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PW Joyce in Other Collections

PW Joyce gave over 180 Co Limerick tunes to antiquarian George Petrie, who published some 20 of them in his 1855 volume Ancient Music of Ireland.

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The Irish song book : with original airs / edited with an introduction and notes by Alfred Perceval Graves

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The Irish song book : with original airs / edited with an introduction and notes by Alfred Perceval Graves

Irish folk songs / the words by Alfred Perceval Graves ; the airs arranged by Charles Wood

Tunes from P. W. Joyce in The Petrie Collection of the Ancient Music of Ireland: Arranged for Piano-forte. Vol. 1 / edited by George Petrie

Cailín a tighe mhoir — B’fearr liomsa ainnir gan gúna — Cá rabháis anois a cailín bhig — The hunt — The pipe on the hob — Do chuirfinn-si féin mo leanabh a chodhladh — An bean óg uasal — A chúl álainn deas — A Munster jig — The winter it is past — Ding dong didilium, buail seo, séid seo — The nobleman’s wedding — Péarla an chúil chraobhaigh — As a sailor and a soldier were walking one day

Tunes from PW Joyce in Music of Ireland / Collected, Edited, and Harmonized for the Pianoforte by the Late George Petrie

An cumhaín leatsa an oidhche úd — Ceapach Dáinig — The green bushes — Aon is dó na píopaireachta — The flannel jacket — An ceó draoidheachta

Tunes from PW Joyce in The Complete Collection of Irish Music / as Noted by George Petrie (1789-1866); Edited, from the Original Manuscripts by Charles Villiers Stanford

The scalded poor boy — Where were you all the day my own pretty boy — I’ll make for my bridegroom a grassy green pillow — ’Twas on a summer’s evening — Last night I dreamt of my own true love — I am a poor maiden, my fortune proved bad — Come all you maids where’er you be — The Shanavest and Corovoth — When you go to a battle — Come all y’ United Irishmen, and listen unto me — Come all United Irishmen and listen unto me — Then up comes the captain & boatswain — The far away wedding — Oh love it is a killing thing — I once loved a boy — Once I was invited to a nobleman’s wedding — An old man he courted me — Ne’er wed an old man — How do you like her for your wife — The old astrologer — The first day of spring — The summer is come and the grass is green — The funny taylor — The croppy boy — Johnny Doyle — When first into this town I came — [Irish version of “My ain kind dearie”] — The Gorey caravan — As I roved out one morning — One evening of late as I roved out in state — One evening fair as I roved out — As I went a walking one morning in spring — As through the woods I chanced to roam — In comes great Buonaparte with forty thousand men — Along with my love I’ll go — Along with my love I’ll go — Willy Leonard — As a sailor and a soldier — Dobbin’s flow’ry vale — Crabs in the skillet — I’m a poor stranger that’s far from my own — My name is bold Kelly — It is to fair England I’m willing to go — Each night when I slumber — The hunt Reel — Munster reel — Boil the breakfast early — The job of journey work — The peeler’s jacket — Munster reel — Munster reel — The silver mines — Reel [Untitled] – Reel – Hornpipe — Good night, good night, and joy be with you — The lovely lad — Tea in the morning — The croosting cap — Munster jig — Munster jig — Munster jig — Munster jig — Old Cork jig – Jig — Round the world for sport — The girl I love Jig — [Jig] – Jig – Jig – Jig — Time of day — Ancient Munster march and jig — The housekeeper — A lullaby — Nurse tune — A caoine — Hymn tune — Mo chailín donn deas a’s mise ag ól — Mo stóirín ó Mhuscraídhe — Baint áirnídhe faoi dhuilleabhar na gcraobh — Ag an mBaile Núadh atá an bhruingeall mhodhamhail mná — Mo ghrádh bán am’ threígean a’s céile dá luadh leis — Corraidh do chosa a Sheáinín — Is í mo leanbh (caoíne) — An cailín ruadh — Séid, a bhean bhoicht! agus bí súgach — Easter snow — Ceis Corran Síos i measg na gcoillte — “Saion” na séad — An gamhain geal bán — Grádh mo chléibh — Bé ’n Eírinn í — Ceó druídheachta — A chuisle geal mo chroídhe — Órán an uig — An cnoicín fraoigh — Cois taoíbh leas’ an ghaortha — Mo chailín rúadh — Péarla an chúil chraobhaigh — An táilliúr aérach — Pilib an cheó — Cois tiar lais an gaortha — Tá ’na lá — Tá ’na lá — Aon ’s do na píobaireachta — Capa Dánig — Slán agus beannacht le buadharthaibh an tsaoghail –Cruimíneach crom — Dá mbéinn-si agus mo ghrádh bán — Súiste buídhe — Air mo ghabháil tré Bhaile-Átha-Clíath dam — Mór Chlúana — An seanduine crom — Bean dubh ó’n slíabh — Bean dubh ó’n slíabh — Mo chreach a’s mo dhíachais