fbpx
Wikipedia

Londonderry Air

The "Londonderry Air" is an Irish air (folk tune) that originated in County Londonderry, first recorded in the nineteenth century. The tune is played as the victory sporting anthem of Northern Ireland at the Commonwealth Games. The song "Danny Boy" written by English lawyer Fred Weatherly uses the tune, with a set of lyrics written in the early 20th century.

Londonderry Air
First print in George Petrie's collection, Dublin 1855

Unofficial regional anthem of Northern Ireland
Also known asDerry Air
MusicUnknown
Audio sample
Piano Arrangement of Londonderry Air

History edit

The title of the air came from the name of County Londonderry, and was collected by Jane Ross of Limavady in the county.

Ross submitted the tune to music collector George Petrie, and it was then published by the Society for the Preservation and Publication of the Melodies of Ireland in the 1855 book The Ancient Music of Ireland, which Petrie edited.[1] The tune was listed as an anonymous air, with a note attributing its collection to Jane Ross of Limavady.

For the following beautiful air I have to express my very grateful acknowledgement to Miss J. Ross, of New Town, Limavady, in the County of Londonderry—a lady who has made a large collection of the popular unpublished melodies of the county, which she has very kindly placed at my disposal, and which has added very considerably to the stock of tunes which I had previously acquired from that still very Irish county. I say still very Irish, for though it has been planted for more than two centuries by English and Scottish settlers, the old Irish race still forms the great majority of its peasant inhabitants; and there are few, if any counties in which, with less foreign admixture, the ancient melodies of the country have been so extensively preserved. The name of the tune unfortunately was not ascertained by Miss Ross, who sent it to me with the simple remark that it was 'very old', in the correctness of which statement I have no hesitation in expressing my perfect concurrence.[2]

This led to the descriptive title "Londonderry Air" being used for the piece.

The origin of the tune was for a long time somewhat mysterious, as no other collector of folk tunes encountered it, and all known examples are descended from Ross's submission to Petrie's collection. In a 1934 article, Anne Geddes Gilchrist suggested that the performer whose tune Ross heard, played the song with extreme rubato, causing Ross to mistake the time signature of the piece for common time (4
4
) rather than 3
4
. Gilchrist asserted that adjusting the rhythm of the piece as she proposed produced a tune more typical of Irish folk music.[3]

In 1974, Hugh Shields found a long-forgotten traditional song which was very similar to Gilchrist's modified version of the melody.[4] The song, "Aislean an Oigfear" (recte "Aisling an Óigfhir", "The Young Man's Dream"), had been transcribed by Edward Bunting in 1792 based on a performance by harper Donnchadh Ó Hámsaigh (Denis Hempson) at the Belfast Harp Festival, and the tune would later become well known far outside of Ireland as The Last Rose of Summer. Bunting published it in 1796.[5] Ó Hámsaigh lived in Magilligan, not far from Ross's home in Limavady. Hempson died in 1807.[1]

In 2000, Brian Audley showed how the distinctive high section of the tune had derived from a refrain in "The Young Man's Dream" which, over time, crept into the body of the music. He also discovered the original words to the tune as we now know it, which were written by Edward Fitzsimmons and published in 1814; his song is "The Confession of Devorgilla", otherwise known by its first line "Oh Shrive Me Father".[6]

The descendants of blind fiddler Jimmy McCurry assert that he is the musician from whom Miss Ross transcribed the tune but there is no historical evidence to support this speculation. A similar claim has been made regarding the tune's 'coming' to the blind itinerant harpist Rory Dall O'Cahan in a dream. A documentary detailing this version was broadcast on Maryland Public Television in the United States in March 2000;[7] reference to this was also made by historian John Hamilton in Michael Portillo's TV programme "Great British Railway Journeys Goes to Ireland" in February 2012.[8]

Music score edit

The melody appears thus in the first edition:

 

Lyrical settings edit

Danny Boy edit

The most popular lyrics for the tune are "Danny Boy" ("Oh Danny Boy, the pipes, the pipes are calling"), written by English lawyer Frederic Edward Weatherly in 1910, and set to the tune in 1913.

The Confession of Devorgilla edit

The first lyrics to be sung to the music were, "The Confession of Devorgilla", otherwise known as "Oh! shrive me, father".

'Oh! shrive me, father – haste, haste, and shrive me,
'Ere sets yon dread and flaring sun;
'Its beams of peace, – nay, of sense, deprive me,
'Since yet the holy work's undone.'
The sage, the wand'rer's anguish balming,
Soothed her heart to rest once more;
And pardon's promise torture calming,
The Pilgrim told her sorrows o'er.

The first writer, after Petrie's publication, to set verses to the tune was Alfred Perceval Graves, in the late 1870s. His song was entitled "Would I Were Erin's Apple Blossom o'er You". Graves later stated "that setting was, to my mind, too much in the style of church music, and was not, I believe, a success in consequence."[6]

Would I were Erin's apple-blossom o'er you,
Or Erin's rose, in all its beauty blown,
To drop my richest petals down before you,
Within the garden where you walk alone;
In hope you'd turn and pluck a little posy,
With loving fingers through my foliage pressed,
And kiss it close and set it blushing rosy
To sigh out all its sweetness on your breast.

Irish Love Song edit

Katherine Tynan Hinkson published the words of "Irish Love Song" in 1892.[9] Graves set these words to the tune in his 1894 Irish Song Book, where the tune was first referred to descriptively as "Londonderry Air" (unlike the names of properly-titled airs in the songbook, "Londonderry Air" was not placed in quotation marks).[10]

Would God I were the tender apple blossom
That floats and falls from off the twisted bough
To lie and faint within your silken bosom
Within your silken bosom as that does now.
Or would I were a little burnish'd apple
For you to pluck me, gliding by so cold,
While sun and shade your robe of lawn will dapple,
Your robe of lawn and your hair of spun gold.

Hymns edit

As with a good many folk tunes, Londonderry Air is also used as a hymn tune; most notably for "I cannot tell" by William Young Fullerton.[11]

I cannot tell why He Whom angels worship,
Should set His love upon the sons of men,
Or why, as Shepherd, He should seek the wanderers,
To bring them back, they know not how or when.
But this I know, that He was born of Mary
When Bethlehem’s manger was His only home,
And that He lived at Nazareth and laboured,
And so the Saviour, Saviour of the world is come.

It was also used as a setting for "I would be true" by Howard Arnold Walter at the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales:

I would be true, for there are those that trust me.
I would be pure, for there are those that care.
I would be strong, for there is much to suffer.
I would be brave, for there is much to dare.
I would be friend of all, the foe, the friendless.
I would be giving, and forget the gift,
I would be humble, for I know my weakness,
I would look up, and laugh, and love and live.

"Londonderry Air" was also used as the tune for the southern gospel hit "He Looked Beyond My Fault", written by Dottie Rambo and first recorded by her group, The Rambos, in 1968.[12]

Other hymns sung to this tune are:

  • "O Christ the same through all our story’s pages" – Timothy Dudley-Smith
  • "O Dreamer Leave Thy Dreams For Joyful Waking"
  • "I Love Thee So"
  • "My Own Dear Land"
  • "We Shall Go Out With Hope of Resurrection"
  • "Above the Hills of Time the Cross Is Gleaming"
  • "Lord of the Church, We Pray for our Renewing" – Timothy Dudley-Smith
  • "Above the Voices of the World Around Me"
  • "What Grace is Mine" – Kristyn Getty
  • "O Son of Man our hero strong and tender"
  • "Since Long Ago" – Watchman Nee
  • "O Loving God" – Paulette M. McCoy
  • "Go, silent friend", by John L. Bell and Graham Maule [13]

In Derry Vale edit

W. G. Rothery, a British lyricist (1858-1930) who wrote the English lyrics for songs such as Handel's "Art Thou Troubled", wrote the following lyrics to the tune of "The Londonderry Air":

In Derry Vale, beside the singing river,
so oft' I strayed, ah, many years ago,
and culled at morn the golden daffodillies
that came with spring to set the world aglow.
Oh, Derry Vale, my thoughts are ever turning
to your broad stream and fairy-circled lee.
For your green isles my exiled heart is yearning,
so far away across the sea.
In Derry Vale, amid the Foyle's dark waters,
the salmon leap, beside the surging weir.
The seabirds call, I still can hear them calling
in night's long dreams of those so dear.
Oh, tarrying years, fly faster, ever faster,
I long to see that vale belov'd so well,
I long to know that I am not forgotten,
And there in home in peace to dwell.

Far Away edit

George Sigerson wrote a poem that T. R. G. Jozé set to this tune in 1901. This setting was popularized in the early 20th century by the Glasgow Orpheus Choir under Sir Hugh S. Roberton.

As chimes that flow o'er shining seas
When morn alights on meads of May,
Faint voices fill the western breeze,
With whisp'ring song from far away.
O dear the dells of Dunavore
A home in od'rous Ossory,
But sweet as honey running o'er,
The golden shore of Far Away.
There sings the voice whose wondrous tune
Falls like a diamond shower above,
That in the radiant dawn of June,
Renew a world of youth and love.
Oh fair the founts of Farranfore
And bright is billowy Ballintrae,
But sweet as honey running o'er,
The golden shore of Far Away.

Other edit

Instrumental settings edit

  • Frank Bridge used the melody as basis for his An Irish Melody, H.86 for string quartet (1908) or string orchestra (1938).[17]
  • American composer Frank Duarte used the air in the trio of his march, The Valiant Green Company for military band.[18]
  • Australian composer Percy Grainger wrote numerous settings, which he called "Irish Tune from County Derry", in his British Folk-Music Settings.[19]
  • The Irish composer Hamilton Harty wrote a setting for violin and orchestra in 1924.
  • Charles Villiers Stanford included the melody in his Irish Rhapsody No. 1 for orchestra.
  • Lionel Tertis arranged the tune for viola or violin and piano as Londonderry Air "Farewell to Cucullain".
  • Ernest Walker arranged the tune for violin and piano (Op. 59) in 1935.
  • Ben Johnston (composer) used the melody in the 4th movement ("Sprightly, not too fast") of his String Quartet No. 10
  • Don Byas recorded an arrangement of the tune, retitled "London-Donnie", originally featured on the album 'Free And Easy' (Savoy Records MG 6044)
  • A big band jazz arrangement by Earle Hagen was used as the main theme for all 280 episodes of the CBS sitcom The Danny Thomas Show from 1953-1965.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Michael Robinson. "Danny Boy—the mystery solved!". The Standing Stones. Retrieved 26 July 2007.
  2. ^ Petrie, George (1855). The Petrie collection of the ancient music of Ireland : arranged for the piano-forte. Vol. 1. Dublin. p. 57. Retrieved 11 December 2017.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ Gilchrist, Anne Geddes (1934). "A new light upon the Londonderry Air". Journal of the English Folk Dance and Song Society. 1 (3): 115–121. JSTOR 4521039.
  4. ^ Shields, Hugh (1974). "New dates for old songs 1766–1803". Long Room (The Journal of the Library of Trinity College, Dublin).
  5. ^ Bunting, Edward (1796). A General Collection of the Ancient Irish Music.
  6. ^ a b Audley, B. (2000). "The Provenance of the Londonderry Air". Journal of the Royal Musical Association. 125 (2): 205–247. doi:10.1093/jrma/125.2.205.
  7. ^ Maryland Public Television-5 March 2000 14 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "Great British Railway Journeys Goes to Ireland – Ballymoney to Londonderry", Series 3, Episode 25, 3 February 2012, BBC Two
  9. ^ Tynan, Katharine (1892). Irish Love-Songs. London: T. Fisher Unwin. p. 109. OCLC 2421518.
  10. ^ Graves, Alfred Perceval (1895). The Irish Song Book : With Original Irish Airs. London: T. Fisher Unwin. p. 141. OCLC 222190614.
  11. ^ "I cannot tell". Retrieved 2 December 2013.
  12. ^ "He Looked Beyond My Fault". Discogs.
  13. ^ Bell, J. L. and Maule, G, Go, silent friend, in Laudate, no. 444, published by Decani Music, 1999
  14. ^ Hampton, Janie (2008). The Austerity Olympics. Aurum Press.
  15. ^ "GNCA-0343 | Tokohana / yanaginagi - VGMdb". Vgmdb.net. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  16. ^ "MusicVoice July 1,2018 (in Japanese)". 奄美の先輩から意志継ぎたい、城南海 故郷が詰まった新作を語る 奄美とアイルランドは似ている. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
  17. ^ Hindmarsh, Paul (1983). Frank Bridge: A Thematic Catalogue, 1900–1941. London: Faber Music. p. 59.
  18. ^ . frankduarte.com. Archived from the original on 3 February 2014. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  19. ^ "Thomas Lewis "Source Guide to the Music of Percy Grainger"". Percygrainger.org. Retrieved 5 September 2013.

External links edit

  • The melody as a MIDI file

Audio clips edit

  • Arrangement with comical lyrics for orchestra and solo baritone, performed by Kieran of the Potato Hermits, 2010
  • Aislean an oigfear

londonderry, 1938, film, film, irish, folk, tune, that, originated, county, londonderry, first, recorded, nineteenth, century, tune, played, victory, sporting, anthem, northern, ireland, commonwealth, games, song, danny, written, english, lawyer, fred, weather. For the 1938 film see The Londonderry Air film The Londonderry Air is an Irish air folk tune that originated in County Londonderry first recorded in the nineteenth century The tune is played as the victory sporting anthem of Northern Ireland at the Commonwealth Games The song Danny Boy written by English lawyer Fred Weatherly uses the tune with a set of lyrics written in the early 20th century Londonderry AirFirst print in George Petrie s collection Dublin 1855Unofficial regional anthem of Northern IrelandAlso known asDerry AirMusicUnknownAudio sample source source Piano Arrangement of Londonderry Airfilehelp Contents 1 History 2 Music score 3 Lyrical settings 3 1 Danny Boy 3 2 The Confession of Devorgilla 3 3 Irish Love Song 3 4 Hymns 3 5 In Derry Vale 3 6 Far Away 3 7 Other 4 Instrumental settings 5 See also 6 References 7 External links 7 1 Audio clipsHistory editThe title of the air came from the name of County Londonderry and was collected by Jane Ross of Limavady in the county Ross submitted the tune to music collector George Petrie and it was then published by the Society for the Preservation and Publication of the Melodies of Ireland in the 1855 book The Ancient Music of Ireland which Petrie edited 1 The tune was listed as an anonymous air with a note attributing its collection to Jane Ross of Limavady For the following beautiful air I have to express my very grateful acknowledgement to Miss J Ross of New Town Limavady in the County of Londonderry a lady who has made a large collection of the popular unpublished melodies of the county which she has very kindly placed at my disposal and which has added very considerably to the stock of tunes which I had previously acquired from that still very Irish county I say still very Irish for though it has been planted for more than two centuries by English and Scottish settlers the old Irish race still forms the great majority of its peasant inhabitants and there are few if any counties in which with less foreign admixture the ancient melodies of the country have been so extensively preserved The name of the tune unfortunately was not ascertained by Miss Ross who sent it to me with the simple remark that it was very old in the correctness of which statement I have no hesitation in expressing my perfect concurrence 2 This led to the descriptive title Londonderry Air being used for the piece The origin of the tune was for a long time somewhat mysterious as no other collector of folk tunes encountered it and all known examples are descended from Ross s submission to Petrie s collection In a 1934 article Anne Geddes Gilchrist suggested that the performer whose tune Ross heard played the song with extreme rubato causing Ross to mistake the time signature of the piece for common time 44 rather than 34 Gilchrist asserted that adjusting the rhythm of the piece as she proposed produced a tune more typical of Irish folk music 3 In 1974 Hugh Shields found a long forgotten traditional song which was very similar to Gilchrist s modified version of the melody 4 The song Aislean an Oigfear recte Aisling an oigfhir The Young Man s Dream had been transcribed by Edward Bunting in 1792 based on a performance by harper Donnchadh o Hamsaigh Denis Hempson at the Belfast Harp Festival and the tune would later become well known far outside of Ireland as The Last Rose of Summer Bunting published it in 1796 5 o Hamsaigh lived in Magilligan not far from Ross s home in Limavady Hempson died in 1807 1 In 2000 Brian Audley showed how the distinctive high section of the tune had derived from a refrain in The Young Man s Dream which over time crept into the body of the music He also discovered the original words to the tune as we now know it which were written by Edward Fitzsimmons and published in 1814 his song is The Confession of Devorgilla otherwise known by its first line Oh Shrive Me Father 6 The descendants of blind fiddler Jimmy McCurry assert that he is the musician from whom Miss Ross transcribed the tune but there is no historical evidence to support this speculation A similar claim has been made regarding the tune s coming to the blind itinerant harpist Rory Dall O Cahan in a dream A documentary detailing this version was broadcast on Maryland Public Television in the United States in March 2000 7 reference to this was also made by historian John Hamilton in Michael Portillo s TV programme Great British Railway Journeys Goes to Ireland in February 2012 8 Music score editThe melody appears thus in the first edition nbsp Lyrical settings editDanny Boy edit Main article Danny Boy The most popular lyrics for the tune are Danny Boy Oh Danny Boy the pipes the pipes are calling written by English lawyer Frederic Edward Weatherly in 1910 and set to the tune in 1913 The Confession of Devorgilla edit The first lyrics to be sung to the music were The Confession of Devorgilla otherwise known as Oh shrive me father Oh shrive me father haste haste and shrive me Ere sets yon dread and flaring sun Its beams of peace nay of sense deprive me Since yet the holy work s undone The sage the wand rer s anguish balming Soothed her heart to rest once more And pardon s promise torture calming The Pilgrim told her sorrows o er The first writer after Petrie s publication to set verses to the tune was Alfred Perceval Graves in the late 1870s His song was entitled Would I Were Erin s Apple Blossom o er You Graves later stated that setting was to my mind too much in the style of church music and was not I believe a success in consequence 6 Would I were Erin s apple blossom o er you Or Erin s rose in all its beauty blown To drop my richest petals down before you Within the garden where you walk alone In hope you d turn and pluck a little posy With loving fingers through my foliage pressed And kiss it close and set it blushing rosy To sigh out all its sweetness on your breast Irish Love Song edit Katherine Tynan Hinkson published the words of Irish Love Song in 1892 9 Graves set these words to the tune in his 1894 Irish Song Book where the tune was first referred to descriptively as Londonderry Air unlike the names of properly titled airs in the songbook Londonderry Air was not placed in quotation marks 10 Would God I were the tender apple blossom That floats and falls from off the twisted bough To lie and faint within your silken bosom Within your silken bosom as that does now Or would I were a little burnish d apple For you to pluck me gliding by so cold While sun and shade your robe of lawn will dapple Your robe of lawn and your hair of spun gold Hymns edit As with a good many folk tunes Londonderry Air is also used as a hymn tune most notably for I cannot tell by William Young Fullerton 11 I cannot tell why He Whom angels worship Should set His love upon the sons of men Or why as Shepherd He should seek the wanderers To bring them back they know not how or when But this I know that He was born of Mary When Bethlehem s manger was His only home And that He lived at Nazareth and laboured And so the Saviour Saviour of the world is come It was also used as a setting for I would be true by Howard Arnold Walter at the funeral of Diana Princess of Wales I would be true for there are those that trust me I would be pure for there are those that care I would be strong for there is much to suffer I would be brave for there is much to dare I would be friend of all the foe the friendless I would be giving and forget the gift I would be humble for I know my weakness I would look up and laugh and love and live Londonderry Air was also used as the tune for the southern gospel hit He Looked Beyond My Fault written by Dottie Rambo and first recorded by her group The Rambos in 1968 12 Other hymns sung to this tune are O Christ the same through all our story s pages Timothy Dudley Smith O Dreamer Leave Thy Dreams For Joyful Waking I Love Thee So My Own Dear Land We Shall Go Out With Hope of Resurrection Above the Hills of Time the Cross Is Gleaming Lord of the Church We Pray for our Renewing Timothy Dudley Smith Above the Voices of the World Around Me What Grace is Mine Kristyn Getty O Son of Man our hero strong and tender Since Long Ago Watchman Nee O Loving God Paulette M McCoy Go silent friend by John L Bell and Graham Maule 13 In Derry Vale edit W G Rothery a British lyricist 1858 1930 who wrote the English lyrics for songs such as Handel s Art Thou Troubled wrote the following lyrics to the tune of The Londonderry Air In Derry Vale beside the singing river so oft I strayed ah many years ago and culled at morn the golden daffodillies that came with spring to set the world aglow Oh Derry Vale my thoughts are ever turning to your broad stream and fairy circled lee For your green isles my exiled heart is yearning so far away across the sea In Derry Vale amid the Foyle s dark waters the salmon leap beside the surging weir The seabirds call I still can hear them calling in night s long dreams of those so dear Oh tarrying years fly faster ever faster I long to see that vale belov d so well I long to know that I am not forgotten And there in home in peace to dwell Far Away edit George Sigerson wrote a poem that T R G Joze set to this tune in 1901 This setting was popularized in the early 20th century by the Glasgow Orpheus Choir under Sir Hugh S Roberton As chimes that flow o er shining seas When morn alights on meads of May Faint voices fill the western breeze With whisp ring song from far away O dear the dells of Dunavore A home in od rous Ossory But sweet as honey running o er The golden shore of Far Away There sings the voice whose wondrous tune Falls like a diamond shower above That in the radiant dawn of June Renew a world of youth and love Oh fair the founts of Farranfore And bright is billowy Ballintrae But sweet as honey running o er The golden shore of Far Away Other edit The tune is used by Alfred Perceval Graves for Emer s Farewell to Cuchullain The melody is given by Julian May as the anthem of the Tanu and Firvulag in her Saga of Pliocene Exile science fiction series The song has been adapted into You Raise Me Up by Secret Garden and also Ne Viens Pas by Roch Voisine The melody was used to words in Irish and sung by the Bunratty Castle chorus during the 1970s The title used was Maidin i mBeara The words are from a poem of the same title by Irish poet and scholar Osborn Bergin o hAimheirgin 1872 1950 A 1938 film The Londonderry Air features the song A P Herbert s poem Let Us Be Glad written for the conclusion of the 1948 Summer Olympics and sung at the end of the event used the melody 14 The 2007 computer game BioShock features the song Danny Boy in a 1950s recording by Mario Lanza An arrangement of the song has also been used in the anime short Cross Road by Akifumi Tada with lyrics in Japanese by Makoto Shinkai and Nagi Yanagi as the singer 15 Belgian singer Helmut Lotti featured the song on his 1998 album Helmut Lotti goes classic Final Edition under the title Air from County Derry to his own lyrics The song was arranged by a Japanese composer Satoshi Takebe with lyrics in Japanese by a Japanese female singer Minami Kizuki in 2009 The title of the arranged song is 紅 Kurenai Kizuki is attracted by the music of Ireland and wrote a university graduation thesis on the similarities between the music of Ireland and the Amami Islands 16 The Amami Islands are located in the southwest part of Japan where she was born and raised The melody was arranged for the Chinese war film The Eight Hundred in 2020 with new lyrics written and titled Remembering 苏州河 Suzhou River sung by Andrea Bocelli and Na Ying Instrumental settings editFrank Bridge used the melody as basis for his An Irish Melody H 86 for string quartet 1908 or string orchestra 1938 17 American composer Frank Duarte used the air in the trio of his march The Valiant Green Company for military band 18 Australian composer Percy Grainger wrote numerous settings which he called Irish Tune from County Derry in his British Folk Music Settings 19 The Irish composer Hamilton Harty wrote a setting for violin and orchestra in 1924 Charles Villiers Stanford included the melody in his Irish Rhapsody No 1 for orchestra Lionel Tertis arranged the tune for viola or violin and piano as Londonderry Air Farewell to Cucullain Ernest Walker arranged the tune for violin and piano Op 59 in 1935 Ben Johnston composer used the melody in the 4th movement Sprightly not too fast of his String Quartet No 10 Don Byas recorded an arrangement of the tune retitled London Donnie originally featured on the album Free And Easy Savoy Records MG 6044 A big band jazz arrangement by Earle Hagen was used as the main theme for all 280 episodes of the CBS sitcom The Danny Thomas Show from 1953 1965 See also editO Cahan Radio 4 UK Theme List of British anthemsReferences edit a b Michael Robinson Danny Boy the mystery solved The Standing Stones Retrieved 26 July 2007 Petrie George 1855 The Petrie collection of the ancient music of Ireland arranged for the piano forte Vol 1 Dublin p 57 Retrieved 11 December 2017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Gilchrist Anne Geddes 1934 A new light upon the Londonderry Air Journal of the English Folk Dance and Song Society 1 3 115 121 JSTOR 4521039 Shields Hugh 1974 New dates for old songs 1766 1803 Long Room The Journal of the Library of Trinity College Dublin Bunting Edward 1796 A General Collection of the Ancient Irish Music a b Audley B 2000 The Provenance of the Londonderry Air Journal of the Royal Musical Association 125 2 205 247 doi 10 1093 jrma 125 2 205 Maryland Public Television 5 March 2000 Archived 14 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Great British Railway Journeys Goes to Ireland Ballymoney to Londonderry Series 3 Episode 25 3 February 2012 BBC Two Tynan Katharine 1892 Irish Love Songs London T Fisher Unwin p 109 OCLC 2421518 Graves Alfred Perceval 1895 The Irish Song Book With Original Irish Airs London T Fisher Unwin p 141 OCLC 222190614 I cannot tell Retrieved 2 December 2013 He Looked Beyond My Fault Discogs Bell J L and Maule G Go silent friend in Laudate no 444 published by Decani Music 1999 Hampton Janie 2008 The Austerity Olympics Aurum Press GNCA 0343 Tokohana yanaginagi VGMdb Vgmdb net Retrieved 9 January 2021 MusicVoice July 1 2018 in Japanese 奄美の先輩から意志継ぎたい 城南海 故郷が詰まった新作を語る 奄美とアイルランドは似ている Retrieved 11 September 2018 Hindmarsh Paul 1983 Frank Bridge A Thematic Catalogue 1900 1941 London Faber Music p 59 The Valiant Green Company frankduarte com Archived from the original on 3 February 2014 Retrieved 4 January 2014 Thomas Lewis Source Guide to the Music of Percy Grainger Percygrainger org Retrieved 5 September 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Londonderry Air nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Londonderry Air The Londonderry Air facts and fiction by Brian Audley The melody as a MIDI fileAudio clips edit Arrangement with comical lyrics for orchestra and solo baritone performed by Kieran of the Potato Hermits 2010 Aislean an oigfear Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Londonderry Air amp oldid 1213385874, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.