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      • Joyce above refers to the song "Good Night and Joy be with you all", which is better-known nowadays as " Parting Glass (2) (The)," which is usually sung to the same melody as "Sweet Cootehill Town."
      tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Sweet_Cootehill_Town
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  2. Patrick Weston Joyce, in his Old Irish Folk Music and Songs (1909), gives the tune with a different text under the name "Sweet Cootehill Town," noting, "The air seems to have been used indeed as a general farewell tune, so that—from the words of another song of the same class—it is often called 'Good night and joy be with you all.'" [23] The celebrated Irish folk song collector Colm Ó ...

  3. Even more successful is a look into P. W. Joyce's Old Irish Folk Music And Songs (1909). "Sweet Cootehill Town" (No. 384, p. 192 ) is sung to the same melody as "The Parting Glass". It's a farewell song of emigrants leaving their hometown for a new life in America:

  4. Feb 7, 2023 · The Parting Glass was a popular New Year’s Eve song in both Ireland and Scotland before it was superseded by Auld Lang Syne. It shares its melody with another old Irish song called Sweet Cootehill Town, which also tells of departure as the singer prepares to leave for America.

  5. May 26, 2024 · Originating from Ireland, this traditional song has been performed by numerous artists over the years, but perhaps one of the most notable renditions is by the enchanting Irish music group, Celtic Woman.

  6. Ireland’s Favourite Folk Song bespoke performance of ‘The Parting Glass’ by Freddie White.

    • 4 min
    • 2M
    • RTÉ - IRELAND’S NATIONAL PUBLIC SERVICE MEDIA
  7. Mar 2, 2011 · The celebrated Irish folk song collector, Colm OLochlainn, pointed out that The Parting Glass shares its melody with Sweet Cootehill Town. This is another traditional farewell song, this time involving a man leaving Ireland to go to America.

  8. www.rte.ie › 2019/0424/1045326-the-parting-glassThe Parting Glass - RTÉ

    May 22, 2019 · ‘The Parting Glass’ with its familiar melody was first printed in Colm O Lochlainn’s Irish Street Ballads (1939). Cork poet Patrick Galvin recorded this song in 1956. The Clancy Brothers...

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