1. Polkas

  2. Hornpipes: Hornpipes are a syncopated dance from the 16th-century British and Irish islands. The popular story is that British navy used them as calesthetic exercise for sailors.

  3. Inisheer: 2014, Thomas Walsh, accordian player. Inisheer is the smallest of the Aran Islands in Galway Bay, off the West Coast. Travelers come to learn Irish, which is still used by the 300 residents.

  4. Reels

  5. Marion MacLean of Eoligarry: Colin Melville named this tune for a resident of Barra, an island in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland, around 2006.

  6. Jigs: The jig came to Ireland in the mid 16th century and Scotland later in the 17th from continental Europe -- the French giguer and Italian giga.

  7. Madeline Island: Sherry composed this for a wedding in 1985 for a still-married couple.

  8. Jigs

  9. Eileen Collins: Sherry wrote this air to honor her friend and host, Eileen Collins, who ran a bed and breakfast in Dingle that Sherry visited for almost 20 years.

  10. Jigs

  11. The South Wind: This song, from at least 1792, depicts a ghost ship blown by the South wind up the West coast bringing back the souls of the Wild Geese who had been killed in battle. The Wild Geese were Irish soldiers serving as mercenaries for continental armys, many fighting the English, during the 16-18th centuries. Jonathan first heard this tune used by Bill Schustik as a shanty or cadence to coordinate end-of-day sailing tasks.

  12. Polkas

  13. Waltz

  14. Reels

  15. Ingela's Vals: Here's some "pop" tunes.... well at least Sherry on her most recent trip to Ireland told us that every session had to play Morten Alfred Høirup's (a Dane) "Ingela's Vals." Written in 2008, it's an example of Irish sensibilities influence abroad and returning to be incorporated back into the session.

  16. Down by the Sally Gardens: Sallow garden is willow garden, but may refer to willows at river bank at Ballysadare, Sligo. The tune was made popular by a William Yeats poem from 1889 that he reconstructed from listening to a (likely much longer) song he heard from an old peasant woman in county Sligo.

Down by the salley gardens
   my love and I did meet;
She passed the salley gardens
   with little snow-white feet.
She bid me take love easy,
   as the leaves grow on the tree;
But I, being young and foolish,
   with her would not agree.

In a field by the river
   my love and I did stand,
And on my leaning shoulder
   she laid her snow-white hand.
She bid me take life easy,
   as the grass grows on the weirs;
But I was young and foolish,
   and now am full of tears.