Into the Summer

Flutes and whistles in the Boda Bar during FluteFling Edinburgh 2018

Summer in Scotland is an exceptionally busy time, particularly so in the traditional and folk music calendar. Every weekend from May onwards there is a festival of some sort and the longer days and better weather rightly draw everyone to Shetland, Ullapool, Orkney, Moniaive, Girvan and everywhere in between. And that’s just for the music.

So it’s no surprise that numbers regularly tail off in May and June and for that reason the end of term session on Saturday 16th June is cancelled. My apologies if you had intended to come, but it makes the most sense. Once workshops resume after the summer I will look to put on something to replace it, but clearly now is not the right time.

I hope everyone has a great summer, with as much enjoyable music as they could wish for. I’m meeting Sharon Creasey, Kenny Hadden and Munro Gauld over the weekend to share ideas and explore dates for future gatherings over the next year, which promises to be an exciting one for fluters and whistlers in Scotland.

Regular FluteFling workshops in Edinburgh will resume in the Autumn, so look out for news of these and the other weekends over the coming weeks.

Inside the Fairy Hill: Tomnahurich

Inverness from Charleston North Kessock Black Isle Ross & Cromarty Scotland

This month we looked at ways to learn a tune by ear and focused on Tomnahurich, an evocative slow air by Pipe Major Donald Macleod that was recorded by Calum Stewart and Lauren MacColl on Wooden Flute and Fiddle.

The tune appears in Volume 3 of Pipe Major Donald MacLeod’s Collection and translates as The Hill of the Yew Trees or the Hill of the Fairies. It refers to the distinctive hill by Inverness that was until recently a cemetery, but was traditionally where the Fairy Folk lived. The Fiddlers of Inverness is a tale told about it (see here and here for more).

Update 12 October 2018: flute player Catriona Patience has spotted a resemblance to the song Tha an Crodh-laoigh air Aodann Chorra-bheinn, as archived in this recording at the fabulous  Tobar an Dualchais/ Kist o Riches Scottish oral traditions website.

Learning by ear v sheet music

The tune is deceptively simple, but offers a great way into learning by ear, which is the way most traditional musicians teach and learn. One thing that has become clear to me is that many people find it difficult to play by ear because, while traditional music relies upon this skill, it isn’t emphasised in formal music education. Indeed, many traditional musicians in Scotland rely on sheet music —in ceilidh bands it is not uncommon for example.

Of course, musicians interested in discovering traditional music that have originally learned their instrument in another tradition, for example Classical, have developed skills in sight reading at the expense of trusting and understanding their ears.

This difference struck earlier this year me when I attended the fantastic Cruinniú na bhFliúit (Flutemeet) for the first time. It takes place in County Cork just after Easter and is an inspiration behind the FluteFling Scottish flute and whistle weekends. If you haven’t been, you should go at least once. All the teaching though is by ear and no sheet music is available. You can record the tunes and ABC notation is used, but these are really for use afterwards. It’s the way they do it there and generations of Irish musicians can testify to the way it works.

Flute players in Scotland have different needs as playing by ear is new to many and needs to be supported. So I usually offer sheet music as a back-up option, again for later reference. Recently we had some success in Aberdeen and Edinburgh in sending out some sheet music in advance, but there is a risk that it becomes a distraction and it’s good to get the balance right.

If the aim is to play by ear, at what point do you refer to the sheet music? Sheet music is a representation of music itself. The more information that is represented, the more complex it becomes. However, just as speaking a language comes before reading and writing, so it is with music. Accent, dynamics, emphasis, breathing, articulation/ decoration and expression are immediately accessible through music but a piece of sheet music needs to be interpreted. I’m not against sheet music at all, but for teaching, learning and playing traditional music as well as we can, we need to step away from the paper and develop our ears.

So, to a small class on a sunny May afternoon, I thought I would try an approach used by Conal Ó Gráda at Cruinniú na bhFliúit to teach the Connemara Hornpipe from a recording. As this was intended to build confidence in learning by ear, the recording I chose was Tomnahurich, a much slower tune.

The process is is a simple idea based on very natural processes:

  • Listen to the recording a few times
  • Begin to move, tap feet etc to the tune
  • Lilt the tune, singing along. Before even picking up the flute, this internalises:
    • Rhythm
    • Melody
    • Breathing
    • Phrasing
    • Dynamics
    • “Memory hooks”, for want of a better expression: basically, a social and sensory association of place, time and people that helps anchor the tune when learning it and when recalling it. When I play this tune now, I will have associations not just of the title (and those associations) but also of the original recording, where I heard it, where I learned it and who with, what the day was like, the bright sunlight coming though the white room skylight on a rare warm May afternoon on a long weekend. When thinking of how to play this tune in future, these associations will be there and may help to jog my memory and even inform my performance.

So, preparing ourselves with the tune through familiarisation before even picking up the instrument laid a foundation for our learning. By the time we came to play, we were already inside the tune in a sense. What we were trying to do is match our fingers to our ears and the existing sense of the tune, joining up the processes.

We paused along the way to reflect on how the melody fits into the bagpipe scale and range of A Mixolydian (underlying chord shape here of A-E, no C or C#) and shifts to G shapes (underlying chord shape of G-B-D). Other considerations were, what phrases repeat, where and how do changes occur?

When training the ear in this way, songs are a natural reservoir to turn to – the melody remains mostly constant, but phrasing and dynamics can shift to emphasise meaning. Be aware that many songs can be in other keys, which is where Bb, C and Eb whistles become handy. Learn the fingering on the whistles and then transfer this to the D whistle or flute. This transposes the tune to a friendlier key and you don’t have to think about theory to do so.

Tomnahurich Resources

I have recorded Tomnahurich and the notation is up on the Resources page.

Create time and space for your music

I’m still digesting my time at Cruinniú na bhFliúit with lots of great new tunes and ideas. However at the workshop I also shared some of Paul McGrattan‘s advice on practising an instrument, creating time and space, setting achievable goals, focus, structure, exercises and routines. Lots to think about.

Session etiquette

June will see an end of term session at The Dalriada Bar, basically a slow session for flute and whistle, based upon, but not limited to, the repertoire covered by FluteFling. It will be suitable for beginners and more experienced players alike. Bringing sheet music along is fine, your friends too of course. It’s free, but if you sign up, I can get an idea of numbers.

As it happens, we ended the afternoon with various discussions, including confidence and session etiquette. That’s a whole topic in itself. Nigel Gatherer has some good advice:

In general, the watchwords are courtesy, consideration, sensitivity and patience.

There are other lengthy accounts on the web, but two types of session cropped up. One is organic, much more like a musical conversation and perhaps akin to traditional house ceilidhs or kitchen sessions. This is what I am most used to and understand. Working out what is happening can be tricky to newcomers, but the rules of normal social interaction will stand you in good stead (see those watchwords above). There are quite probably session leaders or a core of regulars and friends, their own core repertoire, stops for conversation and so on.

It isn’t a performance, it’s a social and cultural gathering. Just as in life, some are friendlier and more welcoming than others and you need to be read the situation and signs.

The other type of session is more structured and maybe even quite formal. Here there will a recognised leader and organiser and there will be turn-taking to ensure a sense of fairness when it comes to starting tunes or songs. Beyond this, my experience fails me. I can only add that these seem to lie somewhere between a session as described above and a folk club. In addition, I might add that possibly may tend to be in settings that call on a small pool of musicians and that this structured approach might be seen to be supportive of those musicians.

The Dalriada session in June will definitely be sociable and also supportive!

A Big Thank You and Summer Workshops

Success for 5th FluteFling Edinburgh Weekend

First of all, a Big Thank You to everyone who was involved or attended the Edinburgh Weekend a couple of weeks ago. This was our biggest event yet and we were very close to being sold out.

Regulars Sharon Creasey and Kenny Hadden (basking in his new-found honour) provided our core continuity, with Niall Kenny as guest tutor and Claire Mann as guest speaker bringing in their own takes on the music and instruments. Feedback has been very positive and there was a real buzz about the place all day and into the evening.

FluteFling Edinburgh under way!

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A special thanks to the City of Edinburgh Methodist Church for hosting our event again – it really is a lovely venue with great acoustics. A big thumbs up to the Boda Bar on Leith Walk for hosting Friday night with such enthusiasm and to the Mercat Bar on West Maitland Street for sympathetically and efficiently sorting us out for Saturday. Very different venues to each other, but both highly recommended. Anyone looking to put something on should consider them as potential venues.

And of course Sandy Bells looked after us well on the Sunday lunchtime as always. One or two of us also made it to the Waverly Bar afterwards, where a great session was also to be had. A pantomime Booooo! however, to the session venue that let us down badly at very short notice (see the archive). I will try and do a more comprehensive round-up very soon, but I am now in the throes of report writing for school.

Summer workshops

After the April break, May and June workshops return this month. These will be the first since returning from Cruinniú na bhFliúit (Flutemeet) in Ballyvourney, County Cork and also since the FluteFling Edinburgh Weekend, of course, so I hope to share some ideas that I picked up over that period. NB Dates now corrected below – thanks to David Flett for pointing out the error.

  • Saturday 19 May 1-4 pm | Back at Tribe Porty, this will be suitable for everyone as I intend to focus on slowing things down, getting into the tunes further and helping with playing by ear. Tickets now on sale.
  • Saturday 16 June 1-4 pm | This will be a more sociable event and include a slow session that will utilise the FluteFling back catalogue. Venue and tickets tbc.

There will be a summer break over July and August, but there will definitely be further events from September, which will be announced just as soon as they become finalised.

FluteFling Edinburgh 2018 weekend details

FluteFling Edinburgh flute and whistle weekend

More details of the weekend. For the lineup and background, see the event page.

URGENT UPDATE: change of session venues

Unfortunately, for reasons outwith our control we have had to change session venue for Friday and Saturday at very short notice and have had to make alternative arrangements. Other parts of the weekend are unaffected.
Both bars are on main bus routes and the Mercat is within walking distance of Haymarket Station and tram stops
Friday night session from 7.30pm until late
Boda Bar
229 Leith Walk
Edinburgh, EH6 8NY
A very small bar, with some space reserved for us at the back, round the corner.
Saturday night session 8pm until late

Mercat Bar and Kitchen
28 West Maitland Street, Edinburgh EH12 5DX
Tel: 0131 225 8716
https://mercatbar.co.uk/

We have a room booked downstairs.

Both web sites have maps and they should be straightforward to find, although they both have small shop fronts. Boda Bar is on a corner and Mercat Bar is near a corner. Parking is easier around Boda Bar, but it is possible to park not too far away from the Mercat.

Friday | 20.04.18

Meet and greet Session

A very small bar, with some space reserved for us at the back, round the corner.

Saturday | 21.04.18

Saturday schedule

  • Workshops
    • 09.00: Registration and coffee. Numbers will be divided into three and each group will have time with each tutor over the course of the day.
    • 09.30: Session 1
    • 11.00: break
    • 11:15: Session 2
    • 12.45: break
    • 13.30: Session 3
    • 15:00: break
    • 15:15: Session 4: everyone; special guest speaker Claire Mann in conversation
    • 16:30: end
  • 17:30-19.00 approx FluteFling Curry at Red Fort: reserve your place when you buy your workshop ticket
  • Saturday evening 20:00-midnight: free session at
  • Mercat Bar and Kitchen
    28 West Maitland Street, Edinburgh EH12 5DX
    Tel: 0131 225 8716
    https://mercatbar.co.uk/

Sunday

  • Farewell session at Sandy Bell’s 12.30-15.30. Free. All welcome.
  • Last leg session: Not part of the weekend, but anyone with any stamina left is welcome to  join the Waverley Bar session 15.00-18.00

Tunes, lyrics, Hogg and Burns: a late January update

The January workshop couldn’t have taken place without a nod to Robert Burns and it turned out that much of the music we covered had lyrics or associations with words.

Gordon demonstrates how to engage the diaphragm while playing the flute. Photo (c) Oonagh O’Brien

We also tried out some different flutes and whistles and explored learning to use the diaphragm.

When playing while lying down, the diaphragm has to be engaged. The sensation is then recreated when resuming a vertical position in order to better support the breath.

Other technique covered included rolls, cuts and strikes and longer phrasing.

Leaving Lismore

We began with Leaving Lismore as a slower piece to warm up. A retreat march in D by Mrs. Martin Hardie (of which nothing seems to be known), there is a harmony for fiddle by Christine Martin from Breakish, Isle of Skye that I have adapted for flutes and whistle. There are some good opportunities for simple decoration and space to concentrate on tone and breath support.

Once we had the slow waltz feel down, we tried introducing the harmonies to good effect, with the whistles adding to the range of sound. While I have taught this tune before, it was new to the group and is one of a few pieces that might be suitable for working on as an ensemble.

Kye Comes Hame

A strathspey I have never heard others play but is undoubtedly related to When the Kye Comes Hame, a song written with James Hogg (“The Ettrick Shepherd”) and first published in 1822 in his novel The Three Perils of Man. There’s a good historical overview of the song at the National Library of Scotland web site which suggests that the tune may have already been well known.

I learned my version many years ago via Kerr’s Merrie Melodies and I think it was the lyricism of the tune that appealed to me at the time, although I was unaware of the song at that point. Being aware of the lyrics can often help with phrasing and is often recommended for slow airs that derive from songs. However, without the words, the opportunity opens to emphasise the rhythm and bounce of the tune.

In D, this tune goes well with Leaving Lismore.

Here are the Tannahill Weavers with their version of the song:

Green Grow the Rashes

Green Grow the Rashes O is a poem of 1787 by Robert Burns with a very long and detailed history. Some information here from the Scottish Country Dancing perspective and also some lyrics analysis from this website, which says there were three other pre-existing versions that Burns took as inspiration.

However the Traditional Tune Archive has more on the melody that can be traced back to 17th Century lute collections and became known in a different format as Grant’s Rant. As the Grants were traditionally in the Rothiemurcus area, this might suggest it is from the heart of strathspey country.

I had thought that the version we learned is based on one from Donegal, but listening back to my sources which have some of the Scotch snaps shaved off, I think that other influences may have overridden it. Our version is more like a Highland or west coast strathspey, in its bounce and punch and certainly not at all like Dougie McLean’s wistful version of the song, which shows how versatile a melody it is.

Our version is in G and sits on flutes and whistles nicely, with opportunities for typically Scottish short rolls on the G in particular. This tune goes well after Kye Comes Hame.

Flutes at this afternoon’s workshop. @tribeporty

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Och Is Duine Truagh Mi

While looking through some teaching material that Rebecca Knorr gave to me a few years ago, I came across the west coast pipe reel/ port a beul Och Is Duine Truagh Mi (Alas I am a forlorn man). It’s a lovely tune that was recorded by the influential Ossian a good few years back, with Iain McDonald on pipes, flute and whistles.

Rebecca’s version is in G to sit on the whistle more readily, which is how we did it, but I also provided music and a recording of it in A, which is how it would normally be played. The version in G features long G rolls and follows nicely out of Green Grow the Rashes, keeping the key but changing the rhythm.

It’s a really useful skill to know a tune in more than one key, particularly if you know it well. It’s like seeing someone in different clothes in that it brings out different parts of the personality. However, it also builds up technical skills in terms of fingering and anticipation. Neither the A version nor the G version are particularly difficult on flute or whistle, but if you try it out you will have to think of different fingering and phrasing transitions which is useful.

Niall Kenny on The Session says he got this from Allan McDonald (Iain’s brother, who with Dr Angus McDonald make up the three piping brothers of Glenuig ) and that it may originally hail from Scalpay.

There are some lyrics to the reel and I have found a couple of intriguing versions, one with pipe variations. This first one has a slightly different title, but features whistles as well as pipes played by Seoanaidh MacIntyre with Ross B. Wilson on keyboards. There are two variations on each part, effectively making it a six part tune. The video includes the sheet music:

The second version is by fiddle and harp duo Jenna Moynihan & Mairi Chaimbeul:

Dhomhnuill a Dhomhnuill

Dhomhnuill a Dhomhnuill is a piece of mouth music (port a beul) from the isle of Skye that I learned from Gaelic singer Michel Byrne. This was part of the repertoire for The Big Squeeze Ceilidh Band for many years when we both played in it together. We didn’t spend much time with it, but it would go well after Och Is Duine Truagh Mi in either key. I taught this reel a couple of years ago and at the time wrote about it here.

February workshop

The next workshop will take place on Saturday 24th February and will be taken by Sharon Creasey. It’s a rare chance to spend some time with Sharon, who plays Boehm system flute as well as whistle.