FluteFling in person events return to Edinburgh

FluteFling Edinburgh Weekend 2023 12-14 May confirmed

FluteFling Edinburgh 2023 tutors (top-bottom): Tom Oakes, Davy Maguire, Sharon Creasey.

The FluteFling Edinburgh Weekend will return in May with a weekend of concert, workshops and sessions that has proved to be successful in the past.

Taking place at Heart of Newhaven Centre, the entire weekend of concert, workshops and sessions will be based in the same location for the first time.

The weekend will open with a Friday concert featuring a new duo, Tom Oakes and Ali Hutton. Saturday tutors will be Tom Oakes, Davy Maguire and Sharon Creasey, with other guests over the weekend to be announced.

This marks a return to in-person events following the cancellation of the 2020 event due to Covid and the successful launch of The FluteFling Collection tune book at Stonehaven Folk Festival last year.

Tickets are expected to go on sale over Easter weekend.

UPDATE: Tickets are now on sale. See the event page for details.

 

 

The North East Scotland Session Tunes Project 10: Retreat March Set

FluteFling NE Tunebook Project: 10 Lochanside/ Borve Castle

Low whistle, Scottish Border pipes and flute in harmony in Sandy Bells, 2018. L-R David Hastie, Allan Sturrock and Kenny Hadden (c) Gordon Turnbull

This tenth video in the series features three tune types – a march, strathspey and reel.

For background to the project of 10 sets of tunes being recorded over 10 weeks, and to see the first video, start here. Alternatively, go straight to the videos on my Youtube channel.

You can download the free PDF of the sheet music here:
FluteFling Aberdeen 2019 NE Scotland Tunes


3/4 Retreat Marches

FluteFling NE Tunebook Project: Lochanside/ Borve Castle

This tenth video in the series features two retreat marches. These are from the FluteFling NE Tunebook of Scottish session tunes for flute and whistle and I play these on my Rudall and Rose flute in D.

Lochanside

John McLellan (from Cornemusique website)

John McLellan (from Cornemusique website)

Composed by John McLellan (1875-1949) of Dunoon on the Firth of Clyde, this three part tune has gained in session popularity in recent years.

While it has no direct NE Scotland connections, it has been included because it had become a recurring piece in the Sunday survivors’ sessions from FluteFling weekends.

This clip is from a few years ago and you may recognise some regulars (L-R: David Flett, Cathal McConnell, Martin Duckworth, Bill Black, Kenny Hadden, Sharon Creasey, Gordon Turnbull):

For some background reading on John McLellan, see this article from The Piping Press and this one from Bagpipie News. There is also a good article in English on this French bagpipe site, Cornemusique. A book of his compositions is also available.

As to Lochanside itself, The tune celebrates Loch Loskin on the Cowal peninsula and lyrics have since been added to the melody by Aberdeenshire singer Jim Malcolm. The Pipes and Drums website has a couple of articles on the tune here and here.

And here is Jim Malcolm himself singing his song to the melody:

Borve Castle

Donald MacLeod (from Hands Up for Trad website)

Donald MacLeod (from Hands Up for Trad website)

Written by Donald MacLeod (1916-1982), I originally taught tune at one of my monthly Edinburgh workshops in 2018 and you can read about it and find other resources for it on the blog that I wrote at the time.

Additionally, here’s a link to my recording of the tune on Soundcloud.

There are two Borve Castles, one in Sutherland and one in Benbecula. It’s the Sutherland one that gives it a NE connection, but the tune title almost certainly refers to the Benbecula one. My guess in the video that the one in question is in Lewis was close-ish — Donald MacLeod, the bagpipes composer and teacher was born in Stornoway and that was my confusion.

There’s much to admire about Donald MacLeod’s compositions and there’s a good account of his life at Hands Up for Trad.

The Bagpipe Shop in Glasgow carries his many volumes of compositions.

I’ve had it put to me that Borve Castle may be a traditional tune that Donald MacLeod arranged, something many traditional musicians have done over the centuries. The tune appears in one of his tune books and is certainly always attributed to Donald MacLeod.

It was Gàidhlig singer and flute player Catriona Patience who asked me the question a few years ago. Take a listen to this field recording of Fanny MacIsaac singing A Mhic Dhugaill ‘Ic Ruairidh. Recorded at Borve in 1962, it tells of a killing at Borve Castle and uses the same melody as our retreat march.

The melody may have been borrowed from the Donald MacLeod composition, of course. He had been playing and writing music for many years at that point. However, the recording archive notes that another version of the song sets the location in Lochaber, which creates another level of ambiguity if it predates the one in the archive.

To my mind, the authorship isn’t settled, but it’s fascinating to see the way that ideas are borrowed and respectfully used and developed within the tradition.

Catriona had responded to my previous blog on the tune when I taught it in 2018 and had been previously aware of the recording on Tobar an Dualchais. The Tobar an Dualchais/ Kist o Riches website is a vital resource and a cornerstone of the proposed Scottish Traditional Music Archive. To learn more about that, see my account of a symposium on the subject from last year.


Ten weeks of videos

Over a 10 week or so period, I have been recording and uploading to YouTube a set of tunes from the PDF roughly once a week. The aim is to introduce the tunes, point out some techniques along the way and then play them as a set as I might play them in a session.

As I go along, I’ll take in suggestions to improve the sound and presentation and get back into the way of teaching again. There is an in-built slow down function in YouTube and the PDF is available to everyone, so why not join me on the journey?

Thanks for following this project, I hope you have found it useful and that it has you to learn some of the tunes or begin playing them again.

 

The North East Scotland Session Tunes Project 9: March, Strathspey and Reel

FluteFling NE Tunebook Project: 09 Pipe Major Jim Christie of Wick/ The Rose Amang the Heather/ Bonnie Kate o’ Aberdeen

A session at the Dalriada at Edinburgh FluteFling 2019. L-R Munro Gauld, Harry Mayers, Malcolm Reavell, Melanie Simpson, Orin Simpson (c) Gordon Turnbull

This ninth video in the series features three tune types – a march, strathspey and reel.

For background to the project of 10 sets of tunes being recorded over 10 weeks, and to see the first video, start here. Alternatively, go straight to the videos on my Youtube channel.

You can download the free PDF of the sheet music here:
FluteFling Aberdeen 2019 NE Scotland Tunes


Wick to Aberdeen Over the Heather

FluteFling NE Tunebook Project: Pipe Major Jim Christie of Wick/ The Rose Amang the Heather/ Bonnie Kate o’ Aberdeen

This ninth video in the series features a march, strathspey and reel, all associated with the North and North East of Scotland. These are from the FluteFling NE Tunebook of Scottish session tunes for flute and whistle and I play these on my Rudall and Rose 8-keyed flute in D.

Pipe Major Jim Christie of Wick

Pipe Major Jim Christie of Wick was written by Wick fiddler Addie Harper. Apparently one of Addie Harper’s earlier compositions, it sits neatly in the bagpipe scale and suits flutes and whistles well too. I find the structure encourages a pulse of breath that makes it flow along readily. Look out for variations in the deployment of snaps in the melody.

The Cape Breton fiddler Buddy McMaster helped to popularise this tune in Canada and The Traditional Tune archive has some background information on the composition.

For more background on Jim Christie, who founded a girls’ pipe band during WW2, there’s a good account of his life here.

The role of Pipe Major is explained in this Wikipedia entry.

Update: Munro Gauld (pictured, above) was in touch about this tune, with helpful information on different versions and background. In particular, he points out that the version in the NE tunebook is not a common one in Scotland and is usually played in 2/4 time with 4 parts. He said,

It’s a tune I know well as it was a staple of the Plockton session when I lived up north 20 years ago, here in Dunkeld it’s also played most weeks at the session and wherever there is a session with a Borders / lowland / cauld wind piper, it usually gets an airing. But it also makes a great fiddle tune. And once you’ve got the hang of articulating the Strathspey-like dotted notes and octave jumps, it’s great fun to play on the flute.

But looking at the NE Tune book version –  I’ve never seen it / heard it played as a 4/4. Any time that I have ever heard it played (or played it myself) it is always as a 4-part 2/4 pipe march (as written for the pipes).

Munro illustrated this by sharing a Pipe band version:

Additionally, here’s a session-like version played by a young fiddler in Wick, Addie Harper’s home town.

Munro continues:

It would seem that the version in the NE Tunes book is taken from the playing of Buddy MacMaster (as found on the Trad Tune Archive). Obviously when it travelled with him over the Atlantic it got smoothened out from its 2/4 Pipe March roots to more like a 4/4 reel. Having said that, I couldn’t find a recording of Buddy MacMaster playing it online, so I may be wrong. I did find this fiddle version from Gus Longaphie from (I think) Prince Edward Island which might give an indication of how Buddy MacMaster plays it.

I’d suggest that perhaps, in a Scottish context, the Cape Breton version of the tune is an outlier – and not one that would be commonly played in Scottish sessions. In your Blog it might be worth mentioning this and if you can easily find it, put in a link to music for the 4-part 2/4 Pipe March version.

Munro adds,

Note that the third and fourth parts are both quite tricky – but lovely to play on the flute.

PM Jim Christie of Wick as published in Ceol na Fidhle, published by Taigh na Teud Music Publishers.

This is a good reminder of how things are often not straightforward in traditional music, with different versions and origins often sitting side by side. This is true, even when the composer is known and the music is published, and my thanks to Munro for drawing attention to this.

From my own perspective, I was surprised that the pipe march only had 2 parts, when 4 is more common. Now I know why.

Munro illustrated the 4 part version with a photo (opposite) from the excellent Ceol na Fidhle music book series published by Taigh na Teud Music Publishers based in the Isle of Skye, edited by fiddler Christine Martin. It can be found in the combined Book 3 and 4 edition and I can recommend these and the related books. To see a list of some publications that have been helpful to us in FluteFling, check out the Resources page.

The NE session sets tune book was compiled by John Crawford from existing session material to be found around Aberdeen music groups. The 2-part version allows us to also play with Cape Breton musicians and there is now an opportunity to broaden the repertoire by adding in the additional parts so that we can play with others. I’ll be adding a bonus video of the 4 part version at the end of this project.

Uncertainty about origins and versions is a big theme for this set of tunes and illustrates the folk process in action.

The Rose Amang the Heather

The Rose Amang the Heather is a traditional strathspey in D. It is known by various titles and was taught by Tom Oakes in 2021 as a Northumbrian tune, The Kielder Schottische. I learned it as The Laddie wi’ the Plaidie and it is a good example of a tune that happily exists in different traditions (link to The Session).

The Traditional Tune Archive gives a different, but related, 2-part tune for The Rose Amang the Heather, from The Middleton Collection of 1870.

However, a search for The Lad wi’ the Plaidie reveals a 2-part version from 1910 and a more elaborate 5-part strathspey, 3 of which are the same as our version.

For comparison, here is The Kielder Schottiche from The Session.

And here’s a recording of Tom Clough (Northumbrian pipes), Billy Ballantyne (piccolo) and Ned Pearson (fiddle): https://youtu.be/rrQaMMjCczA

I suspect that it is Scottish in origin and originally in two parts, but completely take on board Tom’s assertion that it is Northumbrian. Many tunes are common to both Northumbrian and Scottish traditions as each repertoire leaches over the Border.

In addition, the running triplets in the third part are a strong feature of hornpipes beloved of Northumbrian pipers and others. Harvest Home and The Belfast Hornpipe are two notable and well-known tunes that feature this. However, triplets and quadruplets are also common in strathspeys, which are often played at a hornpipe tempo.

I’ll leave it there with regards to this tune, but in my opinion, Northumbrian pipers’ tune books are generally a rich resource for flute and whistle players exploring different settings of Scottish material. Cross-Border hybridisation is clearly a long and noble tradition and there are many threads to the heritage of this lovely tune.

The three part version is the one I have come across the most and it certainly fits the flute and whistle well. Be sure not to let the triplets run away, find a space in the music to breathe and keep it steady.

Bonnie Kate o’ Aberdeen

Bonnie Kate o’ Aberdeen is a reel in Em and has its own questions regarding origins. A tune and a country dance by that name were published in 1771 by Thomson, but the melody, also known as Bonnie Kate, is different. After a bit of hunting around with little success, I tried playing the tune into the Tunepal app.

Mobile phone screenshots of the Tunepal logo, music score and letter notation in ABC format.

Tunepal is a cloud-powered app developed for traditional musicians by Bryan Duggan and his team. It is available for Android and Apple phones, as well as online. After playing a 12 second clip into the app, it will search the free online databases and suggest matches with different degrees of confidence. For any musician trying to identify a tune from a fragment, maybe heard or recorded in a session, it’s a really valuable tool.

Tunepal suggested an Irish reel, called The Mountain Lark, which I have heard but don’t play. A search on The Session reveals that there are two tunes with that name, both in the same key, but distinctly different from each other. One of those is our version and lesser known.

The tune also has a couple of alternative Scottish titles – The Rakish Highlander and Bonnie Kate o’ Aberdeen. Additionally, the annotation to The Rakish Highlander in The Traditional Tune Archive discusses the interest in Scottish repertoire to Irish fiddlers.

On The Session page linked above, FluteFling’s own Sharon Creasey, aka The Archivist and a specialist in Fermanagh music and older manuscripts, writes:

This tune is in the Gunn Book (Fermanagh 1865) as Boney (sic) Kate of Aberdeen.
What a great tune!

The Gunn Book predates Ryan’s Collection (1883) by almost 20 years and strengthens a Scottish claim.

Sharon herself reintroduced the to Aberdeen, teaching it in her workshops, and hence into this PDF. I’m not aware that the tune is otherwise known in Scotland currently.

From Scotland to Ireland and back again with this reel, a Northumbrian schottische or a Scottish strathspey for another tune, from Caithness to Cape Breton and back for our march. Whichever way you look at it, the connections and cross fertilisation of people, culture and music makes the world a richer place.


Ten weeks of videos

Over a 10 week or so period, I am recording and uploading to YouTube a set of tunes from the PDF roughly once a week. The aim is to introduce the tunes, point out some techniques along the way and then play them as a set as I might play them in a session.

As I go along, I’ll take in suggestions to improve the sound and presentation and get back into the way of teaching again. There is an in-built slow down function in YouTube and the PDF is available to everyone, so why not join me on the journey?

Look out for some more tunes in this project. In the meantime, enjoy learning and playing the tunes!

 

The North East Scotland Session Tunes Project 8: Fyvie to Aberdeen

FluteFling NE Tunebook Project: 08 The Bonnie Lass o’ Fyvie/ The 72nd Highlanders’ Farewell to Aberdeen (The Little Boy’s Lament for his Dragon) (4/4 March Set)

The Sunday lunchtime session at Sandy Bell’s, Edinburgh FluteFling 2018. (c) Gordon Turnbull

This eighth video in the series features two popular marches with Aberdeenshire titles.

For background to the project of 10 sets of tunes being recorded over 10 weeks, and to see the first video, start here. Alternatively, go straight to the videos on my Youtube channel.

You can download the free PDF of the sheet music here:
FluteFling Aberdeen 2019 NE Scotland Tunes


The Bonnie Lass o’ Fyvie/ The 72nd Highlanders’ Farewell to Aberdeen

FluteFling NE Tunebook Project: The Bonnie Lass o’ Fyvie/ The 72nd Highlanders’ Farewell to Aberdeen (The Little Boy’s Lament for his Dragon)

This eighth video in the series features two marches with Aberdeenshire names. These are from the FluteFling NE Tunebook of Scottish session tunes for flute and whistle and I play these on my Rudall and Rose 8-keyed flute and Eamonn Cotter keyless flute, both in D.

The Bonnie Lass o’ Fyvie

The Bonnie Lass o’ Fyvie is the melody to a traditional song that has travelled far and wide, into Scottish, Irish, English and American traditions. It begins:

There once was a troop o’ Irish dragoons
Cam marching doon through Fyvie-o
And the captain’s fa’en in love wi’ a very bonnie lass
And her name it was ca’d pretty Peggy-o

The song may possibly have its origins in the 1600s, according to one theory. With many variations of words, places and names, the versions have been recorded multiple times by a wide range of musicians, singers and artists. For a full breakdown, see this Wikipedia entry.

Many songs have ended up being pipe marches for the simple reason that the soldiers would know the words and could sing them as they marched, boosting morale and helping to keep an even and sustainable marching pace. The words give a sense of the rhythm and pace at which to play the march.

This version of the song by Aberdeenshire’s Old Blind Dogs is one of many fine recordings of the song to be found on YouTube.

The setting in the tune book is in G but drops down to low C natural, so keys will be required. However, it is possible to to play the C natural an octave higher and I demonstrate both of these options. A third option is to play the entire tune an octave higher than is written. I didn’t think of this until after the recording so that option doesn’t appear in the video.

The setting probably suits accordions and fiddles better than flutes and whistles and may be common in NE Scotland sessions. A way around this is to transpose the tune into D. A version in that key can be found on The Session website.

The tune has just one part so might be played many times rather than a number standard to the session you are playing in. In a FluteFling session, playing the tune 4 times would be reasonable, depending on the session dynamics.

The 72nd Highlanders’ Farewell to Aberdeen (The Little Boy’s Lament for his Dragon)

This Highland bagpipe march was probably written by William McKay in 1876, who called it The Little Boy’s Lament for his Dragon, “dragon” meaning “kite”. It acquired its Aberdeen title probably around 1885, and knowledge of the authorship become blurred.

There’s a lengthy discussion on this tune, its authorship, titles, versions and the perils of reading bagpipe music on The Session. With some fine voices such as Kenny Hadden and Nigel Gatherer contributing, it is worth a read.

See The Traditional Tune Archive for a very helpful note on this too.

I originally learned and played a different setting of this tune, one with C naturals and some of the snaps reversed (see that discussion in The Session). Be aware when playing to adapt to the majority of those you are playing with, or, often more importantly, to the person leading that particular set of tunes. Both are good session courtesies.

It’s a reminder that when playing, listening happens on many levels, not just to the performances of the other musicians, but to their versions, their pace and the different demands of their instruments.


Ten weeks of videos

Over a 10 week or so period, I am recording and uploading to YouTube a set of tunes from the PDF roughly once a week. The aim is to introduce the tunes, point out some techniques along the way and then play them as a set as I might play them in a session.

As I go along, I’ll take in suggestions to improve the sound and presentation and get back into the way of teaching again. There is an in-built slow down function in YouTube and the PDF is available to everyone, so why not join me on the journey?

Look out for some more tunes in this project. In the meantime, enjoy learning and playing the tunes!

 

The North East Scotland Session Tunes Project 7: Jiggin’ About

FluteFling NE Tunebook Project: 07 The Road to Banff/ Rose Wood/ Milltimber

This seventh video in the series features three popular jigs with Aberdeenshire titles.

For background to the project of 10 sets of tunes being recorded over 10 weeks, and to see the first video, start here. Alternatively, go straight to the videos on my Youtube channel.

You can download the free PDF of the sheet music here:
FluteFling Aberdeen 2019 NE Scotland Tunes


Jiggin’ About Banff, Aberdeen and Milltimber

FluteFling NE Tunebook Project: The Road to Banff/ Rosewood/ Milltimber

This seventh video in the series features three jigs with Aberdeenshire names. These are from the FluteFling NE Tunebook of Scottish session tunes for flute and whistle and I play these on my Alba low whistle in D.

The Road to Banff

The Road to Banff is by Malcolm Reavell and is used with permission. It was first published in The 90s Collection of new compositions in Scottish traditional music and has since become firmly established in the session scene. A fine flute player, Malcolm is a supporter of FluteFling and has written about the 2001 event in Aberdeen that he organised, which subsequently inspired FluteFling. The tune is a joy to play on flutes and whistles and is in D. Look out for the distinctive syncopated phrases.

Kenny Hadden comments:

“This jig of Malcolm’s was published in “The 90s Collection”, and I believe out of all the tunes in that book, this is the only one which was composed by a flute player. It’s popular in and around Aberdeen because I’ve been teaching it to whistle classes for the last 5 years or so. A nice jig for either flute or whistle.”

 

Rose Wood (George Rose Wood of Aberdeen)

George Rose Wood of Aberdeen was written by Aberdeenshire fiddle composer James Scott Skinner (1843-1927) in honour of his concert agent. You can find more on the background of the tune at Tunearch.

The jig is known in the Irish tradition and is very much a fiddler’s tune as it can be a challenge on the flute or whistle. The jig is in A and shifts into E at one point, so unavoidably has G# and D# notes. However, it may be possible to tackle the tune without keys by half covering some of the holes. The success of this will depend on the design of your particular instrument and I use a low D whistle to try and show the potential possibilities.

Milltimber

Written by fiddler Ian Crichton, this jig is named after a suburb of Aberdeen. There’s a good discussion on the tune on The Session.

The jig is in D and once more features syncopated phrases. The tune drops down to a low A, out of the range of the flute or whistle, but there are a couple of ways around this. I found that simply playing the A above the written note fits well and makes musical sense within the tune, creating rhythmic interest that is echoed elsewhere in the melody.


Ten weeks of videos

Over a 10 week or so period, I am recording and uploading to YouTube a set of tunes from the PDF roughly once a week. The aim is to introduce the tunes, point out some techniques along the way and then play them as a set as I might play them in a session.

As I go along, I’ll take in suggestions to improve the sound and presentation and get back into the way of teaching again. There is an in-built slow down function in YouTube and the PDF is available to everyone, so why not join me on the journey?

Look out for some more tunes in this project. In the meantime, enjoy learning and playing the tunes!