Lovely lift guys! I like how second time thru on the B Part youz traded off on the lower octave of that wee core melody. Fun. Makes me ask now... (respecting that Irish traditional music was mostly a solo form till its wonderful modern explosion)... do youz play other duo tunes where each player varies a bit from the other?
Hello dmacseain, thank you for your nice comment, we really appreciate it. We do indeed play more tunes in that way, a few of them are published (see below), and we are planning to publish more. Glad you‘re enjoying our tunes. 😃 Here are the links: Away With The Fairies - Irish traditional tune ‘Around The Fairyfort’ in canon on button accordion ruclips.net/video/kPinOzbMRGM/видео.html The Dunmore Lasses (in canon) - Irish traditional reel played on button accordion ruclips.net/video/USy-cOUJYuU/видео.html And we play some tunes with harmony, such as the following: Eleanor Plunkett - Irish traditional air on tin whistle & accordion ruclips.net/video/pdG_TpPv_qE/видео.html O‘Carolan‘s Dream - Irish traditional slow air on button accordion ruclips.net/video/rosttHmqJHo/видео.html You’ll find a complete playlist of tunes played with more than one accordion here: Pat & Friends - Traditional Irish tunes played on button accordion & other instruments ruclips.net/p/PLDpDX8JKP5Zr1OMyHZnfyf_EMRn32faWh
I must admit that (in canon) is something that I have not heard about. Here is Wiki explanation, but I would much prefer to know your view, Pat. Cheers. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon_(music)
Bruce, thanks for all your many comments on the origin of tunes. You must spend a good part of your time researching all this and finding all those faults. My main focus is playing the tunes I grew in the tradition I grew up with, which is Irish music. These tunes, some of which may well have originated in Scotland or elsewhere, are all an accepted part of the Irish tradition these days. So maybe instead of telling me to do more research (I'm a musician, not a reseacher!), you should just accept that tunes, as well as languages and customs, spread when cultures are in contact. Maybe just enjoy the music, which is what my channel is all about. The tunes are beautiful, no matter where they originate. Thanks for listening. 🎵
@@PatBartonAccordion it matters a lot when you see every scottish fiddle reel tunes /sangs aul and new constantly labeled as irish. the fiddle was introduced to ireland through donegal where there is a large scottish culture. james scot skinner/james hill/ neil gow/his son nathanial/ mcintosh/birnie and many more all had a big impact on the fiddle in ireland.reel music being indigenous to scotland. the accordian was also adopted from scotland in the 1900s. jimmy shand/will starr/ the wyper bros. one the wyper bros was the top button accordianist of his time. look.......foster and allen set to bring their traditional magic to fife........you will read where they state they met their hero scottish accordianist jimmy shand. the more modern irish music started in the late 50s by the clancy bros( i know because i was around then). the clancies were actually actors who went to america to further their careers but it never worked out so they took to singing. the mostly sang irish rebel ballads but came back to the uk where they readily adopted the more fun/livelier scottish raucous style alang with many scottish sangs(also now labeled as irish round the world) then the dubliners formed in 62 and did the same.the the furies in the 70s did the same. remember, these bands like most folkies at the time could not read music and when they did their wee gigs in scotland they would learn them by ear. i.e christie moore was in glasgow doing a gig when he heard the scottish folk singer hamish imlach(who always sung in the guid scots tongue) sing an auld american rework of an auld scottish sang black is the colour. he asked hamish to teach it to him.....christie moore took it back to ireland (this was in the 60s) noo guess whit....it,s now an "ancient irish" sang.
@@brucecollins4729 Still haven't given me an answer on how English dispatches recorded the Irish in the the 15th and 16th century with the opposite of what you say we were.
@@merrybutcher2978 who was hired by irish chiefs(who were probably of scottish descent) to fight the normans at that time...scottish galoglas clans..the mac/mc donalds/maccabes/sweeneys and more. they were given huge tracts of land in return. donal is how we pronounce donald in scotland. donal mac/mc donnel o donnell. donald mac/mc donald of the cland donald. as with the o,niels. the name o,donnell first recorded in ireland 1258 ..the same time as the scottish galoglas arrived taking their names with them. it,s in donegal that the name is most prominent as the earlier scots settled there. type in....irish roots:the use of gaelic patronymic suurnames........you wull read where it states....the recieved wisdom..no fact. you can type in .....a dozen things you might not know about irish surnames-irish times.....they write about the names with the prefix mac and o,s being dropped...no they were only adopted in the late 1800s by the gaelic league of ireland who also adopted scottish fiddle reel music/tunes/stepdance/ceiliedths / accordian/ sangs. you can type in......irish last names :mac & o the evolution of surnames in ireland . look up the earliest irish surname o,clery on the right hand side of the same page.
So where is he? Should be jumping for joy with that fine tune!
Ah, thank you Kevin, glad you like the tune. He was in hiding for that video... 😉
Lovely lift guys! I like how second time thru on the B Part youz traded off on the lower octave of that wee core melody. Fun. Makes me ask now... (respecting that Irish traditional music was mostly a solo form till its wonderful modern explosion)... do youz play other duo tunes where each player varies a bit from the other?
Hello dmacseain, thank you for your nice comment, we really appreciate it. We do indeed play more tunes in that way, a few of them are published (see below), and we are planning to publish more. Glad you‘re enjoying our tunes. 😃
Here are the links:
Away With The Fairies - Irish traditional tune ‘Around The Fairyfort’ in canon on button accordion
ruclips.net/video/kPinOzbMRGM/видео.html
The Dunmore Lasses (in canon) - Irish traditional reel played on button accordion
ruclips.net/video/USy-cOUJYuU/видео.html
And we play some tunes with harmony, such as the following:
Eleanor Plunkett - Irish traditional air on tin whistle & accordion
ruclips.net/video/pdG_TpPv_qE/видео.html
O‘Carolan‘s Dream - Irish traditional slow air on button accordion
ruclips.net/video/rosttHmqJHo/видео.html
You’ll find a complete playlist of tunes played with more than one accordion here:
Pat & Friends - Traditional Irish tunes played on button accordion & other instruments
ruclips.net/p/PLDpDX8JKP5Zr1OMyHZnfyf_EMRn32faWh
What key ya playing that in please ?
I must admit that (in canon) is something that I have not heard about. Here is Wiki explanation, but I would much prefer to know your view, Pat. Cheers. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon_(music)
Pat, if you would: what key are you playing this in? Cheers
you should do some research on these "irish" reels. this is scottish.
Bruce, thanks for all your many comments on the origin of tunes. You must spend a good part of your time researching all this and finding all those faults. My main focus is playing the tunes I grew in the tradition I grew up with, which is Irish music. These tunes, some of which may well have originated in Scotland or elsewhere, are all an accepted part of the Irish tradition these days. So maybe instead of telling me to do more research (I'm a musician, not a reseacher!), you should just accept that tunes, as well as languages and customs, spread when cultures are in contact. Maybe just enjoy the music, which is what my channel is all about. The tunes are beautiful, no matter where they originate. Thanks for listening. 🎵
@@PatBartonAccordion it matters a lot when you see every scottish fiddle reel tunes /sangs aul and new constantly labeled as irish. the fiddle was introduced to ireland through donegal where there is a large scottish culture. james scot skinner/james hill/ neil gow/his son nathanial/ mcintosh/birnie and many more all had a big impact on the fiddle in ireland.reel music being indigenous to scotland. the accordian was also adopted from scotland in the 1900s. jimmy shand/will starr/ the wyper bros. one the wyper bros was the top button accordianist of his time. look.......foster and allen set to bring their traditional magic to fife........you will read where they state they met their hero scottish accordianist jimmy shand. the more modern irish music started in the late 50s by the clancy bros( i know because i was around then). the clancies were actually actors who went to america to further their careers but it never worked out so they took to singing. the mostly sang irish rebel ballads but came back to the uk where they readily adopted the more fun/livelier scottish raucous style alang with many scottish sangs(also now labeled as irish round the world) then the dubliners formed in 62 and did the same.the the furies in the 70s did the same. remember, these bands like most folkies at the time could not read music and when they did their wee gigs in scotland they would learn them by ear. i.e christie moore was in glasgow doing a gig when he heard the scottish folk singer hamish imlach(who always sung in the guid scots tongue) sing an auld american rework of an auld scottish sang black is the colour. he asked hamish to teach it to him.....christie moore took it back to ireland (this was in the 60s) noo guess whit....it,s now an "ancient irish" sang.
@@PatBartonAccordion a might add...your a grand button accordian player. ma brother played for 55 years but rarely touches it these days.
@@brucecollins4729 Still haven't given me an answer on how English dispatches recorded the Irish in the the 15th and 16th century with the opposite of what you say we were.
@@merrybutcher2978 who was hired by irish chiefs(who were probably of scottish descent) to fight the normans at that time...scottish galoglas clans..the mac/mc donalds/maccabes/sweeneys and more. they were given huge tracts of land in return. donal is how we pronounce donald in scotland. donal mac/mc donnel o donnell. donald mac/mc donald of the cland donald. as with the o,niels. the name o,donnell first recorded in ireland 1258 ..the same time as the scottish galoglas arrived taking their names with them. it,s in donegal that the name is most prominent as the earlier scots settled there. type in....irish roots:the use of gaelic patronymic suurnames........you wull read where it states....the recieved wisdom..no fact. you can type in .....a dozen things you might not know about irish surnames-irish times.....they write about the names with the prefix mac and o,s being dropped...no they were only adopted in the late 1800s by the gaelic league of ireland who also adopted scottish fiddle reel music/tunes/stepdance/ceiliedths / accordian/ sangs. you can type in......irish last names :mac & o the evolution of surnames in ireland . look up the earliest irish surname o,clery on the right hand side of the same page.
Not Irish. Scots.