We had a good turn out and an excellent selection of songs in March. George, Frank, Frances, Breege, Helen, John, Clare, Tony, Kevin, all in good voice. Eugene made a nod towards Brendan Behan's anniversary and sang the Captains and the Kings.
Cliona polished up (and off) how she could live at the top of a mountain and Táim corrtha ó bheith im' aonor. Welcome back Marion. Frances and Dermot stayed schtum, but maybe next time?
Boyle Traditional Singers' Circle - Ciorcal Ámhránaíochta Traidisiúnta Mhainistir na Búille
3rd Saturday of every month. Next session: 21st March 2020. CANCELLED
Search This Blog
Fáilte - Welcome
to the Boyle Singers' circle - Ciorcal Amhránaíochta Mhainistir na Búille
Traditional unaccompanied singing, in English and Irish.
Dodd’s Crescent Bar (back room), The Crescent, Boyle, Co. Roscommon, Ireland.
The third Saturday of every month, all year around, 9.30pm onwards.
All singers and listeners welcome.
Dodd’s Crescent Bar (back room), The Crescent, Boyle, Co. Roscommon, Ireland.
The third Saturday of every month, all year around, 9.30pm onwards.
All singers and listeners welcome.
For your diaries: change in APRIL [Easter] date for the Boyle Traditional Singers
The March session of the Boyle Singing Circle will take place on the third Saturday as usual, 15 March 2014.
The third Saturday in April is on the Easter weekend and so we're moving the April Singers' Circle date back a week to earlier date of the 12th April 2014.
The third Saturday in April is on the Easter weekend and so we're moving the April Singers' Circle date back a week to earlier date of the 12th April 2014.
If ever you go to Dublin town...
on the 2nd Sunday of any month, check out Song Central, upstairs in Chaplin's Pub, beside the Screen Cinema.
Dec 2013 / Jan 2014
December was a busy month for everyone, and we wish you all a happy and tuneful 2014. We'll start off again on Saturday 18th January 2014.
Child Ballads
If you get a chance to be in Dublin any Wednesday until December18th, there is a weekly, free concert, of singers singing Child Ballads in the National Library, Kildare Street, Dublin 2. Open to all.
November 2013 session
One song which has popped up a few times recently, with different interpretations, is the Death of Queen Jane, a Child ballad (#170).
The song is believed to be about Jane Seymour (c. 1509–37), Henry VIII's third wife - one of only two of his six wives he neither divorced nor beheaded. She gave birth to a son, Edward, who briefly become King, Edward VI of England and Ireland, before his early death in his late teens, when his older sisters, Mary and then Elizabeth, took over. There is no historical evidence for any Caesarian section being carried out on Jane during her labour and Jane was well enough to receive visitors after Edward's birth. However, she fell ill within a week and died 12 days later.
Helen Grehan sang a beautiful version the other night, to a different tune than that usually heard. Daithí Sproule composed a tune for it in the early 70s and this is the version the Bothy Band and Mícheál Ó Domhnaill recorded on their Afterhours album.This is also the version in the new Coen brothers' film: Inside Llewyn Davis, although that film is about a folk singer in Greenwich Village in 1961, before the tune was composed.
The song is believed to be about Jane Seymour (c. 1509–37), Henry VIII's third wife - one of only two of his six wives he neither divorced nor beheaded. She gave birth to a son, Edward, who briefly become King, Edward VI of England and Ireland, before his early death in his late teens, when his older sisters, Mary and then Elizabeth, took over. There is no historical evidence for any Caesarian section being carried out on Jane during her labour and Jane was well enough to receive visitors after Edward's birth. However, she fell ill within a week and died 12 days later.
Helen Grehan sang a beautiful version the other night, to a different tune than that usually heard. Daithí Sproule composed a tune for it in the early 70s and this is the version the Bothy Band and Mícheál Ó Domhnaill recorded on their Afterhours album.This is also the version in the new Coen brothers' film: Inside Llewyn Davis, although that film is about a folk singer in Greenwich Village in 1961, before the tune was composed.
The words to the ballad are (Bothy Band
version):
Queen Jane lay in labor full nine days or more
'Til her women grew so tired, they could no longer there
They could no longer there
"Good women, good women, good women as ye be
Will you open my right side and find my baby?
And find my baby"
"Oh no," cried the women, "That's a thing never can be
We will send for King Henry and hear what he may say
And hear what he may say"
King Henry was sent for, King Henry did come
Saying, "What do ail you, my lady? Your eyes, they look so dim
Your eyes, they look so dim"
"King Henry, King Henry, will you do one thing for me?
That's to open my right side and find my baby
And find my baby"
"Oh no," cried King Henry, "That's a thing I'll never do
If I lose the flower of England, I shall lose the branch too
I shall lose the branch too"
There was fiddling, aye, and dancing on the day the babe was born
But poor Queen Jane beloved lay cold as the stone
Lay cold as the stone
Queen Jane lay in labor full nine days or more
'Til her women grew so tired, they could no longer there
They could no longer there
"Good women, good women, good women as ye be
Will you open my right side and find my baby?
And find my baby"
"Oh no," cried the women, "That's a thing never can be
We will send for King Henry and hear what he may say
And hear what he may say"
King Henry was sent for, King Henry did come
Saying, "What do ail you, my lady? Your eyes, they look so dim
Your eyes, they look so dim"
"King Henry, King Henry, will you do one thing for me?
That's to open my right side and find my baby
And find my baby"
"Oh no," cried King Henry, "That's a thing I'll never do
If I lose the flower of England, I shall lose the branch too
I shall lose the branch too"
There was fiddling, aye, and dancing on the day the babe was born
But poor Queen Jane beloved lay cold as the stone
Lay cold as the stone
Frank Finn Traditional Singing Weekend- 4th to 6th October 2013
The Sligo Traditional Singers' Circle held the Frank Finn Traditional Singing Weekend, from Friday 4th to Sunday 6th October 2013, at the Yeats Country Hotel, Rosses Point, Co Sligo.
This year, one of the special guests was Boyle's Breege Duffy. Breege and her brother Hughie gave a talk about Josie McDermott on the Saturday evening.
This year, one of the special guests was Boyle's Breege Duffy. Breege and her brother Hughie gave a talk about Josie McDermott on the Saturday evening.
Another Josie, Josie Sheáin Jeaic Mac Donncha, directed the singing workshop and his powerful sean nós singing was heard several times over the weekend.
Rosses Point is a beautiful setting for this singing fest, long may it continue.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)