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(Traditional/Thomas
Moore)
Written
in the version we know it now, the words were set to the traditional Irish
air "Moreen" by the poet Thomas Moore sometime after 1798. There is the thought that it was
written to commemorate Thomas Moore's three friends who had died, in
prison, by hanging after capture and after wounding respectively, while
taking part in the United Irishmen 1798 rebellion and had also been
students with him while at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland. The song immediately caught on and
travelled with many Irishmen to America in the mid-1800s and was taken with
them when they fought in the U.S. Civil War in the 1860s. Another verse was tacked on to it
but who wrote it has not been discovered. In 1947 the composer Leroy Anderson wrote his
arrangement of Irish tunes called Irish Suite and this song became
the second movement. His
version has been described as "a slow march" with sounds of
"distant trumpets and drums" and other versions are often
performed by fife and drum corps.
Boston Pops Orchestra recordings
RCA 60746-2-RG (CD: Irish Night at the
Pops)
Conductor - Arthur
Fiedler
Eastman-Rochester Pops Orchestra recordings
Mercury 434 376-2 (CD: Fennell Conducts
the Music Of Leroy Anderson and Eric Coates)
Conductor -
Frederick Fennell
Richard Hayman and His Orchestra recordings
Naxos 8.555016 (CD: Irish Rhapsody)
Naxos 8.990018 (CD: Irish Rhapsody)
Rochester Pops recordings
Pro-Arte CDD-454 (CD: Classical Jukebox: More
Favourites of Leroy Anderson)
Conductor - Newton Wayland
Sources:
- http://ogallchobhair.org/minstrelboy.htm
- http://www.leroyanderson.com/html/hearthemusic.htm
- http://www.pbs.org/sleighride/Video&Music/Compositions_ISuite.htm
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