|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: GUEST,mick Date: 04 Mar 04 - 11:37 AM McCall published a collection of traditional music with somebody called Darley . It was reprinted sometime in the 1980s. One of the tunes in it was Follow me Down to Carlow . |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Big Tim Date: 04 Mar 04 - 11:01 AM Who was MacCahir Oge? |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: belfast Date: 21 Oct 02 - 10:56 AM I wouldn't for a minute that Christy was too big a claim for himself. I assume that he hadn't heard it sung anywhere and came across it some book or other. (Is it, for example, in Paddy Galvin's Irish Songs of Resistance?) And I've no doubt that Christy's singing of the song popularised it immensely. There's many a song that nobody in Ireland would ever have heard of had it not been for Christy Moore. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Malcolm Douglas Date: 21 Oct 02 - 10:20 AM My impression was formed from Christy's own comments, but I guess I should know better than to take him too literally. I'd still put the song's spread outside Ireland over the last thirty years down to him in large, though. Back to the tune, for a moment; does anyone know if McCall specified it, and under what name he referred to it? |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: belfast Date: 21 Oct 02 - 09:56 AM Malcolm Douglas suggests that the song was rescued from oblivion by Christy Moore. This is not my memory. I had heard the song long before I ever heard of Christy. And some of us even knew the Dominic Behan song using the same air, "Barry's Column". |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Malcolm Douglas Date: 17 Oct 02 - 01:34 PM Dow wrote Bonnie Annie as a reel. Notation quoted from The Athole Collection (1884) can be seen at The Fiddler's Companion. It's recognisably ancestral to the tune used for Carlow, but the latter has undergone considerable modification over the years. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Manitas_at_home Date: 17 Oct 02 - 02:08 AM That's interesting! Was that a jig rhythm and is the notation on-line?the . |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: GUEST Date: 16 Oct 02 - 03:31 PM The tune of "Follow me up/down to Carlow" is Donald Dow's "Bonnie Annie", c 1775. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Big Tim Date: 16 Oct 02 - 03:22 PM Can't help you Mick, I don't actually know the song, I just have the words as in "Irish Ballads and Songs of the Sea" by James N. Healy, Mercier Press, 1967. A biog of GOM "Granuaile: the Life and Times of Grace O'Malley c.1530-1603" by Anne Chambers was published by Wolfhound Press (+Irish American Book Company), 1998. It gives the words of 9 poems and songs on GOM tho not McCall's. I did John Moulden a disservice on my previous post: he named the "Henry Joy McCracken" source as the "Shan Van Vocht" magazine, tho he didn't know the issue number. The mag only ran from Jan 1896 to Apr 1899, so shouldn't be too hard to find. If John doesn't come back, I'll try to remember to check it in the Linen Hall Library next time I'm in Belfaast! All the best to you too,BT. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: GUEST,Kilshannig Date: 16 Oct 02 - 01:17 PM I'm reading, McGrath of Harlow. the good thing is I know more about the song. The bad thing is ... more dates, more names, more places...will it ever stop? Anyway, you all made me more curious. The Swallowtail?Grainnu Mhaol?'Mo Theaglach'? Follow me DOWN ...? And the key question: How much can a Dutch guy like myself handle so much international information about an Irish song? Mudcatters...thanx! |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 16 Oct 02 - 12:57 PM If you're reading, kilshannig, I imagine you get the picture now. Ask the right question, and it's a case of "light the blue touch paper and stand back". |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Big Mick Date: 16 Oct 02 - 12:37 PM Tim, do you know of any good recordings of "Grainnu Mhaol". I have been struggling with a good arrangement on this one and would love to hear others versions. All the best, the other Big Fella |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Big Tim Date: 16 Oct 02 - 12:16 PM McCall (1861-1919) also wrote "Grainnu Mhaol" (Grace O'Malley), 6 verses and chorus, air 'Mo Theaglach', "Sailing in the Lowlands Low" (not the trad. folk song of same name), 6 verses, traditional air, "Ballad of Redmond O'Hanlon", "Henry Joy McCracken" ('Twas on the Belfast Mountains)- the latter according to John Moulden recently on Mudcat, tho no source quoted. Anyone know of any other songs by him? |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: IanC Date: 16 Oct 02 - 12:03 PM Mick Quite right, but I didn't want to quote the whole lot ... put the link in for that. ;-) |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Big Mick Date: 16 Oct 02 - 11:49 AM Yes, Ian, and thank you for that link. I must be mixing memories of other incidents. But you leave a few things out. The document says in several places that the troops were very inexperienced, as was Grey, but that they had some veteran Captains whose experience left them very uneasy about entering the horseshoe valley. It goes on to say that the "hired" Irish troops deserted the English troop and joined with the rebels as soon as the first shots were fired. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: IanC Date: 16 Oct 02 - 11:32 AM Just to highlight the appropriate section: Sir Francis Cosby and Captain Green with their hired Gaelic troops from Connacht formed the advance's spearhead. They were followed by the Berwick regiment under Colonel George Moore. Officers such as Sir Peter Carew, Captain Audley, Captain Furres, Captain Bernard Fitzwilliam and Audley's lieutenant were among the vanguard. Sir Henry Bagenal and Sir William Stanley protected the rearguard with their companies of shot. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: IanC Date: 16 Oct 02 - 11:25 AM Mick This appears to be fairly accurate. :-) |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Big Mick Date: 16 Oct 02 - 10:56 AM We do a fairly hard driving version of this, using "The Swallowtail" between the verses, at the lead break and (with a key change) to end the song. It is on our new CD. I have always loved the song. It is true that O'Byrne suckered the troops into pursuing him up that draw. It is also true that the troops were very inexperienced, having been pressed into service quickly and rushed to Ireland due to the rising. Someone verify, but I believe I read somewhere that they were Hessian mercenary troops Mick |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Brakn Date: 16 Oct 02 - 09:10 AM I was playing near Doncaster earlier this year and a woman asked me to sing "Follow Me UP To Carlow" which I did. She told me, to my surprise, that she was Patrick Joseph McCall's great granddaughter. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 16 Oct 02 - 09:06 AM I've always heard it as "down". It sings easier too, with the more open vowel. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: manitas_at_work Date: 16 Oct 02 - 08:23 AM I've been told that this song was set to an already existing air known as Follow me DOWN.. or CARRY me DOWN... and that traditional musicians tend to use DOWN. Johnny O'Leary had it as Follow me down to Carlow. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: MudWeasel Date: 16 Oct 02 - 02:07 AM From what I've heard (no idea at all how accurate this is), MacHugh led a pitifully small band of Irish against a superior English force, saw what he had gotten himself into, and turned tail. Or so the English thought.It was all a clever ruse on the part of the Irish. The English gave chase up into the hills, through a narrow mountain pass where MacHugh had the rest of his force waiting to ambush and wipe them out. Again, I'm a guitarist, not a historian. I don't vouch for the accuracy of this story. -MudWeasel |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 15 Oct 02 - 05:48 AM Round here it tends to get heard as (and even sung as) "Follow me down to Harlow". |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: GUEST,Martin Ryan Date: 15 Oct 02 - 05:33 AM Any Dublin Soccer fans may like to guess who featured in a parody based on this called Follow me up to Tolka!
|
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: GUEST,Ard Mhacha Date: 15 Oct 02 - 05:23 AM The midi-file played ok for me, and the words are the same as Christy Moores on the Planxty LP. And Christy`s version is much much better. Ard Mhaca |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: MartinRyan Date: 15 Oct 02 - 03:48 AM Jon
|
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: MartinRyan Date: 15 Oct 02 - 03:44 AM McCall also wrote "Boolavogue".
|
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Jon Bartlett Date: 15 Oct 02 - 01:03 AM McGrath, could you kindly give me a source for the authorship of "Kelly". The words of that song are superb, compared to these dreadful (unsingable, unpoetic, fake medieval) ones! I suppose it's quite possible that one author is responsible for both, but... The tune is a good one, though. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: Malcolm Douglas Date: 14 Oct 02 - 08:46 PM As McGrath says, the lyric (I don't know how accurate) in the DT, but the midi file is corrupt and won't play. The tune is the first two parts of Sweets of May; a 6/8 set dance, not a march as sometimes stated, and was posted in this previous thread: TUNE ADD: Follow Me Up To Carlow. So far as I know, the song has never been found in tradition, but was rescued from oblivion by Christy Moore in the 1960s. Does anybody know if the text was originally set to Sweets of May when it was written (presumably at the turn of the 19th/20th centuries)? Quite a lot of websites out there optimistically state things like melody dates from pre-1500's; but that's normal ignorance; there seems to be no available evidence that it's much older than the lyric. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: michaelr Date: 14 Oct 02 - 08:46 PM Silly me, didn't see the lyrics for the threads... |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 14 Oct 02 - 08:31 PM This site has the lyrics, and some interesting background information But we've got the lyrics in the Digital Tradition on this site already, here. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: michaelr Date: 14 Oct 02 - 08:26 PM McGrath, could you post the text, please? |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 14 Oct 02 - 08:10 PM Recent in terms of Irish history, and a long time after the events decribed. It was written in the 19th century by Patrick Joseph McCall, who also wrote other songs such as Kelly, the Boy from Killane. |
|
Subject: RE: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: michaelr Date: 14 Oct 02 - 07:50 PM I found this in the liner notes to a recording of the song: "This song commemorates the victory of Fiach McHugh O'Byrne over the forces of the Crown as led by Lord Grey de Wilton in a battle which took place at Glen Malure, Co. Wicklow in the years 1580." It's come up in quite a few threads before (put the title into the Lyrics and Knowledge Search box at top right) but no lyrics seem to have been posted. Has anyone got them? Also in a previous thread, someone asserted that this is a recent song. If so, who wrote it? Cheers, Michael |
|
Subject: Origins: Follow me up to Carlow From: GUEST,kilshannig Date: 14 Oct 02 - 07:22 PM Getting kind of confused of all the names and places. I know by now there were "good" guys and " bad" guys. Anybody knows some more background on this song? |
| Share Thread: |
| Subject: | Help |
| From: | |
| Preview Automatic Linebreaks Make a link ("blue clicky") | |