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Always was, always will be Aboriginal land
Browsing Hearing the Music of Early NSW by subject 
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  • Browsing Hearing the Music of Early NSW by subject
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  • Browsing Hearing the Music of Early NSW by subject
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Browsing Hearing the Music of Early NSW by subject "Irish traditional music in early colonial Australia"

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    • Eliza Hamilton Dunlop (c.1796-1880), words: Your Eyes Have the Twin-Star's Light (Tune: The Foggy Dew) (Sydney, 1839); first modern performance; Koen van Stade (tenor), Neal Peres Da Costa (pianoforte); Elizabeth Bay House, Sydney, 27 February 2022 

      Peres Da Costa, Neal; van Stade, Koen; Stephens, Matthew; Skinner, Graeme
      Published 2022-08-12
      The Irish poet Eliza Hamilton Dunlop arrived in NSW with her family in January 1838, and over the next two years her series of eight ‘Songs of exile’ were successively published in Sydney newspapers. The most famous of ...
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    • M, of Anambaba [John McGarvie] (1829): The exile of Erin on the Plains of Emu [O! Farewell my country - my kindred - my lover] (Tune: The exile of Erin); Koen van Stade (tenor), Neal Peres Da Costa (pianoforte); Elizabeth Bay House, Sydney, 27 February 2022 

      Peres Da Costa, Neal; van Stade, Koen; Stephens, Matthew; Skinner, Graeme
      Published 2022-08-12
      This lovely song, published in the ‘Sydney Gazette’ in 1829, is a parody of the Irish nationalist song, ‘Erin go Bragh’ (‘The exile of erin’), to be sung to its tune. It ventriloquises the laments of a colonial exile - a ...
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