Your very first tune

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rorybbellows
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Your very first tune

Post by rorybbellows »

The very first time I got my hands on uilleann pipes was a practice set that was loaned to me by the London pipers club. I was given the set and told to come back the following week for my first lesson. In that week in an effort to play something I learned the tune to a black velvet band.
What was your very first tune?

RORY
Last edited by rorybbellows on Tue Dec 15, 2020 6:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Your very first tune

Post by m muir »

Sean Bui
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Re: Your very first tune

Post by RenaissanceGuy »

After spending close to a month getting used to the workings of the bellows and managing to hold a steady note, my first tune was "Eibhlín a Rúin" as presented on the first "Art of Uilleann Piping" DVD. And of course it took several practice sessions for me to be able to get through it without messing up.
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Re: Your very first tune

Post by Seamie »

The Bucks of Oranmore (yeah....Riiiight!)

It was Garrett Barry's Jig.
Brian MacNamara had the Beginners' group at my first Tionol in Baltimore- 2000.
20 + Noobs all doing their best to murder a tune (oddly enough, every single one having trouble with this "darn new reed")
I'm sure the poor man was never the same, though he was as elegant, supportive and un-flappable as ever.
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Re: Your very first tune

Post by an seanduine »

The first tune I picked out was the theme from Samhradh, samhradh. Then we were all assigned The Last Rose of Summer. Our first jig was of course the Kesh.
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Re: Your very first tune

Post by Seanie »

I got my practice set from Matt Kiernan in 1979. I had been playing on the whistle for about a year before that so i already had some tunes.

I met up with a piper called Eamonn Lane who gave me my first tune. It was a jig called the Bank of Turf.

Cheers

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Re: Your very first tune

Post by rorybbellows »

The first tune I was taught at the London pipers club was the song of the chanter.

RORY
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Re: Your very first tune

Post by An Draighean »

rorybbellows wrote:What was your very first tune?
Eh, something from the Heather Clarke tutor, because that is what my teacher used.

The first one that I wanted to learn, that I still remember to this day is "Cliffs of Dooneen". I had played it on the whistle for a long time before I got my first pipes.
Deartháir don phaidir an port.
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Re: Your very first tune

Post by MarcusR »

A little Swedish tune called Sommarvals (Summer waltz) by Ale Möller.
It was easy enough for a beginner with nothing above high D and at the time it was also a melody I knew by heart.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1HISMsFJOMw

https://thesession.org/tunes/2059

I have to play it again, thanks for the reminder Rory :thumbsup:

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Re: Your very first tune

Post by Pipewort »

An Caisdeach Ban - Fair Haired Cassidy - from Tommy Keane's CD, The Wind Amongst the Reeds. His version still excites, capturing for me the essence behind the story.

I was a beginner alright, and far from help. Just a determination to play, and struggling with the ornamentation techniques and a lack of available tuition. I had Tommy's CD, and one other, but this air just grabbed me, and having a slow tempo I thought it would give me something I could play, which it did after a fashion, and led on to better things over time.

Its still a favourite. By good fortune he was my first tutor, at my first visit, to Willie Week. As with others, he had the patience of a saint...
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Re: Your very first tune

Post by daveboling »

Lilting Banshee. Not a great choice given the challenge of the "B" part to a newbee, but the tune was the first whistle tune I had committed to memory decades before, and despite sage advice I could not be dissuaded.

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Re: Your very first tune

Post by Ketil »

I think it was the Mountain Road. At least the first recognizable tune. But I am only 4,5 years into my piping so "learn" is maybe too strong a word.
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Re: Your very first tune

Post by shakyhands »

I'm pretty sure mine was All the Way to Galway, which I learned from Jimmy O'Brien Moran's album Take Me Tender
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Re: Your very first tune

Post by pancelticpiper »

I got my first practice set, there was nobody around who played so I was on my own.

What I did have was The Dance Music Of Willie Clancy book (which had just come out) and some Planxty albums, and I found a tune that was in the book and on one of the albums, The Humours Of Ballyloughlin, so that was what I learned.

It was fantastic because the book described how to do all the cool things I could hear on the album like crans and how to bend C natural.

The tune didn't seem long to me because I came from Highland piping where most tunes have four parts.
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Re: Your very first tune

Post by John Driscoll »

It was recent, Summer of 2019: Sean Gavin taught me "ta an coileach ag fogairt an lae" in the back room of Connor O'Neill's in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He put on the Raw Bar Collective's recording and we listened while we ate lunch, then had a beer and learned it on the pipes.
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