G,B,DG BGDB,|(3CCC EG cedc|BDGB ADFA|Ggfa g2 ga| (3bag dg bgdg|afdf afdf|(3gag (3fgf (3efe (3dcB|(3cBA (3BAG (3FED (3CB,A,| G,B,DG BGDB,|(3CCC EG cedc|BDGB ADFA|GBAF G2||
LAD O'BEIRNE'S (HORNPIPE). AKA - "Reavy's Hornpipe." Irish, Hornpipe. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB (Cranford/Holland): AA'BB' (Reavy). Composed by prolific tune composer and fiddler Ed Reavy (1898-1988) originally from County Cavan, Ireland, who lived in Corktown, near Philadelphia, Pa., for many years. It was dedicated to the great New York fiddler Lad O'Beirne
as O'Beirne loved the tune, although it was originally written for Reavy's son, Ed Reavy Jr., a lover of hornpipes. The younger Reavy especially liked "Harvest Home (1)" and his father promised to write him a hornpipe in the same vein. Reavy Jr. was somewhat skeptical, as he considered "Harvest Home (1)" a masterpiece, but a few weeks later the elder returned home from a dance and played the hornpipe for his son, and "when I heard that tune, that's when I realized that he was a genius." Ed Reavy Jr. thinks it is different from the sort of hornpipes his father usually wrote. The piece was recorded by the great County Sligo/New York fiddler Michael Coleman in 1944, and later, in the 1960's by Sean Ryan (although it appeared under the title "Flowing Tide (3)," a title that usually goes with another hornpipe).