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 3: 6/8 Pipe March Set

Sharon Creasey and John Gahagan at a session in Aberdeen, November 2019 (c) Gordon Turnbull

FluteFling NE Tunebook Project: 03 PM Donald PM Donald MacLean of Lewis/ Bonawe Highlanders

This third video of the NE Scotland Session Tunes Project features 6/8 pipe marches for the Highland bagpipes.

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


6/8 Pipe March Set

This third video in the series features two Highland pipe marches from the FluteFling NE Tunebook of Scottish session tunes for flute and whistle. I play these on my Burke whistle in D.

These tunes are often mistakenly referred to as jigs due to being in 6/8 time, but they are marches and should be played at a regular, steady pace, not too brisk, but brisk enough to invite moving purposefully. These types of tune are also often played for particular ceilidh dances and that’s what I have in mind as I play them.

PM Donald Maclean of Lewis was written by Donald McLeod, a composer of many fine tunes for the Highland pipes. It’s a finely constructed four part tune where parts 2 and 4 are closely related to each other. G is natural in this tune, which helps it to fit nicely under the fingers. As in all of our sets so far, an octave jump features, this time A-a. On the whistle, you may find that tonguing the higher note will help to make it clearer.

PM refers to Pipe Major, which is a role in a pipe band and not to be confused with a military rank. There’s a celebration of Donald Maclean and Donald MacLeod at the Piping Press web site.

There is some dispute about the authorship of The Bonawe Highlanders, which was composed by David Bowman, but some sources give PM John MacColl. See this discussion on The Session and the links given to other discussions, and also the reference on The Traditional Tune Archive. In this case I am going with David Bowman, which is backed up by several other websites. As always, treat any information on the web with caution and compare with other sources. I can find no information about David Bowman unfortunately.

The tune itself is firmly in A but features G# in just one phrase that occurs in parts 2 and 4. Part 4 also has G naturals that contrast with the G#. In Part 3, paying attention to the construction of the repeated rhythmic, hypnotic phrase will help the syncopation pop out of the melody. The tune features a Scotch snap — a dotted phrase characteristic of Scottish traditional music (see Wikipedia to learn more). It’s a sure sign that you’re playing the tune too fast if it can’t be heard or played clearly.

Bonawe is on the shores of Loch Etive in Argyll and is the historic site of an early iron furnace.  In an Aberdeen session, I was the only person not playing this tune, so I’m glad to have finally learned it.

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 next week. In the meantime, enjoy the music!

Exploring the John Miller fife manuscript

John Crawford digs into the digital archives of the Scottish flute world

About the author: John Crawford is a long-standing supporter and co-organiser with FluteFling. John enjoys exploring the forgotten pre-revival Scottish flute manuscripts that reside in online libraries and collections, such as this Scottish fife player’s manuscript from 1799.


Update: John Crawford has written a follow-up to this post.

Early in lockdown, I found myself in the Village Music Project (VMP) website. Their primary interest is the traditional social dance music of England and I was intrigued by their Manuscript collection. They’ve transcribed some 45 manuscripts into ABC format with most also rendered as printable PDF documents.

The Village Music Project Manuscript List © Village Music Project

The people who wrote these manuscripts were generally educated and literate people with some available leisure time and a strong interest in music.

The VMP collection includes a manuscript book belonging to Grace Darling’s father and another by poet, John Clare. It’s said that John Clare used to stand in the bookshop, in Stamford, copying the latest tunes from published books into his manuscript book. No doubt, some musicians copied from books owned by better off friends and acquaintances.

The Scottish location of the John Miller MS, held in the AK Bell Library in Perth, as part of the Atholl Collection, made it the obvious first choice to explore in more depth. I was surprised and delighted when I opened the file and discovered the content was fife music. My first ever flute, nearly fifty three years ago, was a five key, rosewood Bb fife which my friends christened “Roxanne”.

John Crawford’s Bb, 4 key rosewood fife, “Roxanne” (c) John Crawford

The Village Music Project transcriptions and the related notes have provided the opportunity to take a trip back to 1799 into the world of a military fife player.

St Cecilia’s Boxwood C Fife, 1800 © 2021 University of Edinburgh.

John Miller’s fife would have been far simpler than “Roxanne”. It would have been made from a single piece of wood with six finger holes, an embouchure hole, brass ferrules at the ends and no keys.

St Cecilia’s Hall Concert Room and Music Museum, in Edinburgh, have a boxwood C fife, made around 1800, that is almost certainly similar to the instrument John Miller played. Their website provides more details of the instrument and a sound sample.

Flyleaf illustration from Thompson’s Compleat Tutor for the Fife – published in 1765 © NLS Inglis Collection.

Chris Partington’s introduction to the VMP material on the MS (see the extract below) provides a summary of the MS contents, some speculation about the man behind it and the context of his fife playing.

The insight we get into the world of a fife player 220 years ago tells us quite a lot about the music John Miller played but relatively little about the context of his playing or indeed the man himself.

 


The Manuscript

The John Miller MS is in the A.K.Bell Library, Perth, Scotland
This introduction by Chris Partington, village music project, 2002

DESCRIPTION

The John Miller MS is in the A.K.Bell Library, Perth, Scotland, accession number possibly 34685, which is inscribed on the fly-leaf. We have worked from a good photocopy. We do not at present have a context for how the MS comes to be in Perth, other than the obvious martial nature of it and the fact that Perth is I believe the home of the Black Watch.

Music manuscript book, 7.5″ wide, 3.75″ tall, apparently hard – bound. 4 pre-ruled staves per page.

Inscribed (repeatedly) prominently on the flyleaf and elsewhere “John Miller his book of tunes for the Fyfe” often along with dates from August 1799(most often) to 1801. Also postings in Ireland, “Strabane May 12th 1800”, “Stranorlar”, “Londonderry”. Ireland had been and still was in some considerable turmoil at this period……1798 rising, etc. Some of the tunes herein may still have some resonance today, particularly played by a fife & drum band, as it was intended by Mr. Miller.

There are 117 Musical items surviving, at least two pages are missing, the book is otherwise in good condition.

The handwriting is consistent through the book.

It would seem then that John Miller wrote the book, that he was a Fife player, rank unknown, probably in the Regimental Band, but I would not at this stage like to form an opinion as to which Regiment, even if Perth was the home of the Black Watch. Somebody with knowledge of Military History may be able to throw some light on this if they were so inclined.

THE MUSIC

    • 117 surviving musical items, some barely legible.
    • 26 common time marches (or serving as)
    • 11 6/8 marches (or serving as)
    • 8 jigs
    • 4 strathspeys
    • 12 reels
    • 14 English hornpipes, all well known
    • 16 airs
    • 1 slip jig
    • 25 sacred items, psalms

I would suspect that most of the non-martial and non-sacred tunes would be Lowland rather than Highland in nature. The most remarkable feature to us is the number of tunes marked as being for marches, but this would not be remarkable I suppose for a member of a Regimental fife band.


The Context

Understanding the context of the John Miller manuscript has required exploration of:

  • Other music collections including the Buttrey Manuscript and the Black Watch Fife Manuscripts in the NLS;
  • Sources on the history of the fife and its place in the music of Scottish regiments (including – Highland Soldier: A Social Study of the Highland Regiments, 1820-1920 by Diana M Henderson; Drum & Flute Duty 1887; Scots Duty – The Old Drum and Fife Calls of Scottish Regiments – Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research Vol. 24, No. 98 ) and
  • Sources on the Irish rebellion in 1798 (REBELLION, INVASION AND OCCUPATION: A MILITARY HISTORY OF IRELAND, 1793-1815 – Thesis by Wayne Stack, University of Canterbury 2008)

Each of these topics deserves to be the subject an article on its own right.

Military activities in Ireland 1798 (c) Wayne Stack, University of Canterbury 2008

Dates and locations given in the MS strongly indicate that Miller was in counties of Tyrone, Londonderry and Donegal during a tumultuous time in Irish history as part of some sort of military unit. The 1798 uprising had just happened. Massacre and atrocities were perpetrated by both government and rebel forces, each feeding on religious bigotry.

The French invasion in August the same year came too late to aid the rebel cause. Dublin Castle accepted the offer of English militia regiments to serve in Ireland, alongside the numerous English and Scottish fencibles units that remained in the country until their disbandment in 1802. In 1801 Britain reclaimed political control of Ireland through the Act of Union.

Recruiting card for the Caithness Highlanders 1799 (c) Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research

None of the locations cited in Miller’s MS, other than Londonderry, appears to have been the location of permanent barracks, associated with a specific regiment. Londonderry seems to have been the location of a Militia barracks. Evidence supporting the VMP suggestion that Miller might have been part of what was to become the Black Watch is very limited. There is no clear evidence that the 73rd (Perthshire) Regiment of Foot, or the 42nd Regiment of Foot, were in any of the locations mentioned by Miller on the dates indicated in his MS.

An alternative possibility is that Miller belonged to one of the Scottish fencibles regiments. These were raised as a defence force during 1793/ 94 due to the fear that the French would either invade Great Britain or Ireland, or, that radicals within Britain and Ireland would rebel against the established order.

A significant number of the Scottish fencibles served in Ireland including the Breadalbane Regiment (Embodied in Perth in 1793 – 3rdBn disbanded in Ayr in 1802) and the Angus –shire Regiment (disbanded in Perth in 1802). It’s interesting, and perhaps not entirely coincidental, that Miller’s MS has no postings or dates after 1801.

The possibility that Miller was part of an Ulster militia regiment seems to me less credible.

The Content

The Atholl Collection Catalogue (c) 1999 Perth and Kinross Libraries

The original copy of the MS, in the Atholl Collection, has not been digitised. It is of course, possible to visit the Bell Library in Perth to view the manuscript. Naively, I thought when the pandemic is over it’ll be relatively easy to go to Perth and see this at first hand. Here we are a year later still waiting.

The Collection, consisting of around 600 books and manuscripts of Scottish music, some from the seventeenth century, has been described as one of the most important collections of its kind in existence. In addition to the Miller manuscript the collection includes 50 other flute specific items making a visit to the Bell Library well worthwhile.

A catalogue was published in 1999 and is available from the library service at a cost of £4.95 plus postage. A card index to the tunes has been compiled by a volunteer and this is currently being transferred to an Access database. Contact the library if you are looking for a particular tune. info@culturepk.org.uk

There are two main options for accessing the manuscript online.  The first is via the Village Music Project website: The VMP manuscript list is at this link. The MILLER,John MS, 1799, is item 32 in the list. The following links will take you directly to an introduction to the manuscript and the tunes in ABC and standard music notation respectively.
INFO * ABC *  PDF

The second online access option is to use  Richard Robinson’s Tunebook . The following link will allow you to see the entire Miller MS in standard notation:
http://richardrobinson.tunebook.org.uk/documents/0/11/112.html

The links associated with each tune provide download options including ABC files, a printable PDF of the tune in standard notation and a MIDI file.

My own favourite tunes from the manuscript include:

  • JMP.019 – The Bonnet Makers of Dundee (Bremner’s  1757 collection)
  • JMP.026 – The Sussex Polka  (untitled polka from the 1796-1818 MS collection of William Aylmore)
  • JMP.015 – Quick March [aka  “Auld Reckie”, or “Hoble about”] (Aird – Selection of Scotch, English, Irish and Foreign Airs, vol. 3  1788) Note the dedication on the cover! “Humbly Dedicated to the Volunteer and Defensive Bands of Great Britain and Ireland
  • JMP.062 – West’s Hornpipe (Appears in Preston’s Twenty-Four Country Dances for the Year 1798. The tune also appears in the Buttrey fife manuscript. This tune is now a regular fife and Lambeg drum repertoire)

Cover of Volume 3 of Aird’s Collection published in 1878 (c) National Library of Scotland

Although this is only a small sample from the manuscript, it does support a view that Miller’s had a source that had access to contemporary music collections, like Aird’s, Bremner’s and  Preston’s  published in the late 1700s.

Another feature of the manuscript is the number of tunes (like West’s Hornpipe) that are now part of the Orange Order fife and drum tradition.

Cover of With Fife and Drum by Gary Hastings (c) Gary Hastings

Perhaps this isn’t surprising; in the late 1790s Orangeism quickly spread in the North of Ireland; by early 1797 as many as 30,000 Orangemen had enlisted in Ulster yeomanry corps. Miller, and his regiment, must have found himself in the middle of a society where Protestant/ Orange Order values were very influential.

Other tunes in the MS that currently feature in the music of Orange Flute bands include:

  • Boyne Water
  • Croppies Lie Down
  • Morning Stare (Star)

See Gary Hasting’s excellent book With Fife and Drum for more details.

In common with the contemporary Black Watch & Buttrey fife manuscripts, the Miller MS omits the duty tunes that would have regulated the soldier’s day (The Reveille, The General, to Arms, the Gathering, the March, the Retreat and the Tattoo). Presumably, as part of the fabric of regimental life, no written reference to these was required.

An 1819 political cartoon (c) Wikipedia.org

Only the Buttrey MS includes “The Rogue’s March”; arguably the most recognised melody in martial repertory of the era. Being “drummed out of the regiment” consisted of as many drummers and fifers as possible, playing the tune, parading the prisoner in front of the regiment. The offender’s coat would be turned inside out as a sign of disgrace. The final ignominy was a kick from the youngest drummer followed by ejection through the barrack’s gate with an order never to return.

Some of the available manuscript resources suggest that the musicians who played for marches and parades would be the same ones playing for social events and dances in the officer’s mess and the Sunday morning church parade and service. Other sources dispute this; making the point that the drums and fifes were part of the regiment. The fifers were generally boys. Some were the sons of soldiers who were brought up in the regiment, regarding it as their home. This is unlikely to apply to Miller if he was part of a short term fencibles regiment.

As the Buttrey MS confirms another recruitment path, for fifers, was via the poor house or, other comparable institutions. In contrast, the regimental bands were civilian professional musicians, in uniform, sponsored by the officers of the regiment. Ironically the band uniforms were often more exotic and elaborate than those of the drums and fifes.

Who was John Miller, what regiment was he part of, where, when and how was he recruited, where did he obtain the tunes in his MS book, why did the book have a four line stave, how did he obtain his skills in playing the fife and writing  music notation, who did he play music with and in what circumstances? The answer to these and a host of other questions may lie in a closer examination of the Atholl Collection or, may be lost to us forever. His music though is still with us thanks to his manuscript and deserves to be remembered and played providing an insight into our musical history.

Update: John Crawford has written a follow-up to this post.

An 18th Century British Army fife player practicing (c) militaryheritage.com (additional text by John Crawford)

Article (c) John Crawford 2021

December workshop: of Squirrels and Tatties

A few of us braved the icy conditions last Saturday to continue the journey of learning tunes aided by a process of internalisation. The Tribe Porty White Hall is far warmer than a couple of years ago, with new heating and insulation in place. And Malcolm brought some mince pies along, which were equally welcome!

A few blind tunes were prepared and all of them had noteworthy names: Hunt the Squirrel and The Droketty March were from the playing of Cran, an Irish band with an active interest in Scottish repertoire that also have flutes, whistles and pipes at their instrumental heart.

These proved to be popular, but everyone was also taken by the performance of Mike Vass and Mairearad Green of Tha ‘m Buntata Mor. So instead of working on a new tune and then repertoire, we learned Hunt the Squirrel and Tha ‘m Buntata Mor. Sheet music and recordings of all three tunes are in the Resources section.

Hunt the Squirrel has a rich history. The Sleeve notes for Cran’s Dally and Stray CD seem to be no longer available online, but a search around sees it associated with Dumfriesshire and Ayrshire.

Tune Archive suggests it is played in England, Scotland, Ireland and USA and first published in Playford’s English Dancing Master, 1689. There it is listed as A New Scotch Jigg, as Scottish music was fashionable in London at that time. It appears in Oswald’s Caledonian Companion in 1760.

Another, possibly later, name for it is The Geud Man of Ballangigh, which seems to be the name of the dance that accompanies it. This fascinating account reveals that The Geud Man was none other than James V in disguise going about his people in Stirling. Although whether that tale was collected by Scott or invented by him is open to question. The dance that accompanies Hunt the Squirrel can be found on YouTube.

Other references associate it with Ayrshire, Dumfriesshire and Kelso, which gives it a good Lowland spread.

Cran play Hunt the Squirrel in quite a stately and unhurried way, which leads nicely into the busier 3-part Drocketty March. The D and G notes sit strongly on flutes and whistles and are helpful for getting the ear into focus.

Tha ‘m Buntata Mor translates as The Potato is Large and appears to be a 9/8 port a beul, as sung by Julie Fowlis here:

Aside: Note that the port Julie Fowlis sings is more like what the Irish call a hop jig, characterised by an underlying long-short note pattern throughout. By comparison, Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh‘s following song An Bairille has a more standard slip jig sound featuring quavers grouped in three. Incidentally, if that second sounds familiar, it’s a version of The Rocky Road to Dublin. This set is one they recorded on dual, available as a download here. With fine singing, flutes and whistles and Éamon Doorley and Ross Martin accompanying, it’s one to look out for.

However the arrangement by Mike Vass and Mairearad Green, simply entitled Buntàta, is in the old 3/2 hornpipe time, illustrating the connection between 3/2 and 9/8 tunes. Indeed, their arrangement, as recorded on A Day a Month may have been influenced by that relationship.

In G and Em, the tune sticks closely to an arpeggiated melodic structure, so the rhythm becomes even more important. The close repetition of phrases and unusual time signature lends it a hypnotic and beguiling air that draws the listener in. As in some other 3/2 tunes such as Pawky Adam Glen, the underlying rhythm is a constant:

1-and-2-and-3-and | 1-and-2-and-3-and |

1-and-2-and-3-and | 1-and-2-and-3-and ||

The beat tends to fall most heavily on the 1 and 3, so requires a pulsing breath. 3/2 tunes tend to be punchy but this one can also take a moderate pace, so feel free to take it easy while learning it as you won’t lose its inherent identity.

At the workshop we had the three low whistles and two flutes getting into quite a groove with countless repeats and nuances merging that was pleasing to be part of. I wish I had recorded it at the time, but it inspired me to play for a bit longer than usual in my own reference recording of it.

This tune would go well in a set ahead of Pawky Adam Glen. Both are in 3/2 and the shift from G/Em to Bm/D is a striking one. Alternatively, going into a tune in 9/8 would also be effective.

The Droketty March is from Drogheda in County Louth. While we didn’t manage to cover this tune, I have also included it in the Resources.

Upcoming worshops

Edinburgh FluteFling workshops resume 26 January 2019. The FluteFling Scottish Flute Weekend for flutes and whistles will take place in Edinburgh 26-28 April. Sign up to the FluteFling Newsletter to hear news about events and tickets directly.