Annotation:Far from Home: Difference between revisions
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|f_source_for_notated_version=Francis O'Neill learned his version of the tune in the San Joaquin Valley, California, when he was aged 19 in the 1870's "from the whistling of a companion while herding a flock of 3,000 sheep on the plains at the foot of the Sierra Nevada range" (ed.—presumably the title appealed to the young O'Neill, who left Ireland in his mid-teens, or was his own invention) [O'Neill/'''Irish Folk Music''']. | |f_source_for_notated_version=Francis O'Neill learned his version of the tune in the San Joaquin Valley, California, when he was aged 19 in the 1870's "from the whistling of a companion while herding a flock of 3,000 sheep on the plains at the foot of the Sierra Nevada range" (ed.—presumably the title appealed to the young O'Neill, who left Ireland in his mid-teens, or was his own invention) [O'Neill/'''Irish Folk Music''']. | ||
|f_printed_sources=Cranitch ('''The Irish Fiddle Book'''), 1996; No. 59, p. 148. | |f_printed_sources=Cranitch ('''The Irish Fiddle Book'''), 1996; No. 59, p. 148. | ||
"Boys of the Lough," ''Frets Magazine'', October 1980; p. 31. | "Boys of the Lough," ''Frets Magazine'', October 1980; p. 31. | ||
Corfield ('''Tunes from New Brunswick'''), 2024; p. 41. | |||
Kennedy ('''Fiddler's Tune-Book, vol. 2'''), 1954; p. 11. | Kennedy ('''Fiddler's Tune-Book, vol. 2'''), 1954; p. 11. | ||
Miller & Perron ('''New England Fiddler's Repertoire'''), 1983; No. 86. | Miller & Perron ('''New England Fiddler's Repertoire'''), 1983; No. 86. |