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.

January Edinburgh workshop: The Rose in the Gap

We began the January workshop with a simple warm-up piece, a Gavotte Ton Double from Brittany and had fun taking turns in playing call and response with drones in a Breton-influenced manner with various high and low pitched whistles and flutes in D and a sonorous A flute. I have taught this previously and wrote about it here.

This led to a discussion and interest on playing parts against each other which led to Laridé de Portobello, a 9-part extended arrangement of mine of a 2-part traditional Breton tune. This page has some discussion and a version of it played by a FluteFling ensemble a few years back (via the Soundcloud widget). If you scroll down this page there is a bit more written about it, with some suggestions on how to play it, along with another recording of a performance. I haven’t yet recorded the parts separately for people to learn, so that’s one for the future.


Our main tune was an Irish march, The Rose in the Gap. I was surprised to learn that The Rose in The Gap is not widely known. I have heard it in Edinburgh sessions played by Dublin singer, whistler and fiddler Saidhbhin Bhreatnach. As I recall, she plays the version by Dónal O’Connor (fiddle) and John McSherry (uilleann pipes, whistles) on their Tripswitch CD:

If you haven’t heard this before, by the way, it is highly recommended, with some very fine arrangements and a stripped-down sound. Listen and more at John McSherry’s website.

Dónal is the son of Dundalk fiddler Gerry O’Connor and singer/ fluter Eithne Ní Uallacháin, who performed as La Lúgh, and a 4-part version of The Rose in the Gap appears on their CD Senex Puer (confusingly as The Rose in the Garden, but see below) as well as their Brighid’s Kiss album.

They popularised many tunes and songs from the Louth area, which has an often overlooked gaeltacht, Oirialla (Oriel in English). You can hear their version on the well-produced Oriel Arts website which is a mine of information and is well worth an explore. We listened to both versions in the workshop but focused on the Tripswitch one. The La Lúgh one is a little closer to the original source.

The ever-reliable Tune Archive website throws up some interesting links and origins for the tune. The Rose in the Garden is a different tune that contains phrases to be found in The Rose in the Gap, hence the confusing renaming on the La Lúgh recording.

The Rose in the Garden seems to be better known as The White Cockade, which is also known by other Scottish titles and some northern English ones too. The White Cockade appears in late 18thC/ early 19thC Scottish collections as well as being part of fifing traditions, Cape Breton, Old Timey and Morris traditions too. For me the connection underlies the ties between neighbouring traditions and how a good tune will always travel.

Resources for the January workshop can be found on the new Resources page for this year.

The next FluteFling workshop in Edinburgh will take place 23 February.

Borve Castle: a highland pipes retreat

October’s FluteFling Edinburgh workshop continued to develop the skills of learning by ear, using the same approach as in May and September.

The tune we focused on was Borve Castle, a retreat march by Donald MacLeod that I first heard on The Cauld Wind recording by Chris Stout and Finlay MacDonald. It’s the opening tune in this set and there are other live versions by them on YouTube:

This recording is slightly faster than previous ones we have been learning from, which made it a little trickier. However, recognising an internal section within the tune that is repeated in both the A and B parts was helpful in unlocking the structure and building confidence.as we sang, moved and played our way to consolidating the tune.

There are two Borve Castles, one in Benbecula, the other in Sutherland, and it isn’t clear which of them the tune title refers to.

I have recorded a flute version of the tune and notated two settings — one with piping decoration from the PDF linked to below, the other with my own decoration from a flute/ whistle perspective. These can be found in the Resources section.

In trying to locate the sheet music for the tune, I came across some interesting sites. First of all, the Celtic Arts Foundation Winter School Music Book Vol V from 2017 has some very fine Highland pipes tunes in this PDF.

Over 7, 000 tunes can be found from the CeolSean website too, scanned from out of copyright tune books.

Donald Macleod’s tune collections can be bought in a number of places, including PipingPal.

Upcoming workshops

The next workshop will be part of the FluteFling Aberdeen Weekend, 17th November, where Dougie Pincock, Sharon Creasey and myself will be be teaching and there will be sessions and performances too. One not to be missed!

Sharon Creasey also has her next Glasgow workshop on 10th November in Partick. By all accounts this has been going very well.

The next Edinburgh workshop will be Saturday 15th December. Dates for 2019 will be announced before soon.