Fermanagh Reels and pulse: November workshop

November’s workshop in The Wash House in Portobello, Edinburgh saw us look at a couple of reels from County Fermanagh that are popular in the north of Ireland. The Three Scones of Boxtie (also spelled Boxty) and Jig Away the Donkey (one of two tunes with that name) come from Hidden Fermanagh, a book of interviews and accounts exploring the lesser-known music and song from County Fermanagh, with accompanying CDs. The music was transcribed by fellow FluteFling tutor Sharon Creasey from original recordings.

Eddie Duffy (flute) and Mick Hoy (fiddle)

Eddie Duffy (flute) and Mick Hoy (fiddle)

It will come as no surprise to many that Cathal McConnell was very central to the project and helped introduce the music and musicians to a wider audience, Eddie Duffy (flute) and Mick Hoy (fiddle) in particular. They hailed from Derrygonnelly, which now hosts an annual  festival. Altan recorded The Three Scones, but these unusual tunes were recorded together by Desi Wilkinson on his Shady Woods album and are often played by Rebecca Knorr in Edinburgh sessions. Rebecca is no stranger to Northern Irish sessions herself and taught at FluteFling’s Edinburgh Weekend earlier this year.

We focused on The Three Scones, which we learned by first singing them to Desi Wilkinson’s recording, which is in a different key to the manuscript version. This can often happen in traditional music and having an existing internal sense of a tune can help to create a shortcut when then referring to the manuscript. By retaining a strong sense of the reference performance, we can fast-track the melody, breathing and phrasing of the tune and get it “under the fingers”.

We then looked at creating rhythm and swing through breath, emphasising Beats 1 (more) and 3 (less) and also how this happens against a backdrop of the flow and phrasing of the tune. Different styles do this differently, but in Ireland it is better established on the flute than in Scotland. It so happened that the class was all flute players, so we listened to and compared Matt Molloy (Ireland) and Calum Stewart (Scotland), who have very different approaches to very different repertoires, both with inspiring results.

The resources for the workshop can be found on the Resources page.

The next workshop will take place on Saturday December 14th and will continue the themes. The workshop is filling up but there are still some places available.

September polkas, singing, breath

Anascaul Lake - geograph.org.uk - 919995

Photo of Anascaul Lake, County Kerry by Peter Church

The Autumn workshops got off to a fine start with a look at a pair of Irish polkas that I have been teaching for many years that make a great way to warm up.

Tune background

I learned Patrick O’Connor’s Polkas from a cassette recording of a County Cork band called The Monks of the Screw, who took their name from a drinking club (the screw in their name is a corkscrew). There’s an old web page on them here and you can hear snippets of the recording at Irishtune.info.

I have also recorded the version I wrote and will add sheet music to the Repertoire page. Polkas have an interesting history as a dance form and can found around the world. In Ireland, a distinction can be drawn between the polkas of the south west, in particular Cork and Kerry and the area around Sliabh Luachra, and those of the Connaught area (Mayo, Galway, Sligo, Leitrim, Roscommon) further north.

The Cork and Kerry polkas are played very briskly and often have an off-beat emphasis, while those of the Connaught area are more like marches in many ways. Indeed, some of the Irish polkas can be traced to Scottish 2/4 marches. Farewell to Whiskey and The Barren Rocks of Aden are two obvious examples. For this latter reason, I find the way of playing Irish polkas on the flute and whistle a useful in road to playing Scottish marches on those instruments.

Patrick O’Connor’s Polkas were originally collected in Ceol Rince na hÉireann vol 2 as untitled tunes and I reversed the order that they appeared there and in the recording as I preferred the contrast between the runs of the first and the more punchy jumps in the second. It turns out that the one we learned first is better known as the Anascaul Polka (notation and discussion on The Session), named after a village on the Dingle peninsular, whereas the other one has no other name of its own (notation and discussion on The Session).

Caution: The Session is a very useful website that I often refer to, but the notation and information can sometimes contain errors, so please refer to it with a pinch of salt

To my knowledge the tunes are not as widely known as they maybe should be. Perhaps their relative simplicity puts people off, but this also creates an opportunity to concentrate on playing techniques.

Techniques

We began by listening to the Annascaul Polka, which is constructed on simple runs up and down. In A Dorian (see here for some ready modes information) with A as the top note and G at the bottom, it sits within the bagpipe scale, hinting that it may even have been a bagpipe tune at one point. There is a C natural as it ascends, but this and the F# are missed on the descent, making it a little ambiguous. Patrick O’Connor’s No. 1 is more punchy within the same scale.

We then alternately sang and played that part of the tune to help root it and connect it to our breathing more directly. Singing the tune, no matter how quietly, helps to develop the ear and to find places to breathe. We also naturally articulate parts of the melody in diddling that can be referenced when playing our instruments, particularly the whistle or low whistle.

It is arguably present in Gaelic puirt à beul, here’s a direct Irish example:

On the flute, glottal stops are more common in Ireland for rhythm and articulation, but tonguing is sometimes subtly used and is generally associated with whistle playing.

We looked at generating pulse with breath and on the low whistle this proved to be subtle but effective.

We discussed cuts, strikes, rolls and crans and also what I call The Sylvain Barou Method for learning and developing them, which is described in this post from 2017.

Finally, we looked at some books to support our learning. Some of the stand-out ones are discussed in this post, to which I would add Steph Geremia’s Up She Flew, a CD with her accompanying book of transcriptions and notes. To date, the only book on the low whistle I am aware of is The Low Whistle Book by Steáfán Hannigan and David Ledsam.

Upcoming events

The next Edinburgh workshop will be 23 November, while the Aberdeen Weekend takes place 1-3 November.

Autumn workshops in Edinburgh and Aberdeen Weekend 2019

FluteFling returns to Aberdeen 1-3 November 2019

The 3rd FluteFling Aberdeen Weekend for traditional flutes and whistles will take place Friday 1st – Sunday 3rd November.

The weekend will include:

  • sessions each day, including performance spots
  • a full day of workshops with 3 tutors, including a special guest
  • special guest discussion

Details are are very close to being finalised. Check back for further announcements, including ticket sales.

Edinburgh workshops schedule

Gordon will be resuming monthly workshops in Portobello, Edinburgh in September. Dates and booking details will be announced as soon as the venue details have been confirmed.

Early March update

A quick round up of the many things that have been going on with FluteFling

The Edinburgh FluteFling Weekend is taking shape nicely. Firstly, we welcome Munro Gauld, who brings his studies into strathspey playing to the day of workshops on Saturday 27 April alongside Rebecca Knorr and Claire Mann.

In addition, we are really excited that The Cathal McConnell Trio will be performing an early evening concert after the workshops and before the evening session. The acoustic concert takes place in the same building as the workshops, will have a bar and takes advantage of the magnificent old church hall at Bellfield — essentially similar to the Queen’s Hall in central Edinburgh. It should be a real treat.

Further details, including links to tickets for both events, can be found on the Weekend web page.

Resources update

I have also been able to record tunes for the February Edinburgh workshop and update the Repertoire page for 2019 properly. Irish, Scottish, Breton, Swedish? Lots of tune types covered so far this year and the recordings for March have also been updated. Have fun!

February Workshop: Calum Sgàire, voice, breath and bow

The beach at Bosta, Great Bernera, Western Isles, Scotland

Calum Sgàire (Òran Chaluim Sgàire) is a Gaelic love song from Bernera that was the focus of the February workshop in Edinburgh. We also looked at a Swedish tune (Engelska frå Småland) and had fun with Laridé de Portobello.

The story behind the song can be found here. Here’s the rich Bothy Band arrangement of the song, which is the one I am most familiar with, having first heard it in 1982:

Other versions can be readily found too. However, the instrumental version that we focused upon was that by fiddler Alisdair Fraser with Tony McManus on guitar:

Convention holds that the best way to learn a song air is directly from a sung version. This provides an understanding of the lyrics and phrasing that underpins the delivery of a fine narrative. This is important when playing flute or whistle as the breathing and dynamics are able to closely match that of the singer. (The best performances of song airs on flute or whistle are often singers).

The next best way is to learn from a musician who knows the song, but also to have an existing understanding or performance of the song in mind. This provides an anchor to reference. In Alisdair Fraser’s playing, the bow performs the role of the breath and it swells, rises, falls, stops, pulls and pushes the timing to bring out a sense of the story.

Additionally, certain grace notes and articulations lend themselves to the fiddle, much as they do with other instruments, including the voice. We sang along with the song to get a strong sense of the phrasing and inflections and then also to the fiddle version, which was simpler to focus upon due to the simple and sparse arrangement.

I have put a bare bones written version of this in the resources section. The arrangement does attempt to show how to negotiate the phrases that go below the flute range and it should help when referring back to the original.

The question of fingered vibrato (ghost trill, or flattement in Baroque flute parlance) arose and we tried a few ideas out for this. Each flute and whistle will be different and various combinations of fingers will suit different situations. It is worth taking the time to try these out and they aren’t confined to slow airs, but may also appear where notes are held in other tunes too.

The Engelska (a Swedish interpretation of an English dance) I learned from Fun Fiddle in Portobello. We tried out some harmonies and Malcolm Reavell contributed a third one on the spot for his sonorous A flute. Here’s an authentic Swedish version, that shows we were in the ballpark. Note the bowing emphasis, which squeezes and stretches the melody:

The next workshop takes place on Saturday 23 March and will focus on a set of Irish jigs. A recording for this will be sent out in advance.

Look out for the Annual flute and whistle weekend on 26-28 April. Lots of things happening that weekend: workshops, performances and sessions featuring flutes and whistles.