Annotation:King of the Fairies (The)

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 KING OF THE FAIRIES, THE (Rí na Sideog). AKA and see "Bonny Charlie (1)," "King William of Orange," "Your Old Wig is the Love of My Heart." Irish, Set or Long Dance. E Dorian (Harker/Rafferty, Mallinson, O'Neill): E Minor (Brody, Raven, Stanford/Petrie): G Minor (Welling). Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB (O'Neill): AABB (Harker/Rafferty, Mallinson, Stanford/Petrie): AABBCC (Brody, Raven, Welling). "King of the Fairies" appears to be derived from a Jacobite tune called "Bonny Charlie (1)," appearing in many 18th century Scots and Northern English publications, such as Aird (1783). It was collected in the 19th century in Ireland by P.W. Joyce (Old Irish Folk Music and Songs, 1909, No. 690) under the title "Your old wig is the love of my heart," and by George Petrie as an untitled air (Stanford/Petrie, Complete Collection, No. 1281). The tune is played by Cape Breton fiddlers with the Irish title ("King of the Fairies"), but as a march. One tale attached to the tune (albeit perhaps a modern piece of 'blarney', as there is no folkloric connection) has it that "The King of the Fairies" is a summoning tune, and if played three times in a row during a festivity the King must appear. Once summoned, however, the King assesses the situation, and if the gathering is to his liking he may join in; if however, he does not find it to his liking he may cause great mischief.

 Source for notated version: Dave Swarbrick (England) [Brody]; New Jersey flute player Mike Rafferty, born in Ballinakill, Co. Galway, in 1926 [Harker].  Printed sources: Brody (Fiddler's Fakebook), 1983; p. 158. Harker (300 Tunes from Mike Rafferty), 2005; No. 294, p. 96. Mallinson (100 Enduring), 1995; No. 84, p. 35. Raven (English Country Dance Tunes), 1984; p. 168 (appears as "King William of Orange"). Welling (Welling's Hartford Tunebook), 1976; p. 22.  Recorded sources: CAT-WMR004, Wendy MacIssac - "The 'Reel' Thing" (1994). Folkways FW 8876, Kevin Burke- "Sweeney's Dream." Transatlantic 341, Dave Swarbrick- "Swarbrick 2."  See also listings at: Alan Snyder's Cape Breton Fiddle Recording Index Jane Keefer's Folk Music Index: An Index to Recorded Sources Alan Ng's Irishtune.info Hear recordings of the set dance dating to 1958 at the Comhaltas Archive

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