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This was first composed as a two-part hornpipe by fiddler James Hill, who was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, during the 1830s. When living in Newcastle-on-Tyne as a young man, he named his hornpipe after the upper level of a double-decker bridge that spanned the River Tyne. The third part of the tune is credited as a composition of James ‘Lad’ O’Beirne of Co. Sligo / New York. I learned it from Co. Galway musician Joe Burke.
GA | B2GB AGEG | DGGF G2AB | C2AB CBAG | EAAG FDGA | B2GB AGEG | DGGF GABC | d2Bd gdBd | CAFA G3 :||
BC | d2Bd gdBC | d2Bd gdBd | e2Ce agfe | defg agfe | d2Bd gdBC | d2Bd gdBd | C2AC BAGB | ADFA G3 :||