Annotation:Tide Come in (2) (The)

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X:1 T:Tide Come In [2], The M:C L:1/8 R:Hornpipe K:Gmin (dc)|BAG^F GABc|B2G2G2 (bg)|fedc Bced|(3cdB (3ABG F2 (dc)| BAG^F GABc|dg^fa g2 (g=f)|edcB ceAc|B2G2G2:| |:(^fg)|bgdB gdBG|DGBd gdbg|afcA fcAF|CFAc BAG^F| G^FGA BABc|dg^fa g2 (g=f)|edcB ceAc|B2G2G2:|



TIDE COME IN [2], THE (Tháinig an taoide isteach). AKA – “The Tide Came In." AKA and see “Brown Casket (The)," "Brown Chest (The),” “Brown Coffin (The),” “Comhra Donn (An)," "When the Tide Comes In." Scottish (originally), English, Irish; Hornpipe. G Minor (Kerr): D Minor (Miller). Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Some similarities to "Tide come in (1) (The)." According to Donegal fiddler Danny O’Donnell the tune was also called “Factory Smoke Hornpipe” and “Flowing Tide (2)” (the latter title also belongs to a popular but unrelated hornpipe). The tune is sometimes attributed to Tyneside fiddler and composer James Hill (it is included in Graham Dixon’s 1987 book of Hill compositions, The Lads Like Beer), but the attribution is conjectural. The Charlton Memorial Tune Book (1956) attributes an E minor version of the tune (called “When the Tide Comes in”) to one Jack Davidson.


Additional notes



Printed sources : - Kerr (Merry Melodies, vol. 3), c. 1880's; No. 363, p. 40. Laybourn (Kohler’s Violin Repository), 1881-1885 (appears as “Factory Smoke”). Miller (Fiddler’s Throne), 2004; No. 318, p. 187.

Recorded sources : - Danny O’Donnell – “Ón tSean-Am Anall”

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