With the advent of "wifi hotspot" devices that often sabotage higher-speed wired web servers, this and other such sites are being adapted to the new rules for private web sites. I'm experimenting with ways to deal with this growing problem. Stay tuned ... [~jc/w/music/book/ONeills]
O'Neill's "1850" The Music of Ireland ["MoI" 1903]
O'Neill's "1001" The Dance Music of Ireland ["DMoI" 1907]
O'Neill's "Waifs and Strays of Gaelic Melody" ["WaS" 1922]

Click tune lister or session lister or collection lister to see the tune list.
See summary at bottom for explanations.
Back in 2020, several people leading Irish tune classes and/or sessions contacted me asking if the online ABC transcriptions of the O'Neill's books (early 1900s) could be made useful to musicians using tablets or phones. If you're involved in such groups, feel free to send me your suggestions, too. Turning ABC into a useful tool for working musicians is something that's still "under development", as they say, and communication can help us implement and test ideas. The Internet isn't much like music books, and we have a long way to go to find the best ways to do things here. See also these explanations of this transcription project:
Notes.html Explanation for the original O'Neill's project in the late 1990s
Revision_Notes.html Explanation for this revision of the collection


Summary
O'Neill's "The Music of Ireland" was first published in 1903 by Capt. Francis O'Neill, a Irish immigrant to Chicago, a fireman, and player of the uillean pipes, fiddle and flute. It's often called "The Bible of Irish Music", and also "O'Neill's 1850" for the number of tunes in the book. It has gone through many printings, the latest by Mel Bay, Anyone interested in traditional music of the British Isles (or most of North America) should have a copy.

The 1850 collection was the first known to have been transcribed to ABC notation, making it very available to computer software as well as humans. The work was done by a group of about 20 people from 1996-1999, and has been online at several sites since then. The original collection was organized mostly for people using search sites, and for those that wanted to download the entire collection in ABC form. This directory is a "reorg" aimed at making it more useful to people using computers, especially portable electronic gadgets, rather than paper.

"The Dance Music of Ireland" was published in 1907. It's called "O'Neill's 1001" for its number of tunes. There's a large overlap of tunes with "1850", but "1001" concentrates on the versions used in dancing (generally longways reels and jigs, and Irish step dancing).

There might be some confusion about just what is here. Some tunes were transcribed by more than one person. Other tunes are in 2 or 3 different versions in the original book, usually indicated by 1st, 2nd, etc. after the title. There are also several cases of more than one tune having the same title. So the confusion is understandable, and can be only partly clarified. Fairly often, the easiest way to indicate multiple tunes or versions with the same titles is to append the tune number to the title in the file name. This may be accompanied by other info such as "2nd", "3rd" (for multiple settings of the same tune), or a single-digit number for "condensed" versions that require less screen space due to the use of more alternate endings and/or the P: part-order notation for complex ordering of labelled sections of a tune.

The row of capital letters take you to the section of titles that start with that letter.

This list of tunes is alphabetical, based on a tune's English filename (omitting an initial "The" or "A" or "An"). Basicaly, all the non-letters and initial articles are stripped from the title, and the result is what is alphabetized. The software may show a surprising order in a few cases, as computer software sometimes has odd ideas about how to alphabetize things. so you might look around a bit if you don't see a particular name. There are also some odd spellings in a few tune titles.

The columns at the left are buttons that return a tune in several formats. The "abc" link merely returns the ABC source file. If there's a link in the "img" column, it returns a page formatted for printing. The others don't add any borders, and work better on a small screen, but may print oddly (depending on your gadget's software).

If you have question or suggestions, send me email.