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Lyr Req: Coolin/Cuilin Related threads: Old Gordon Bok song sought-Cuillins of Rhum (19) Meaning of 'The Coolin' (72) Help!Irish:Flower of Baile-anagurr? (25) (origins) Origins: The Coolin (18) Lyr Req: The Cuhlin?..or Coolin? (24) Lyr Req: An Coolan (15) Recent recordings of 'The Coolin' (16) Lyr Req: Various: Ned of the Hills, The Coolin... (18) killin floor-coolin board (2) Cuillins of Rhum (2) |
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Subject: Coolin/Cuilin From: Wolfgang Hell Date: 25 Feb 98 - 11:09 AM The song "Spinning Wheel" (see DT-database) has a line "And singing all wrong the old song of the "Coolin"?" Al O'Donnell, a not very well known Irish folk singer, has recorded a song "Cuilin". The few notes say that D. Behan has written (translated?) the words. The few lines I understand go "I will come to my Cuilin ere the life of my corpse shall wander". has someone Behan's lyrics? Is there an older Irish version? are the two songs the same? Wolfgang |
Subject: RE: Coolin/Cuilin From: Bruce O. Date: 25 Feb 98 - 11:23 AM I don't know when the tune "Molly St. George" was 1st called "The Coolin". BUCEM lists a song "Coolun with words" issued as a single sheet song with music by Anne Lee in Dublin, c 1780 (and later issues). The tune was usually found with the "Coolin/Coolun" title after that, and there are many copies. Bunting in his 3rd collection of ancient Irish music says that Lyons composed variations on the tune in 1702. The song commences "Oh the hours I have passed".
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Subject: Lyr Add: OH! GIVE ME MY COOLIN From: Bruce O. Date: 25 Feb 98 - 12:27 PM OH! GIVE ME MY COOLIN
Oh, the hours I have passed in the arms of my dear I have only this copy from the “Universal Songster,” I (1825) 1828. The song was often called “The Coolin; Or, The Lady of the Desert,” and this subtitle is the title of the tune in a late 18th and an early 19th century Scots music collection. “O’Kane, the lady of the desert” is a contemporary song I’ve seen mentioned, but never found. “The Coolun,” song and tune, are in “The Vocal Magazine,” II, #40, Edinburgh, 1798. Tune only was published (with variations) in the US in 1816 in “Riley’s Flute Melodies.” I took my identification of “Molly St. George” from Alfred Moffat, but this may be incorrect (as others have proved to be). “Molly St. George,” song and tune are in Donal O’Sullivan’s “Songs of the Irish,” p. 181, where the tune is attributed to Thomas Connellon in the late 17th century.
Probably the best place to look for further information is in Donall O’Sullivan’s edition of Bunting’s MSS, which appeared as three or four volumes of “The Journal of the Irish Folk Song Society” in the late 1920’s. |
Subject: RE: Coolin/Cuilin From: Bruce O. Date: 25 Feb 98 - 05:36 PM Agh! I forgot to do the search and replace of | with (left angle bracket) br (right angle bracket) for the html markup. The song is all one verse in the songbook cited. I also missed the first character in the title in my copy to Notepad, 'Oh!....'. |
Subject: RE: Coolin/Cuilin From: Date: 26 Feb 98 - 03:39 PM The Coolin is a traditional tune and sean-nós song performed by many traditional bands - I think Begley and Cooney may do a version. The word comes from Cúl Fhionn, meaning fair hair; boys usually wore their hair tied back, and they cut off the bunch of hair to leave it with their mothers on emigration, so all a mother would have left to remember her child was the lock of hair, the Coolin. |
Subject: RE: Coolin/Cuilin From: Wolfgang Date: 27 Feb 98 - 10:05 AM Thanks for responding. The song Cuilin uses the melody I found on the web for Coolin. But the lyrics from Dominik Behan are different from the lyrics posted by Bruce. It seems to me that Behan has taken the old story and made his own lyrics to fit the tune. Wolfgang |
Subject: RE: Coolin/Cuilin From: Martin Ryan Date: 27 Feb 98 - 04:34 PM Sparling's Irish Minstrelsy (1888) has a set by Samuel Ferguson - noted as a translation. he was a well known poet in the mid-19th C. Verses are rather ornate - unsigable, I would think. I don't have the book to hand, but there is little resemblance to the version Bruce quotes above, methinks. The Journal, Bruce, seems to only have a version of the tune - no mention of words - or none that are referenced in the index, anyway. There is a Gaelic set - usually sung in drawing room style in my experience. I'll try to check if its out there in the real world at all. For what its worth, I think the tune is suffering under its own weight - like the Londonderry Air! Regards |
Subject: RE: Coolin/Cuilin From: Bruce O. Date: 27 Feb 98 - 05:02 PM I don't remember much about what was in a book of Ferguson's songs and poems that I turned up in the Library of Congress. I hunted for, but never found, a song "Druimion Donn Delis" that he is said to have translated from Gaelic. All too often I've seen English songs from Ireland that say 'translated from the Gaelic' or the like, with never a mention of where to find an old copy in Gaelic. "Coolun" might well have been originally a Gaelic song. Posibly even resembling the English one, but literal and metrical translations are often nearly unrecognizable as from the same original. My Gaelic dictionary has no words 'coo---'. Colu/n is column or pillar, and doesn't seem to make any sense. That "Lady of the Desert" is still a mystery to me too. Thanks for the info on O'Sullivan's Bunting edition. O'Sullivan sometimes found verses among Bunting's MSS, and gave them, and he also found old songs elsewhere. O'Sullivan was mostly very good, but on some occasions his comments were just ridiculous. |
Subject: RE: Coolin/Cuilin From: MM Date: 27 Feb 98 - 09:04 PM Coolin comes from cu/l (back hair) and fhionn (blonde). |
Subject: RE: Coolin/Cúilfhionn From: Felipa Date: 13 Apr 03 - 05:29 PM I've added the lyrics from O'Sullivan & Ó Súilleabháin edition of Bunting to a more substantial Coolin thread |
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