As I Roved Out
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Like many Irish love songs, 'As I Roved Out' is derived from the songs, many centuries ago, of the troubadours of Provence in southern France. With the assimilation of the Normans into Gaelic culture in the fourteenth century, other typically French song types took root in Ireland and 'As I Roved Out' belongs to the tradition of one of these, the pastourelle or pastoral adventure song. The song now appears in many versions and under many titles, among them 'John Riley' and the 'Lamentation of Riley and Mary Campbell'. Set to a traditional air this particular version, which Planxty used, was recorded by Paddy Tunney in the early sixties, and so became the standard version. As such it has influenced the repertoires of many subsequent singers. |
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As I Roved Out |
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Biography
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