"The Humours of Ballyconnell", in Gaelic "Sugra Baile-Ata-Conaill" or "Pléaráca Bhaile uí Chonaill", also known as "Humors of Ballyconnelly", "Aldridge's Rant", "Captain Rock", "A Highland Reel", "McNeil's Maggot", "Now is the Time Reel" and "O'Neill's Maggot" is an Irish reel in 4/4 time and D Major. The parts are played ABC (Mulvihill), ABB'CC' (Moylan, Prior), AABBCC (Boys of the Lough, Brody, Goodman, Kerr, Mallinson), AA'BB'CC' (Harker/Rafferty).
The tune, titled "Humours of Bally Connell", first appears in the large mid-19th century music manuscript collection of County Cork cleric and uilleann piper Canon James Goodman. The tune is popularly known nowadays under the "Ballyconnell" title, which was only a local Fermanagh name for the tune more commonly known as "Captain Rock's" according to the Boys of the Lough.
The tune was first recorded on a Columbia 78 RPM (No. 33068) in New York in 1925 by renowned County Sligo fiddler Michael Coleman in a duet with flute player Tom Morrison.
It was printed in Brody's Fiddler's Fakebook (1983), Bulmer & Sharpley's Music from Ireland, vol. 1 (1974), Harker's 300 Tunes from Mike Rafferty (2005), Kerr's Merry Melodies, vol. 4 (c. 1880's), Mallinson's 100 Essential (1995), Moylan's Johnny O'Leary of Sliabh Luachra (1994), Mulvihill's 1st Collection (1986), Prior's Foinn Seisiún 2 (2003) and Treoir, vol. 37, No. 3 (2005).
It was recorded by Michael Coleman & Tom Morrison (1925), Tulla Ceili Band on Dance Tunes (1990), Paddy Keenan on Paddy Keenan (1975), Craob Rua on The More That's Said the Less the Better (1992), Boys of the Lough on Piper's Broken Finger (1976) and Arcady on Many Happy Returns (1995).