[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference tallis::celt

Title:Celt Notefile
Moderator:TALLIS::DARCY
Created:Wed Feb 19 1986
Last Modified:Tue Jun 03 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1632
Total number of notes:20523

158.0. "Greatest Rendition of Danny Boy" by FNYFS::AUNGIER (Rene El Irlandais que no tiene tiempo para los Ingles) Thu Mar 19 1987 06:51

    I once saw a fantastic film made I think by Walt Disney which featured
    2 boys, one black, the other white who played music together.
    
    I don't remember the whole story but I remember that the were singing
    in the streets outside an Irish bar in America somewhere and eventually
    the owner hunted them away. Some weeks later they came back and
    the owner gave them a job because they sung "Danny Boy" and other
    Irish songs.
    
    I would like to know the name of the film, it was the greatest
    rendition of "Danny Boy" I have ever heard in my life and it came
    back to me recently listening to an Irish tape with "Danny Boy"
    on it.
    
    
    Rene
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
158.1From Glen to Glen.AYOV10::DHUNTERI came, I saw, I left!Thu Mar 19 1987 11:192
    Dammit! - Can't stop whistling Danny Boy now.
    
158.2Check the Pipes - they're callingTALLIS::DARCYGeorge @Littleton Mass USAThu Mar 19 1987 11:285
    It's interesting - "Danny Boy" is just a set of lyrics for a much
    older tune.  I have the same music for piano at home and it's entitled
    "Would God I were a Tender Apple Blossom" or something like that.
    
    I suppose that's true of many such songs.
158.3From Glen, to glen �ENGGSG::BURNSAs The Hammer Strikes The AnvilThu Mar 19 1987 13:317
    
    
    	The version Rene is refering to was sung by Glen Curtin ...
    
    
    
    	K�V�N
158.4 U.S. Marine Corps TunePROSE::WALKERThu Mar 19 1987 16:1916
           < speaking of lyrics being used with an old tune >

Years ago I tried my hand (and mouth) at playing the pipes. It was 
with an established pipe band in N.Y.C. The Armagh County Band.
I think I mostly got involved for the drinking that took place 
after the practices and the events they attended. Never did learn
how to play the pipes. Anyway, beginners were given the Marine Corps 
Hymn as a tune to practice on the chanter.

The band played the tune regularly as part of their repertoire.
I remember one night at an event in the K of C hall the band was
playing the Marine Corps Hymn. Afterwards an Irishman or Scotsman
made a comment to me that the U.S. Marine Corps Hymn was an old
Orangemen's Tune played by them during their parades.

I am curious, does anyone know if there is any truth to that ?
158.5The Londonderry AirPUGH::IANIan Smyth 830-3869Thu Mar 26 1987 08:5111

	
	One name for the lyric is "The Londonderry Air". It was 
apparently first published after a young lady heard a fiddler playing
it in Limavady, Co Londonderry. There's a plaque on a building in
Main Street, Limavady marking the house where she lived.

Ian

( from Limavady, a few years ago)
158.6THE IRISH OF THE EASTUSWAV1::KEANEYThu Mar 26 1987 21:528
    ANOTHER INTERESTING QUIRK CONCERNING "DANNY BOY" IS THAT IT IS PERHAPS
    THE MOST POPULAR LOVE SONG IN KOREA! I ALMOST GOT INTO A LOT OF
    TROUBLE TRYING TO EXPLAIN THE SONG WAS OF A FATHER SAYING GOODBYE
    TO HIS SON WHO WAS GOING OFF TO WAR( THE PIPES THAT ARE CALLING
    ARE WAR PIPES). IN KOREA YOU'D BEST KEEP THAT INFO TO YOURSELF.
    AS FAR AS THEY ARE CONCERNED THE SONG IS OF A YOUNG GIRL WHO IS
    SAYING GOODBYE TO HER LOVE. THEN TO REALLY CONFUSE THE ISSUE, KOREANS
    CALL DANNY BOY THE COWBOY SONG! REGARDLESS, THEY DO ENJOY THAT SONG.
158.7AXEL::FOLEYRebel without a clueWed May 06 1987 12:367
    Rene,
    
    	If you want to here what I think it the best version of Danny
    	Boy then send me mail and I'll mail you a copy of my fathers
    	album. It was made around '72.
    
    							mike
158.8One of these days I'll get to hear it.ENGGSG::BURNSThe Burren and the Cliffs of MoherWed May 06 1987 14:5211
    
    
    	I'd like to a copy of that album also ... :-)
    
    
    
    	"Up the Rebels"
    
    
    
    	keVin
158.9Wholesale of course...AXEL::FOLEYRebel without a clueWed May 06 1987 20:085
    
    
    	Ah, yea.. That's right.. I'll see what I can get ya..
    
    						mike
158.10A FavoriteMODEL::FULTONI&#039;ve Heard the Mermaids SingingThu Nov 05 1987 13:253
    
    My favorite rendition of "The Londonderry Aire" or "Danny Boy"
    is James Galway's.
158.11CALLME::MR_TOPAZThu Nov 05 1987 13:328
       re .10:
       
       Londonderry?
       
       Is Mrs Thatcher shooting a moon from 10 Downing St an example
       of a Londonderry Aire?
       
       --Mr Topaz
158.12Life is but a bowl of cherriesMODEL::FULTONI&#039;ve Heard the Mermaids SingingFri Nov 06 1987 12:3014
    
    re: .11
        
    Mrs. Thatcher wouldn't be able to appreciate a 'Londonderry Aire'
    if her life depended upon it.  So no need to go off the deep end
    with worry about some unfortunate response on her part.
    
    Londonderry, by the way, is a town in Northern Ireland.  It was
    originally called Derry.  The English in their enthusiasm to
    share all things 'bright and beautiful' prefaced the town's
    name with the word London, obviously an unfortunate decision
    on their part.  Now  I'd take a flutter that you already knew
    all this.  So...
158.13CALLME::MR_TOPAZFri Nov 06 1987 13:428
       re .12 (re .11):
       
       Someone want to help Mr/Ms Fulton with the concept of 
       Mrs T bending over and a Londonderry Aire?
       
       Thanks,
       
       --Mr Topaz
158.14London Derryaire??!!ANOVAX::TOUGHWhat! You want to net my cluster?!Fri Nov 06 1987 15:211
    
158.15Still a Nice TuneMODEL::FULTONI&#039;ve Heard the Mermaids SingingMon Nov 09 1987 10:1811
    
    Re .13
    
    Mr. Topaz is it?  Most Irish I know are a sensitive, poetic lot.
        
    By the way "Fulton" is a Scottish name, but when I lived in
    Glasgow I used to root for Celtics just like I do here in Boston.
    (Just love that DJ)
    There is much to admire in that which is Irish; you are not one
    of them.  A vulgarian at best.
    
158.16SayonaraMODEL::FULTONI&#039;ve Heard the Mermaids SingingTue Nov 10 1987 10:0212
    
    Just realized that I left out one of the finest Boston Celtics
    of them all, old Dannyboy himself.
    
    There are some excellent notes in this file on Celt history 
    and I've been learning quite a bit here, but I also realized 
    that this is the only notes file where I have peersonally been 
    subjected to crudeness.  It was easy enough to type in "Add
    entry Celt" and it should be just as easy to type in "Delete
    entry Celt".
    
    			Bye, Guys!
158.17SaywhateverulikeRTOEU2::RDELANEYCaith Siar � agus n� lig aniar �Tue Nov 10 1987 10:274
    
    
        Sl�n agus Beannacht......
    
158.18Root tootie toot tootWELSWS::MANNIONBonnets so redWed Nov 11 1987 09:251
    O Margaret dear, your pipes, your pipes are caw-aw-ling...
158.19The Man with the Golden FluteKLOV01::LOGANDECkchair Attendant Mon Nov 16 1987 08:296
    Just to agree with .10 James Galway R.O.K.
    
    I heard him on 13-Nov-87 at the XXV Belfast Festival at Queens and
    he was his usual superb self.
    
    Andy.