Bernie O'Shea ~ Come by the Hills (Traditional Irish Song) MUSIC VIDEO: filmed in County Clare
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- Опубліковано 9 січ 2021
- Bernie O'Shea sings 'Come by the Hills' a traditional irish folk song.
Filmed by Lutia Swan
Edited by Tess O'Shea - Фільми й анімація
WHAT A BEAUTIFUL SOUL!!! LOVE UR SINGING!!!
Lovely song! Takes me back to Ireland ☘️
Thank you.
Buachaill ón Éirne. Lovely!
Beautiful!
Back to my root!
Thankyou for the quiet lovely tone of Your voice, I'll look for more of you on you tube and hope I'm successful!
Love and Blessings to you
Lesley
Always makes me cry!
i love this song! thank you
lovely.
And a big thank you, that is beautiful! XxX.
Beautiful!
Thank you!
Beautiful
Thank you! Cheers!
good song!
Thankyou,so beautifully played,you have a lovely Irish voice🍀☘️🍀☘️🍀
What a beautiful song. Not just a pretty face ey bear! Jamie
Thanks B O'S . Masterly! More please.
Over 500 views and about 55 likes, come on yous, hit the like button, it costs you nowt and keeps these up in the algorithm!
Namaste. XxX.
This is beautiful. Love it!
I am just hearing this rendition for the first time. It had me in bits it is so wonderful. Where can I find more of Bernie's songs? Thank you!!
Fantastic job
Class version sir
Sadly it appears only old farts love such wonderful songs!
Can somebody tell me how old this song is? Thanks.
Come by the hills A Scottish song was written in the 1960's but set to a much older Irish tune.It was written by W Gordon Smith of Edinburgh Scotland he is widely credited with " bringing the Scottish arts scene to the BBC "
Lyrics written in 1960s. For a TV programme about Scotland, by a Scotsman. Schmaltzly to fit the contents of that programme, which the author was involved in.
Very nice rendition but it's not Irish trad, It was written in the 1950s by Edinburgh poet Gordon Smith and set to an old Irish tune.
A Scottish song. Easily verified as such.
Who of course went to Scotland from Ireland.
@@stephenmcloughlin7718 for clarity it is written about Scotland By a Scotsman in the 1960's not by some Scoti tribesman back in the 3rd century. The desperate misspelling of the lyrics of Lochs as Loughs as seen online to make it appear Irish is laughable . Almost as bad as the loch tay boat song being misspelled as the lough tae boat song to make in sound Irish but still keeping Killin and Aberfeldy as the locations
@@cecircinn2908 , but the words were still put to an old Irish tune.
@@stephenmcloughlin7718 Yes the tune is Irish but the song is Scottish.
Much like Red is the rose is an Irish song but set to the tune of the much earlier Scottish song Loch Lomond .
Difference being that Scots do not try to claim Red is the rose.