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MUSIC SUPPLEMENT
The Confession of Devorgilla
Arrangedand with an Introductory Noteby BENJAMIN
BIERMAN
The tune for The Confession of Devorgilla is better known by other
names: often as the Londonderry Air, and, since gaining a new text by Fred Weatherley in
1913, even more famously as Danny Boy, with which words it is known throughout the
English-speaking world.
My arrangement for English concertina and mezzo-soprano, which was
commissioned and has often been performedby the New York Victorian Consort,
draws on the earliest known (and possibly the original) words for the tune: The
Confession of Devorgilla, seemingly published for the first time in Edward
Fitzsimonss Irish Minstrelsy (1814). The song refers to historical events in
twelfth-century Northern Ireland. Briefly, Dermott McMurrough, King of Leinster, kidnapped
Devorgilla, the wife of Tiernan ORourke, Prince of Brefni. ORourke avenged the
kidnapping by driving McMurrough from his stronghold; McMurrough then enlisted the help of
Henry II, thus setting the stage for the first English invasion of Ireland. Eventually,
Devorgilla returned to her husband, and the song finds her in a confessional, pleading,
Oh! shrive me, father... , as she asks for absolution. The history of the
tuneits many versions and sets of wordsis told brilliantly in Brian Audley,
The Provenance of the Londonderry Air, Journal of the Royal Musical
Association, 125/2 (2000).
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