The FluteFling Collection: publication and launch

Cover design for The FluteFling Collection, featuring many hands holding flutes up in the air.We are delighted to be publishing a new book of traditional and original tunes from Scotland and Ireland. The FluteFling Collection contains 133 tunes from the 13 tutors and contributors to FluteFling weekends 2014-2021.

The FluteFling Collection is compiled and edited by Sharon Creasey (of Hidden Fermanagh success), with co-editors Kenny Hadden and Gordon Turnbull, and support from Dougie Pincock, Director of the School of Excellence in Traditional Music in Plockton.

The FluteFling Collection is a landmark publication in the revival of the flute in traditional music in Scotland, arguably the first of its kind for around 150 years. The collection features traditional and original music suitable for flute, whistle and low whistle, contributed by:

  • Sharon Creasey
  • John Gahagan
  • Munro Gauld
  • Kenny Hadden
  • Niall Kenny
  • Rebecca Knorr
  • Dougie Pincock
  • Davy Maguire (Ireland)
  • Claire Mann
  • Órlaith McAuliffe (Ireland)
  • Cathal McConnell (Ireland)
  • Tom Oakes
  • Gordon Turnbull

The FluteFling Collection proofing spread.

The FluteFling Collection will be available from mid July 2022 from www.flutefling.scot and in person.

This landmark tunebook is in A4 format, printed in black and white with a colour cover. Price: £18 plus P&P. The eBook in PDF format will retail for £10.

The book includes biographies and influences for each contributor, an introduction from Gordon Turnbull, an account of the Scottish traditional flute revival by Kenny Hadden and contributors’ condensed notes. An expanded version of the notes will be freely available in PDF format from the website.

All profits will go to fund future FluteFling projects and events.

‘It has been my pleasure and privilege to know some of the people involved in FluteFling for many years, from Kenny Hadden, Niall Kenny and Gordon Turnbull via our own Festival, Cruinniú na bhFliúit, to Cathal McConnell in Tommy Gunn’s kitchen in the early 1970s.

Flutefling’s dedication to the principle of ‘The Scottish Flute’, as independent but yet related to the Irish flute, is a strong indication of the healthy position of the flute in Scottish music and is due in no small part to FluteFling’s activities.

This collection is an important step in consolidating the work that has taken place in workshops over the years, and gives the flute world access to many previously unpublished and newly composed tunes’.

Hammy Hamilton, Cruinniú na bhFliúit, Ballyvourney, Co. Cork

Music in The FluteFling Collection is suitable for most instruments, but in particular flute and whistle players looking to expand and diversify their repertoire. Tune types include:

  • Reels
  • Jigs
  • Slip jigs
  • Strathspeys
  • Marches and quicksteps
  • Highlands and schottisches
  • Polkas and slides
  • Hornpipes and barndances
  • Waltzes and mazurkas
  • Airs and miscellaneous

The FluteFling Collection is part funded by the Tasgadh small grant for traditional arts.

Trad Music Forum logoFluteFling gratefully acknowledge Grant McFarlane of Fèis Phàislig and the Trad Music Forum’s Tradmentor scheme in encouraging and supporting the project in the early stages.

 

Launch at Stonehaven Folk Festival 9 July 2022

Logo for Stonehaven Folk Festival

The official launch of The FluteFling Collection will be at Stonehaven Folk Festival on Saturday 9 July. With a festival lineup that also includes Flook and Rura, it promises to be a great weekend for flutes and whistles. The FluteFling team will be there Friday-Sunday. Tickets for the event and for flute and whistle workshops can all be bought via the festival website. See the FluteFling home page for times and venues.

Sign up for the FluteFling newsletter to learn first about these and similar events. Look out for guest blog posts on the website, too.

From Hotteterre to Tannahill: a Scottish flute journey

Elizabeth Ford describes how she came to study the Scottish baroque flute

Elizabeth Ford performing at Edinburgh FluteFling 2017 (c) Gordon Turnbull

Elizabeth Ford is a flute player, academic and publisher who has been involved with FluteFling for a number of years, performing and speaking at some of our events. Her PhD on the early history of the flute in Scotland was published in book format in 2020 and you can read a review of it in this blog.

Here, Elizabeth describes how she became drawn to early Scottish flute repertoire and to study the history of the flute in Scotland.


My research into the history of the flute in Scotland started informally in 2003, as a Master’s student at the Peabody Conservatory. I was just then learning to play baroque flute and was surprised and somewhat demoralized by how challenging it was. My teacher had assigned a suite by Hotteterre, in a facsimile edition, in the original French violin clef.

I was writing my thesis on Hotteterre’s improvisation manual, L’Art de preluder, so this was good for me. But now and then, I needed something to remind me that I had actually been a pretty good flute player before I took up baroque flute, so I was combing the shelves of the library looking for 18th-century flute music that wasn’t depressingly challenging and that I wasn’t already familiar with. I happened upon Jeremy Barlow’s edition of James Oswald’s Airs for the Seasons. I knew my teacher wouldn’t approve because it was a modern edition, and Scottish; this music was outside the canon and we were not there to challenge the canon. Personally, I think the Peabody Conservatory is exactly the place to do so, but that’s a different topic.

I had always been interested in Scotland, but I didn’t know very much about it as a country or culture. The only recordings of Scottish music I could find at this time were by the Baltimore Consort, which happened to be my favorite band.

I kept my Scottish music tendencies to myself, yet after graduation I started to explore music from Scotland, especially for flute, in greater detail. I kept coming back to Oswald, and how delightful and satisfying his music was to play and to hear. I amassed a large collection of photocopies of music and performed this repertoire any chance I got. I didn’t get into the traditional/art music debate because having been trained in French 18th-century performance practice, I didn’t know what to do with the questions of national identity and ‘traditional’ as it related to music. I had been taught to think that playing by ear was somehow inferior to reading music…even though baroque music is and was largely improvised.

While a law student a few years later, I acquired Concerto Caledonia’s recording Colin’s Kisses: The Music of James Oswald. It was the most exciting, fun recording I’d ever heard. I had a new favorite band and was completely down the rabbit hole. I started reading as much as I could find in the West Virginia University library about Scottish music, and it wasn’t much. David Johnson, Henry Farmer, and that was it. What I kept coming back to was their assertion that the flute was unknown in Scotland prior to 1725. That really bothered me. One thing led to another, and I contacted John Butt and David McGuinness at the University of Glasgow, who said that this would be an excellent PhD topic.

This is the question from which all my research on the flute in Scotland sprang: how, if there was no flute in the country prior to 1725, was there so much flute music published so early in the century? If an instrument wasn’t known or wasn’t popular, it would presumably take a while before composers or music publishers started marketing for it. But, as I made my way through the secondary literature, I realized that this date of 1725 had never before been challenged.

To me, this was ludicrous. The one-keyed flute was developed in France sometime before 1692 (the first image is on the title page of Marin Marais’s Pieces en trio) by a member of the Hotteterre family. The addition of the key revolutionized music: a formerly one-piece non-chromatic instrument with a limited range became fully chromatic, in three pieces, and with wide range. The flute was very popular in France, and considering the long and well-established relationship between Scotland and France, it didn’t make sense to me that no flutes travelled back home with a visiting Scot. I wondered if music scholarship had become victim to that unfortunate ailment, the Scottish Cringe.

These questions guided me I as began my archival research. I quickly found evidence for the flute in Scotland prior to 1725 in the National Record Office. I know that this can sound like I’m saying previous scholars didn’t do their work properly, but that’s not my intention. My predecessors were not focused on the flute, lacked my background in flute history, and didn’t have any reason to question the date. I then began to challenge the historiography of Scottish music scholarship, and its reliance on antiquarian sources.

So, this is the long story of how and why I study the history of the flute in Scotland. My next task is to determine when it disappeared from Scottish music, as until recently most contemporary Scottish traditional flute players would assert that there is no historic evidence for the flute in Scotland and they must look to Ireland for culture, tradition, and repertoire. This is obviously incorrect, but it has been the prevailing assumption, and I want to know why that’s the case.

Here are some factoids on the flute in 18th-century Scotland:

  1. The earliest iconographical evidence for the flute dates to the 16th century
  2. The earliest mention of the German flute, or transverse flute, is 1702
  3. It was primarily played by gentlemen amateur musicians, although ladies and lower class men also played it
  4. Musical tastes were similar to those in the rest of Europe: there was a taste for Handel and Quantz
  5. The first music for flute published in Scotland by a Scottish composer was William McGibbon’s 1727 Sonatas for Two German flutes, or two violins, and a bass
  6. Many compositions were based on traditional tunes, but this is not unusual for the time
  7. Much so-called traditional music was newly composed and collected in the 18th century
  8. Flutes were made in Scotland in the first half of the century
  9. The idea of traditional music and art music isn’t relevant to music of the 18th century
  10. There is evidence of shared repertoire between flute players and pipers

Some of the major composers for flute are William McGibbon, Mr. Munro, James Oswald, John Reid, Daniel Dow, and Francesco Barsanti. Some known flute players include Susanna, Countess of Eglinton, John Reid, Alexander Bruce, the 3rd Duke of Gordon, and Robert Tannahill. Flutes were played in homes, concert halls, and taverns.

Here are some excellent recordings of this repertoire:

  • Captain Tobias Hume: A Scottish soldier, Concerto Caledonia
  • On the Banks of Helicon, The Baltimore Consort
  • Adew Dundee, The Baltimore Consort
  • Wind and Wire, Chris Norman and Byron Schenkman
  • She’s Sweetest When She’s Naked, Alison Melville
  • Colin’s Kisses: The music of James Oswald, Concerto Caledonia
  • Fiddler Tam: The music of Thomas Erskine, the 6th Earl of Kellie, Concerto Caledonia
  • Mungrel Stuff: Francesco Barsanti and others, Concerto Caledonia
  • The High Road to Kilkenny, Les Musiciens de Saint-Julien
  • [Ex]tradition, The Curious Bards
  • The Reel of Tulloch, Chatham Baroque
  • The Caledonian Flute, The Chris Norman Ensemble

Sometime in the 19th century, the flute seems to have disappeared from Scottish music: it stops being mentioned, it stops appearing on title pages, and there are notably fewer flute manuscripts. I’m interested in knowing why and how this happened, and this exploration of historiography and cultural history will (hopefully) be a future project.

More about the author:

Elizabeth Ford won the 2017 National Flute Association Graduate Research Award for her doctoral research on the flute in eighteenth-century Scotland. She was the 2018-2019 Daiches-Manning Memorial Fellow in 18th-century Scottish Studies, IASH, University of Edinburgh. Her complete edition of William McGibbon’s sonatas is published by A-R Editions, and her monograph, The Flute in Scotland from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century, is part of the Studies in the History and Culture of Scotland Series from Peter Lang Press.

In 2021 (hopefully!), Elizabeth will hold the Martha Goldsworthy Arnold Fellowship at the Riemenschneider Bach Institute, the Abi Rosenthal Visiting Fellowship in Music at the Bodleian Libraries, and the American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies-Burney Centre Fellowship at McGill University for research related to James Oswald, Charles Burney, and John Reid. She is co-founder of Blackwater Press.

(c) Elizabeth Ford 2022

Remembering Boxwood Aberdeen

Scottish Flute Weekend 16-18 Nov 2001: Twenty Years of Scottish Traditional Flute

Malcolm Reavell in Ma Cameron’s snug, Aberdeen. (c) Gordon Turnbull

November 2021 marked twenty years since Boxwood Aberdeen took place, a weekend that sowed the seeds for FluteFling and inspired many others to further explore the flute in Scottish traditional music contexts.

Organised by Malcolm Reavell for Scottish Culture and Traditions, here he describes the background to the event, which was possibly the largest such gathering in Scotland.


Publicity for Skyedance performing and teaching in Banchory

Publicity for Skyedance performing and teaching in Banchory

In 1997, representing Scottish Culture & Traditions organisation (SC&T) I contacted Duncan Hendry who was at the time managing the Aberdeen Alternative Festival (now at the Edinburgh Festival Theatre) to see if he would help us arrange to get Alasdair Fraser’s band Skyedance to run a day of workshops for traditional musicians. The lineup at that time was Alasdair on fiddle, Eric Rigler on pipes, Peter Maund on percussion, Paul Machlis on piano, and as American/ Canadian flute player Chris Norman had joined the band, we could have flute a workshop as well.

The workshop was held on a snowy January day in Banchory Academy. Chris Norman had previously held workshops at Celtic Connections in Glasgow, attended by just a couple of people, so when he walked into the room, he was pleasantly surprised to be confronted by about a dozen flute players.

Flute players in Banchory

Flute players in Banchory. Chris Norman is front row, in white. Malcolm Reavell to the right of him.

Chris advertised the Boxwood week he ran, and so that was where I went for my holidays the next two years – Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. It was an inspiring event, and I really wanted to do something like this in Scotland, and I got the chance in 2001. Chris got in touch about coming over to Scotland, I jumped at the chance to try and organise something.

I thought it would be good to try out the format Chris used for Boxwood with three tutors covering different styles and traditions. As well as Chris I invited Eddie McGuire whose reputation as composer as well as flute player appealed to classical flute players, and from Limerick, Niall Keegan, who was pushing the boundaries of traditional Irish flute playing.

Flyer for the Boxwood Aberdeen Weekend

Flyer for the Boxwood Aberdeen Weekend

It was going to cost a bit of money to put on the event. We could not run it for a whole week as Chris did in Lunenburg, but a weekend seemed achievable.

At this time I was still working shifts as an aircraft engineer, so I had days off during the week which I could devote to SC&T (in fact SC&T took up most of my spare time anyway).

I investigated Scottish Arts Council funding and luckily Dave Francis pointed me in the direction of a new funding stream for which few people had applied.

I submitted the grant application and budgeted for about half of the amount I put in the application (that’s kind of normal for such applications). The Scottish Arts Council approved the whole amount. This was not supposed to happen! I had to then revise the programme and remove all the cost saving I had incorporated to use up all the money we were getting (you can’t give it back – you must spend it!).

So… venues for workshops, evening concerts, sessions, accommodation for artists, publicity, leaflets, press releases, flyers, catering,… the machine was set in motion. It wasn’t all plain sailing, I had several weeks, and a few frantic days, sorting out last minute international work permits with the UK Home Office.

Organising it under the SC&T banner gave us access to volunteer resources of the SC&T committee and helpers. The Elphinstone Institute under the auspices of Dr Ian Russell became involved, and Ian gave a talk on the flute bands of NE Scotland. (a photograph of one of the flute bands was used by Chris on his album cover for The Caledonian Flute).

Kenny Hadden helped put out the word to all the flute players we could find in Scotland, and by some magic, we managed to attract participants from the south of England, and one lady (who I had met at Chris’s Boxwood event in Lunenburg) that decided to come all the way from Wisconsin in the US.

The workshops took place in the Aberdeen Foyer. We had an evening concert in Cowdray Hall, and one in the Lemon Tree, and Friday night session in The Globe.

(Left to Right) Chris Norman, Robin Bullock, Niall Keegan, Malcolm Reavell, Dr Ian Russell, Eddie Maguire

The weekend was the first time this number of traditional flute players had gathered in Scotland and acted as inspiration to continue from there. A young Calum Stewart was even in the audience, (although he told me recently, at the time, he didn’t play much flute).

Niall Keegan, Chris Norman and Eddie Maguire performing

I can’t remember how many participants we had at the weekend, (data protection means I no longer have access to enrolment details), but I seem to have the number 45 in my head.

As for names… well, have fun looking through some of these pictures and try putting names to faces, and a video of the weekend was made by Dr Ian Russell and we hope to make some of it available in the future.

Eddie Maguire and the Whistlebinkies with the participants. Notice the animated music stand. (c) Malcolm Reavell

Aberdeen Press and Journal. Some weel kent faces here: Rebecca Knorr (left) and a young Mhairi Hall centre left, Ann Ward just behind them, a young Calum Stewart (partly hidden behind Mhairi), Munro Gauld and Gordon Turnbull (back right). The lady in the Fairisle pattern sweater is Ann Huntoon from Wisconsin. Apologies for not being able to recall other names at present.

Aberdeen City Evening Express a few days later: Kenny Hadden, Rebecca Knorr and Ann Ward front and centre.

A workshop with Chris Norman. Pete Saunders back, right.

Some more faces to spot, this time with Eddie Maguire.

Chris Norman in a workshop

Niall Keegan with a group

The participants at the end of a full day animated and ready to listen to the three tutors.

(c) Malcolm Reavell 2021

FluteFling Online with Tom Oakes

FluteFling Online with Tom Oakes 22-24 April 2021

A laptop with the screen showing Tom Oakes playing the flute

In April 2021 the second FluteFling Online event took place, with a weekend curated by Tom Oakes featuring an online concert, workshops and a masterclass. Finally, I have managed to complete writing it up.

Following the success of the first FluteFling online workshops with Clare Mann in December 2020, the team were keen to try to mark the Edinburgh weekend that was cancelled at the beginning of the pandemic in April 2020. Tom Oakes had been due to perform that weekend, so it was natural to approach him. 

After exploring a few options together the outcome was a core series of four workshops over two days, with an additional multi-location concert on the Friday night. The weekend finished with a masterclass from Tom on using the keys on keyed flutes for traditional music, an aspect of the music performance which is often overlooked. Delivered via Zoom, the main workshops were recorded to allow access across different time zones, a popular decision that we carried over from our previous event. 

Despite the beginning of the easing of some lockdown restrictions, cumulative screen fatigue, better weather and improving daylight hours, numbers were very healthy. 35 people attended the evening concert, 38 attended the workshops and 21 attended the masterclass. This still compared favourably with previous in-person events and has encouraged FluteFling organisers to consider including online access in the future, regardless of circumstances.


Friday night concert

The Friday concert was informal and international, featuring Tom Oakes (Edinburgh) who had invited Aoife Granville (County Kerry, Ireland), Philippe Barnes (London) and Kirsi Olja (Finland) on a variety of flutes, whistles and recorders. The musicians played solo from their homes but there was engaging crossover chat and conversation about music, instruments and traditions, ending in questions from the global online audience. 

Technology didn’t let us down and the audience at home enjoyed a journey with flutes across Europe. Aoife Granville’s music from Kerry included punchy and spirited traditional fife tunes that resonated with Scottish traditions. Her performance also referenced her project that celebrates the pioneering contributions of women to Irish traditional flute music. You can watch a video on that topic on YouTube. 

The Boehm system flute is becoming better understood in traditional music and Philippe Barnes showcased a fine range of driving tunes and slower pieces with tone and colour more associated with wooden flutes. He also played a simple system wooden flute and introduced us to a richly sonorous Boehm alto. Philippe is a multi-instrumentalist who also plays the uillean pipes, his fingered articulation carries over from them effortlessly. A personal highlight was a slow air that I failed to make a note of, so I’ll have to try and catch him again.

The music of Finland is not necessarily well-known in Scotland and Kirsi Olja introduced us to traditional airs and dance music on recorders and end-blown flutes that invite us all to learn more. However, her improvisational singing while playing primitive fipple flutes with bark intact was as elemental and arresting as it was unexpected.


Weekend workshops and masterclass

The workshop formats of Saturday and Sunday morning and afternoon sessions worked to allow everyone screen breaks and keep things fresh. From his studio in a 17th Century building in Leith, the old port for Edinburgh, Tom took us through a wide range of tunes for all tastes. These included The Keilder Schottische and Matt Seattle’s The Four Winds — Borders tunes from his time living in Newcastle, while the pipes jig The Snuff Wife and Hamish the Carpenter from Cape Breton reflected more his time in Edinburgh and Glasgow sessions. The vibrant contemporary folk scene in Scotland often features more modern tunes that play on traditional themes and Tom also treated us to one of his own compositions.

As if that wasn’t enough, the weekend finished with a Masterclass from Tom. Initially focusing on the use of keys on keyed flutes in traditional music, he also covered tuning, embouchure and ergonomics, tone, flute design and the differences between historical flutes and contemporary models used in traditional music.

With so much covered, there was something for everyone to take away and explore. Thanks again to Tom for taking it on and keeping the energy levels going. Thanks too to Pete Saunders who manned the decks admirably and kept the technology running smoothly. Not to forget the FluteFling team who worked in the background and were on hand to assist when called upon.

It has taken me a while to get around to writing this up, but Tom has been working hard. He has a new album coming out as I write. By popular demand his solo flute outing, entitled Water Street, is available for pre-order. See his website for more details: https://www.tomoakesmusic.com

Update: Tom’s album has launched and can be ordered or downloaded from Bandcamp.

Scotching a musical myth

The Flute in Scotland from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century,
Elizabeth C Ford; published by Peter Lang (2020)

Review by Gordon Turnbull


Until very recently in Scotland, when we thought of the flute in traditional music, we tended to immediately think of Irish musicians. This is beginning to change, but the truth is that the flute has been undergoing a revival in Scotland for less than 50 years, with most of the activity being since 2000.

Many of us, myself included, were drawn to the instrument largely through exposure to the flute in Irish traditional music, where it is long established. By studying these examples and applying what we have learned to Scottish traditional music through trial and error, it has been possible to begin to piece together something that might be understood as a Scottish flute. This was the origin of the FluteFling weekends — an attempt to understand and share as part of an ongoing process of revival.

But an ongoing mystery for many traditional flute players in Scotland who are part of the current revival is: to what extent was the instrument previously played? There have been hints in publications of repertoire found in many public archives, but they have been buried away. As Kenny Hadden noted, there must have been a market for flute arrangements of Scottish music in the past.


Discovering the origins

Just before the second FluteFling Scottish Flute Day in Edinburgh in 2015, Elizabeth Ford approached the organisers. A PhD student at the time, she was studying the early history of the flute in Scotland and gave a talk and performance for attendees, opening up a new world for many of us. Elizabeth returned the following year to participate in a notable concert and has remained in touch.

Following the completion of her landmark PhD, it has been published by Peter Lang as The Flute in Scotland from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century.

Dr. Elizabeth Ford giving a talk on flutes

Dr. Elizabeth Ford giving a talk on flutes

It has to be said that Elizabeth Ford’s book is a welcome publication in the history of Scottish music and is a must-have for any serious student of the flute in Scotland. This is a well-researched fascinating read, full of engaging detail, fascinating diversions and leavened with disarming wit; dry it is not.

Importantly, Dr. Ford firmly dispels the long held myth that the flute was introduced to Scotland in 1725 and reveals instead that it was present in the 16th century and was part of a rich musical flourishing in Scotland throughout the 18th century and into the 1800s. Through detailed research, she examines and scotches many established assertions to piece together a rich and colourful picture of the Scottish flute world. What emerges is that the flute was confidently part of the contemporary musical landscape. A quote from Tobias Smollett of 1771 sets the scene: “The Scots are all musicians — Every man you meet plays on the flute, the violin, or the violoncello…”

Covering amateur and professional musicians of the period, evidence for women playing, composers and repertoire, traditional musicians, teachers and instrument makers, Elizabeth Ford delves deep into the archives to demonstrate that the flute was prevalent in the Lowlands, from Aberdeen to Glasgow, Edinburgh, the Lothians and Galloway. As yet, no direct evidence for the flute in the Gaelic archives has been uncovered, but it is to be hoped that the tantalising hints may be pursued in the future.

Gordon Turnbull holding an ivory flute.

Gordon holds an ivory and silver flute claimed to have been once owned by Bonnie Prince Charlie. At an Edinburgh auction room 2015 (c) Gordon Turnbull

Much like elsewhere in Europe, the flute was largely a symbol of gentrification and grew in popularity alongside that of other instruments in tandem with the increasing wealth of the landed classes. Scotland underwent a period of rapid urbanisation, from 1750-1850 in particular, as Lowland farming was “Improved”, resulting in the displacement of many who had formerly worked the land.

Some of these displaced people went to work in towns and cities, while the wealth of landowners increased and merchants prospered with transatlantic trade such as sugar, tobacco and slaves. The Scottish Enlightenment, the Jacobite uprisings of 1715 and 1745 and the start of the notorious Highland Clearances also occurred during this turbulent period of rapid change in Scotland.

For more on this, the early chapters of Tom Devine’s The Scottish Nation: A Modern History perfectly complement Elizabeth Ford’s book.

Against these many changing strands of Scottish society, we learn from Dr. Ford’s book that the establishment of Musical Societies took place in Aberdeen and Edinburgh. Associated professionals were engaged to teach various instruments, including flute, and organise performances. The flute was also featured in Glasgow where the music teachers organised performances in the absence of a local society.

The Flute in Scotland from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century digs deeply into the archives and shines the light on many personalities and characters, from letters requesting new flutes to be purchased from London to a love message secreted into an instrument gifted to a female flute player. (And yes, women most certainly played the flute).


Flute players, composers, arrangers, teachers and makers

Dr. Ford offers us portraits of different amateur and professional musicians of the period, looks at the flute elements of the work of composers and arrangers, not just bigger names such as William McGibbon and James Oswald, but also Daniel Dow and the Italian influence of Barsanti and Urbani, who worked and resided in Edinburgh. Combined with private manuscript collections of flute players, a broad sweep of Scottish flute playing society is captured. The repertoire ranges from traditional music to newly composed sonatas in an Italian style, suggesting a healthy amateur scene and a wide range of ability.

William Nicholson’s flute (c) The Future Museum, Southwest Scotland.

Flutes have always been expensive instruments and require some care, but it wasn’t just those with money and aspirations who played the flute. Information is scant, but much can be inferred. Lower class examples such as weaver poet Robert Tannahill (Paisley) and pedlar poet William Nicholson (Kirkudbright) suggest that there may have been another traditional and undocumented scene. I think that many of us can recognise this musical scene painted by Tannahill:

There is Rab, frae the south, with his fiddle and his flute;
I could sit list tae his strains still the starns fa out.
An we’re noddin, nid nid noddin,
We’re a noddin fu at e’en
— Robert Tannahill, The Five Frien’s

It is in this context that the music of Scotland began to be collected, organised and published, with the patronage of the landed classes, professionals, middle and merchant classes. The Flute in Scotland from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century describes the music societies of Edinburgh and Aberdeen, and the teachers of Glasgow who organised concerts, where flutes featured naturally alongside violin and harpsichord.

Dr Ford also provides us with a tantalising glimpse of flute makers active in Scotland: James Lily (no surviving flutes but active 1708), Urquhart (his one surviving example is the earliest Scottish flute and can be seen here, probably first name Alexander and active as a maker and writer 1726; he was the first translator of Hotteterre into English), John Mitchell Rose (of Rudall and Rose fame), Thomas McBean Glen (no examples, but listed as a maker of bagpipes and flutes 1833).

John Gunn was one of many new names to me and to my mind should be more widely celebrated as an influential teacher and author of flute theory books. The first to attempt a scientific description of tone production and method while discussing style and expression, he bridges the worlds between single keyed and 8-keyed instruments and surely stands alongside Hotteterre and Quantz in his contribution to the instrument. From a traditional musician’s point of view the discussion of the changes in ornament styles is of particular interest.

Once exposed, all of this activity reveals a compelling argument for the flute being rightfully part of Scottish musical heritage. The reason it has been long forgotten while other instruments and repertoires have been celebrated in Scotland remains an unanswered question. A crux seems to be the formulation of cultural symbols for Scotland in the 19th Century. Dr. Ford ponders on the associations of “German” flute (as the transverse flute was known) with the Hanovarians at a time when Jacobitism was being safely romanticised. That is an area for further study, but The Flute in Scotland from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century lays a welcome firm foundation for future investigations.

The Flute in Scotland from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century by Elizabeth Ford, published by Peter Lang (2020) https://www.peterlang.com/view/title/69223