A set of Irish traditional "slides" performed by mainly by the box and banjo with accompaniment by fiddle, flute and bodhran. O'Keefes is performed first and leads into the Brosna at 0:53. Brosna is sometimes also called "The Lonesome Road to Dingle" or "Trip to the Jacks". This track has two titles because this is traditionally how many Irish pub tunes are performed, as a double set of short tunes, the first leading directly into the second.
Track details
Track ID number: | 15055 |
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Genres: | World: Celtic, Irish music -- Early music / Medieval / Historical |
Moods/Emotions: | Happy / Joyful / Positive -- Homey / Cozy / Wholesome |
Suggested Production Types: | Historical: Older History / Ancient -- Outdoorman / Fishing / Hiking -- Party / Dancing / Fun times -- Vacation / Travel / Discovery |
Prominent Instruments: | Accordion -- Banjo -- Ethnic percussion / Tribal drums -- Flute / Pan Flute / Recorder -- Violin / Viola / Fiddle |
Keywords / Hints: | box, banjo, fiddle, flute, bodhran, tin whistle, whistle, Irish, Ireland, tunes, traditional music, Dublin, fun, upbeat, lively, jolly, accordian, percussive, Guiness, Guinness, gaelic, celtic, pub, inn, folk, folk dance, medieval pub, tavern, riverdance |
Tempo feel: | Medium -- Fast |
Tempo Beats Per Minute: | 145 |
Artist: | Emmett Cooke |
Composer: | Trad./Arr: Emmett Cooke (IMRO) |
Publisher: | Lynne Publishing (PRS) |
SRCO (Sound Recording Copyright Owner): | Lynne Publishing AS |
PRO / Non-PRO Track? | PRO (What's this?) |
WAV file bit depth: | HD / 24-Bit (What's this?) |
Stem files available for this track: | No |
Album containing this track: |
Music collection: Irish & Celtic, Vol. 4 12 tracks |
Emmett Cooke was born and currently lives in Ireland. Having studied music from a young age, he continued his education by completing a BA Music in college and is currently completing his studies with Berklee in a Specialist Certificate in Orchestration for Film and TV. Emmett's music has been heard on numerous television networks from NBC, CBS, The Science Channel, The History Channel, and The Cartoon Network, to name but a few and his constant "pulsing" style is unique and instantly recognizable.