Canasg Choral Music Publishing

Canasg Music

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WT2007

Preab san ól

18th century Irish song by Riocard Bairéid, originally in Gaelic; English version by Donald O' Sullivan

arranged by Peter Hill
for soprano, alto, tenor and bass chorus

SATB performance time approx 2m 15s

Composer's note

This is a rollicking drinking song from Ireland, and makes a great final number or encore. The tune is very catchy, and there's lots of rhyming, which makes it easy to swing the piece along from phrase to phrase. The words should be really meant - with the disdain of the poor for the rich - the tone not too 'nice'. This is a song in praise of the pleasures of life, and to hell with the toil or trouble.

Verse 2, arranged for tenor and bass on their own, can be taken either by two soloists or by the entire sections. Verse 4 includes a simple descant. The verse scansion is irregular, which takes getting used to, but the whole song is very singable by any moderately experienced choir.


Music

See a sample of the music

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Hear a MIDI file of the song


Words

Preab san ól
(another round)

1.Why spend your leisure bereft of pleasure?
Amassing treasure you'll scrape and save.
Why look so canny at ev'ry penny?
You'll take no money within the grave.
Landlords and gentry with all their plenty
Must still go empty where'er they're bound,
So to my thinking, we'd best be drinking,
Our glasses clinking on- another round.

2. The huxter greedy will grind the needy
Their straits unheeding, shouts: 'money down!'
His special vice is his fancy prices,
For a florin's value he'll charge a pound.
With hump for trammel, the scripture's camel
Missed the needle's eye and so came to ground
Why pine for riches when still you've stitches
To hold your britches up- another round.

3.The shipmen trading in Spain and Aden
Return well laden with oil and corn.
And from Gibraltar their course they'll alter
And steer for Malta and the Golden Horn.
With easy motion they sail life's ocean
With ne'er a notion they'll soon run aground,
So lads and lasses make all your passes
And fill your glasses for.. another round.

4. King Solomon's glory, so famed in story,
Was far outshone by the lily's guise.
But cold winds harden both field and garden;
Pleading for pardon, the lily dies.
Life's but a bubble of toil and trouble,
A feathered arrow, once shot ne'er found.
It's nought but miming, so ends my rhyming
And still we've time in for- another round.

Original Gaelic by Riocard Bairéid (Richard Barrett), 18th c
English translation by Donald O'Sullivan


Price

The price of this piece depends on the number of singers in your group. This is a single payment for a licence to make as many copies as you need for your group to rehearse and perform the song as often as you wish. Copies of the song must not be given, lent or sold to any other group.

Number of singers in your group
up to 12 singers13 to 24 singers25 singers or more
£5 (approx US$8.00)
£10 (approx US$16)
£15 (approx US$24)
Please note that your Paypal transaction will be in sterling but it should automatically
be converted if your credit card draws on a different currency.


Companion pieces

Browse the 'World folk and traditional' section of the Canasg catalogue for more songs like this one. To go there now, click on the 'catalogue' box to the right.
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ã Page updated by Peter Hill Jan 2006