Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
by Tom Hanway
Introduction
In conceptualizing this article a story by melodic banjoist Bill Keith comes to mind:
In the early sixties, progressive banjoist Roger Sprung and New York City friends
from the Greenwich Village scene drove down to Marshall, North Carolina (near
Asheville) to a bluegrass gathering - where moonshine was even made available
behind a tree - to meet and jam with traditional players. A local singer was giving
his rendition of a song when he was interrupted by a New York City autoharp
player who had brought along his personal song book. "Stop! That verse doesn't
go there. Let me show you how it goes." He then read from his sacred printed
version of the song. The out-of-towner embarrassed his friends and the North
Carolinians by attempting to tell the latter group how to sing and play their local
music.
This incident made some distinct impressions on Bill about jamming etiquette: (1.)
There is no accounting for taste - good or bad. Playing in context is key. (2.) It is a
bad idea to interrupt the flow of the music; such things as chords, lyrics and
melody lines may differ from context to context. Unless such things are agreed
upon beforehand, one should not assume that one's version of a tune is the only
way to play it. (3.) It is unwise to correct one's hosts and mentors. When local
traditional customs are ignored, second-guessed or trampled, someone always
notices - but not always the transgressing innovator.
Part I: The "Authentic" Music of the Six Celtic Nations and the Celtic Diaspora
In Celtic music, those who make interesting use of variation (whether melismatic,
intervallic, rhythmic) and ornamentation (whether spontaneous or pre-planned) are
highly regarded. Creative interpretation, within implicit parameters, is the rule. A
potential pitfall of bluegrass, rock, or jazz-influenced accompanists would be to
exceed the boundaries of what is considered tasteful improvisation by any Celtic
standards. If the chords and rhythm become objects of whimsy, so might the
melodies, and tunes might be lost to "the changes." This has long been a
problem with "fiddle tunes" at bluegrass jams, where players must work
particularly hard to play the same melody - if they are to play it together - within
the mix of styles on various instruments.
The orally transmitted music of the Irish, Scots, Manx, Welsh, Breton and Cornish
peoples are not one in the same, just as their languages are not one in the same.
Each Celtic nation has its own language, culture and musical traditions - related
but not interchangeable. An old-time Cape Breton (Scottish) backer, a guitar
player, would tend to use a boom-chuck rhythm, similar to country, swing and jazz
guitarists, whereas many Irish backing guitarists would tend to use a syncopated
style and avoid altogether American country and swing rhythms, or use them very
sparingly. Accordingly, traditional musicians have often resented the ongoing
blurring of national, regional and local distinctions.
Terms like "Celtic music" and "world music" gloss over the important differences
between ethnic, cultural, regional and local styles. They tell us nothing about the
music in the Celtic diaspora, for example, in Shetland, Galicia, Prince Edward
Island and Cape Breton. All attempts to reduce Celtic music to the printed page
miss important and defining aspects of it. I have written elsewhere on the
definition of "Celtic music" and how the term has been confused with and used to
sell other forms of music. See http://www.celticleague.org and click on "Celtic
Music" Tom Hanway, "Perspective and Meaning in Celtic Music" (2001).
In Celtic music, instrumental compositions are simply called "tunes"; tunes are not
songs - songs have lyrics. Tunes are the instrumental dance and listening music of
the six Celtic nations, comprising two main language branches - the Gaelic (Irish,
Scottish, Manx) and the Brythonic (Welsh, Cornish, Breton). Gaelic tunes include
the air, the single, double and slip jig, march, rant, reel, clog, hornpipe, the slow
and dance strathspey, Highland fling, Kerry slide, set dances (Irish) and set-tunes
(Scottish/Cape Breton). Piobaireachd is piping music - played on the píob-mhór or
Great Highland bagpipe, considered by musicologists to be closest to the
classical harping and traditional music of the Gaelic world before its slow demise
from the 1500s through the 1700s. Most Celtic music can be played successfully
without any backing or accompaniment. Some Celtic music, e.g., Breton music,
typically involves the interplay (call and response) between two main instruments,
the binou (a little bagpipe) and the bombarde (an oboe-like instrument).
The Irish and Welsh have proud harping traditions, though Wales alone has an
unbroken tradition of harping, going back to the ancients. Ireland's Turlough
O'Carolan gave us Italian-Baroque-inspired harp tunes and planxties which are
now favorites of guitarists and even 5-string banjo players. There are sprightly
Cornish country dances and the laridenn and an dro from Brittany (Breizh) in
France. Breton tunes are very localized, with villages having their own tunes, and
the tradition is the most fragmented of the Celtic musics.
Continental dance tune forms are found even in Irish music, for example, the
mazurka, polka, and waltz. Shetland, Galicia, the Canadian Maritimes and other
parts of the Celtic diaspora also have flourishing Celtic tune traditions, variously
infused with musical elements from old Scandinavia (in Shetland and the
Orkneys), old Scotland and Acadia (in Prince Edward Island and Cape Breton
Island), and Ireland (in Galicia, Australia and America). Some of the older
breakdowns (or hoedowns) in old-time and bluegrass music derive from
centuries-old Irish, Scottish and Welsh reels and hornpipes.
Traditionally, piping tunes had no harmony save for droning, typically at a fifth, but
even at a fourth, third, or second if appropriate to the tune, whereby tonal centers
were reinforced. Fiddlers also used drones as harmony. Harpers from Ireland and
Wales undoubtedly played various types of harmony, but we cannot be sure what
they played without actual recordings or transcriptions; the O'Carolan
transcriptions hint at what Baroque-style harmonies could have been played, but
even these give us just the bare bones melodies (and not how he actually played
them). Musicians played solo, adding personal ornamentation, or in small groups,
with everyone playing in slightly heterophonic unison, each adding ornamentation
and fleshing out the melody.
The bulk of Celtic tunes handed down to us date between the late sixteenth to the
early twentieth centuries; some tunes are much older, e.g., "Brian Boru's March."
Even today, in piping, fiddling, and harping, the ornamentation and the tune are
virtually inseparable. The ornamentation is the tune. This is also true of more
recent compositions that are entering the living Celtic traditions which grow,
change and adapt from other music forms, sometimes in astonishing ways.
Some nineteenth century tunes resist harmonization or being locked into a single
tonality. They have "complex tonality" with competing "tonal centers," like two (or
more) little suns exercising gravitational pulls on nearby satellite notes. They give
the impression of changing keys or leaving notes hanging in mid-air. Such
melodies may befuddle classically trained musician whose "ears" have been
trained to hear equally tempered music, major-minor keys, modulations, and
Western harmony. Some traditional Irish and Scottish, e.g., Cape Breton and
Western Highlands fiddlers make use of slightly sharped or flatted pitches, or
"half-sharp" notes, especially at the third and seventh degrees of the scale.
The implication is that one must really listen to the melody of a piece of music so
as not to jump to any conclusions about its key. To classically trained and
Westernized ears, some tunes seem to modulate from one key to another and
then back again. Depending on the tune, this may or may not be the case. "The
Blarney Pilgrim" is a well-known example: It has a pronounced D tonality, though it
makes more sense on paper in G. It could be a "gapped" G-Ionian (major) scale or
a "gapped" D-Mixolydian scale - in either case hexatonic (six notes) - in the former
leaving out the seventh degree of the scale (F#) and in the latter leaving out the
third degree (still F#). Consequently, this tune is ambiguous between D and G.
It is often the deft use of gapped scales (pentatonic and hexatonic) that makes
Celtic tunes so slippery and ambiguous between tonalities. The use of modes,
which may not always conform to simple major and minor keys but may possess
characteristics of both, and the shifting of the tonal center between sections
(change of mode): Both of these elements contribute to the elusive character of
Celtic tonality.
There's no shame in not playing if one does not know a tune. People trained in
bluegrass, rock 'n roll and jazz might have a hard time sitting out a tune and just
listening when they can identify the tonality and know how to play - but play
what? Having knowledge of classical harmony or elaborate chord substitutions is
not essential to backing up tunes, but knowing the tune is. Understanding
composition and harmony concepts is important, but not as important as being
able to recognize tunes and lilt or hum them. Major and minor scales, chord
substitutions and bass lines are good to have in one's toolbox, especially for
improvising in a variety of contexts, but in the various Celtic musics, learning the
tunes and local etiquette must come first.
Knowing the tune and the local or "traditional" style of back-up (if it exists) is
paramount. An understanding of music theory is useful but not essential for
learning how to back tunes using altered tunings (e.g., DADGAD) or widespread
Celtic playing techniques, although these vary from person to person and session
to session. Back-up can be learned firsthand by playing regularly with local
players and absorbing the tunes and back-up techniques through ear training and
practice.
Yet it is quite common for overeager players, especially guitarists, to jump in once
they think they have found the right key and chords, and some "bludgeon-
strummers" are frequently incorrect in their assumptions of the key (tonality),
which may be "complex" - having more than one tonal center. A tune may also
change tonality (with or without changing modality). Some Scottish tunes use
"double tonics," with tonal centers one tone apart, using hexatonic scales and two
modes, e.g., "Sweet Molly," which uses the E- Dorian and D-Ionian modes. See
http://www.purr.demon.co.uk/jack/Music/Modes.abc for Jack Campin, "Scales
and Modes in Scottish Traditional Music" (1999).
The most frequently used modes are the Ionian (major), the Mixolydian (more
major than minor sounding - flatted 7th), Dorian (bluesy, more minor than major -
flatted 3rd and 7th), and Aeolian (natural minor - flatted 3rd, 6th and 7th). Some
Cornish, Breton and Galician music uses the Phrygian mode (very minor sounding
- flatted 2nd, 3rd, 6th and 7th). The Phrygian mode is more common in Spain,
Mediterranean countries, Scandinavia and Russia. It occasionally crops up in
some Gaelic (especially in Scandinavian- or Mediterranean-influenced Irish and
Scottish) music.
Mel Bay author Chris Smith writes: "[T]his modal foundation means that Celtic
harmony works differently than ... European classical ... harmony. This can be
confusing and you need to ... understand how a tune's mode and its appropriate
chords interact.... Due ... to my training in jazz, where harmonic substitution is a
prized skill, it's my conviction that harmonic variation is a musical parameter
[whereby] an accompanist can contribute ... to the presentation of Celtic dance
melodies. This music in its most traditional form is melodic and rhythmic....
[R]eplicating [in back-up] this melodic and rhythmic material ... runs the risk of
being redundant: if you're contributing nothing, why play? In contrast, if you ... can
manipulate Celtic harmony, you can present beautiful, shifting harmonic
frameworks for these melodies, to the extent that listeners and players alike
actually 'hear them anew.'" - Chris Smith, Celtic Back-up for All Instrumentalists,
(Pacific, MO: Mel Bay Publications, 1999), p. 49.
Smith mentions two "great swing drummers" of the early 1940s and how they
made jazz rhythm "more implicit, flexible and susceptible to reaction," to illustrate
an interesting theoretical approach: "[B]ecause rhythm is the most ubiquitous and
fundamental part of musical organization, you can get ideas and inspiration for
playing Celtic rhythms from many other world music traditions... [In] traditional
music ... all players should (emphasis added) be responsible for time, and no one
player's time should be the- arbiter. - Smith, p. 57.
Clearly, the author has an open-minded, eclectic approach to Celtic music that is
not afraid to draw from many non-Celtic styles and traditions.
Smith's "shifting harmonic frameworks," however they are presented, still derive
from the oldest ecclesiastical modes, favored up through the Renaissance, for
their melodic richness, before the rise in subsequent eras of equal temperament
and familiar European polyphony. Singers, fiddlers, and melodists, who can
physically alter the pitch of notes, may play something closer to "just"
temperament in actual performances, by slightly flattening thirds and sevenths,
bringing them closer to what the ear might otherwise naturally expect to hear.
Many tunes use hexatonic or pentatonic scales and are ambiguous between
modes and could be harmonized to sound either more major or minor. See
Patricia Vivien Yarrow, http://clem.mscd.edu/~yarrowp/MODEXh.html for "A Brief
Introduction to Modes in Early and Traditional European Music (1998).
The beauty of the various Celtic musics lies in their very individuality and
irreducibility to the printed page. Although Celtic music is not a universal "meta-
style" which can be fully captured using standard notation, a good theoretical
background and ear training is certainly a practical place to begin. At the same
time, the careful explanations Euro-American theorists and performers offer,
demonstrating how driving rhythms, bass lines, power-chords, drones, moving
triads, contrapuntal motion, and various combinations of homophony and
heterophony can be used to play various Celtic tunes, do not necessarily mean
that traditional players would use such techniques "back home." This includes the
very notion of "Celtic back-up," which, on the surface, seems not to take into
account national, regional, and local distinctions.
Some sessions don't even allow backers to take their instruments out of the case;
this is especially true for backroom sessions consisting entirely of fiddles, or
fiddles and flutes. These players may only want to hear certain melody
instruments. Sometimes only one or two backers are allowed. At these types of
sessions, a considerate player would not pull the instrument out of the case
without first being asked. Alas, some people have not learned proper respect and
would jump in willy-nilly; these types may quickly discover a stony and awkward
silence around them.
Lead players are typically accorded higher status than backers, unless the
backers happen to be exceptional players, singers or songwriters. The local
etiquette will not change to conform to the neat transcriptions or theories of books
and articles, yet the river of Celtic traditional music has united many related Celtic
and non-Celtic currents, and the tradition is a living one. The dynamic interplay of
continuity and change, or repetition and variation, lies at the heart of the various
Celtic traditions. Traditional players never ask themselves if they are "authentic" - a
nebulous term.
Bibliography
Cooper, Peter. Mel Bay's Complete Irish Fiddle Player. Pacific, MO: Mel Bay, 1995.
Cowdery, James R. The Melodic Tradition in Ireland. Kent, Ohio: Kent State
University Press, 1990.
Cranitch, Matt. The Irish Fiddle Book. Cork, Ireland: The Mercier Press, 1988,
reprinted, Music Sales Corporation, 1993.
Dunlay, K.E. and Reich, D.L. Traditional Celtic Fiddle Music of Cape Breton.
Wayland, MA: Dunlay and Reich, 1986.
Hanway, Tom. Complete Book of Irish & Celtic 5-String Banjo. Pacific, MO: Mel
Bay Publications, 1998.
McQuaid, Sarah. The Irish DADGAD Guitar Book: Playing and Backing Traditional
Irish Music on Open-Tuned Guitar. Cork, Ireland: Ossian, 1995.
Nelson, Mark. Mel Bay's Complete Book of Celtic Music for Appalachian
Dulcimer. Pacific, MO: Mel Bay, 1995.
Reck, David. Music of the Whole Earth. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1977.
Smith, Chris. Celtic Back-up for All Instrumentalists. Pacific, MO: Mel Bay, 1999.