@@allenfeldman8869 No. it is not. "According to the American Folklife Center's founding director, Alan Jabbour, “Bonaparte's Retreat” is probably Irish in origin, and was used for ballads about Napoleon's defeat and exile. Samuel Bayard further tells us it was used as a military march during the Civil War."
@@UISTMAN59Its not what? By the term "Celticized" I inferred Irish and/or Scottish derivations. Ireland is full of ballads and marches relating to Bonaparte. Frank Harte a great singer from Dublin made Napoleonic ballads his speciality.
That girl is real entertainer.
True indeed!
Brilliant music from young musicians.
Emma love the little wiggle of your head makes me smile , just pure class and skill, well played
Colm
How wonderful to see such a lovely group of young people playing and dancing so well. 🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪
Great girl on the accordion,can we have more.😂
Loved every second of this!
Brilliant music great players and dancers alike
Very uplifting Beautiful music and dance Doesnt get better than this
Happy people !!! Excellent!!!
Up Cavan! Brilliant!
Fantastic playing from very talented young musicians. Straight from the heart. Congrats.
Very talented musicians. Love this ceile music
Love this pure magic
Just great! A synchronised match of exquisite proportions.
Fantastic performance sounds very good well done thanks ⭐️⭐️⭐️🎧
class pure class perfection
Top shelf this!
Just Brilliant music.................love it !!
One word brilliant. 🌏
They are Brilliant Accordian players
Great entertainers✅🇮🇪
Brilliant.
Just class lads.
what clown disliked this absolutely brilliant
They are Fabelous
amazing
Наши башкирские мелодии.
Great swing. Anyone know the name of the first tune?
bonapartes retreat.
Its a Celticized version of the Appalachian tune Bonaparte's Retreat with a bit of a Quebeqois twist,
@@allenfeldman8869 No. it is not. "According to the American Folklife Center's founding director, Alan Jabbour, “Bonaparte's Retreat” is probably Irish in origin, and was used for ballads about Napoleon's defeat and exile. Samuel Bayard further tells us it was used as a military march during the Civil War."
@@UISTMAN59Its not what? By the term "Celticized" I inferred Irish and/or Scottish derivations. Ireland is full of ballads and marches relating to Bonaparte. Frank Harte a great singer from Dublin made Napoleonic ballads his speciality.
The a and b part closely resemble the Appalachian variant see: ua-cam.com/video/1yeQucos9-M/v-deo.htmlsi=517J2fil5wNX6hSD
Anyone know the name of the second tune
Eoghan Fitzgerald 😂😂
Devaneys goat
Yes. Devanneys goat ln the key if D
amazing