Annotation:New Lesson (The): Difference between revisions
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|f_tune_annotation_title=https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:New_Lesson_(The) > | |||
'''NEW LESSON, THE''' (An Leigeann Nuad). AKA and see "[['Read-a-med-aisy' (The)]]," "[[Reading made Easy (1) (The)]]." Irish, Air (6/8 time, "airily"). D Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. Read-a-med-aisy = 'reading made easy'. "[[Billy McCormick's]]" is sometimes given as an alternate title, but the jig of that name printed in O'Neill's DMI (1907, No. 341) bears no resemblance. See also George Petrie's version "[[annotation:Reading made Easy (1) (The)]]," from an 18th century song of seduction entitled "The Turf and Reading-Made-Easy." O'Neill's "New Lesson" title may be an example of his rather Victorian attempts to distance his work from any of the earlier era's salaciousness. | |f_annotation='''NEW LESSON, THE''' (An Leigeann Nuad). AKA and see "[['Read-a-med-aisy' (The)]]," "[[Reading made Easy (1) (The)]]." Irish, Air (6/8 time, "airily"). D Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. Read-a-med-aisy = 'reading made easy'. "[[Billy McCormick's]]" is sometimes given as an alternate title, but the jig of that name printed in O'Neill's DMI (1907, No. 341) bears no resemblance. See also George Petrie's version "[[annotation:Reading made Easy (1) (The)]]," from an 18th century song of seduction entitled "The Turf and Reading-Made-Easy." O'Neill's "New Lesson" title may be an example of his rather Victorian attempts to distance his work from any of the earlier era's salaciousness. | ||
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|f_printed_sources=O'Neill ('''Music of Ireland: 1850 Melodies'''), 1903; No. 488, p. 85. | |||
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Revision as of 04:47, 8 January 2021
NEW LESSON, THE (An Leigeann Nuad). AKA and see "'Read-a-med-aisy' (The)," "Reading made Easy (1) (The)." Irish, Air (6/8 time, "airily"). D Mixolydian. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. Read-a-med-aisy = 'reading made easy'. "Billy McCormick's" is sometimes given as an alternate title, but the jig of that name printed in O'Neill's DMI (1907, No. 341) bears no resemblance. See also George Petrie's version "annotation:Reading made Easy (1) (The)," from an 18th century song of seduction entitled "The Turf and Reading-Made-Easy." O'Neill's "New Lesson" title may be an example of his rather Victorian attempts to distance his work from any of the earlier era's salaciousness.
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