History
of Irish music
The banjo in irish music
During the twenties and thirties at the height of the
Irish music recording industry in America the banjo was
one of the most popular instruments playing Irish music.
In fact on the very first disc of Irish traditional music
to be made by Ellen O Byrne De Witt in 1916 the musicians
were Eddie Herborn on melodeon and George Wheeler on banjo.
Those early recordings started the ball rolling and the
Irish music recording industry really took off. The banjo
featured strongly in many of those early recordings especially
in bands such as Dan Sullivan’s Shamrock Band where
Neil Nolan was the banjo player for many years.
The banjo in the early days seemed to be often used for
accompaniment to the dance tunes or the songs and one
great example of this was PJ Conlon’s classic recording
of ‘The Newfoundland Jig’ where the banjo
provided the accompaniment to the driving melodeon playing
of PJ Conlon from Miltown North Co Galway, one of the
first Irish born musicians to record commercially on the
melodeon. One of the earliest to record on the tenor banjo
was Co Roscommon musician Michael Gaffney.
Gaffney arrived in New York in 1915 and although at home
he had been better known as one of the best fiddle and
flute players in his locality, on arrival in the United
States he turned to the banjo and made many fine recordings
both as a solo player and in duet with among others the
great Leitrim flute player John McKenna. Michael Gaffney
was born in 1896 and grew up just over a mile from one.
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Mick Moloney wrote:
Undoubtedly, the first Irish banjo player to record commercially
was Mike Flanagan, born in County Waterford in 1898, who
emigrated to the United States at the age of 10. Like
many of the Irish banjo players in this century, he started
on the mandolin and learned on his own simply because
there was nobody to learn banjo from. Mike, who at the
time of writing [1986] is very much alive in Albany, New
York, recorded prodigiously with his brother, Joe, accompanied
during the early years by another brother, Louis, who
passed away at a young age. Other banjo players to record
in the 1920s were Michael Gaffney from New York and the
late Neil Nolan from Maine, who played with Dan Sullivan's
Shamrock Band in Boston.
There was great life and exuberance in those early recordings,
in part because the music was designed for lively dancing,
but also because the banjo was at that time traditionally
tuned higher than nowadays—still in fifths, but
with the top string pitched at B or sometimes even at
C. There are a few players in America who still favour
the old tuning, most notably Jimmy Kelly in Boston. Most
of the younger players, however, favour the GDAE tuning,
which is by now "standard" for Irish music on
the tenor banjo.
It's
not hard to pinpoint when this "standardization"
occurred. Before 1960, a number of styles and instruments
co-existed in the modest fraternity of banjo players in
Ireland. Some players favoured the 5-string banjo, some
the banjo-mandolin, while others favoured varieties of
the 4-string instrument. Some players used a pick, while
others used a thimble.
In
the early 1960s, the meteoric rise to commercial success
of The Dubliners in the Irish and English folk revival
was to have a profound effect on the fortunes of the banjo
in Irish music. Bearded, affable Barney McKenna, ace tenor
banjoist in the group, became a household name among traditional
music fans. Barney's skill and wide visibility helped
bring scores of new devotees to the instrument, almost
all tuning their banjos as Barney did—GDAE, an octave
below the fiddle.
Now
in the mid-1980s, there are literally hundreds of accomplished
Irish banjo players in Ireland, England and America. The
instrument has most certainly come of age, after years
of occupying a marginal position in the traditional music.
Source:http://www.standingstones.com
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Source:
http://www.musicalpubcrawl.com
Traditional Irish Music is
known today throughout the world. It is an oral tradition
and its prolific nature has captured the attention of
listeners everywhere. Though it is only in the past tow
decades that Irish Music has gained such recognition on
an international scale, its origins can be traced back
to almost two thousand years ago when the Celts arrived
in Ireland. They brought with them, among other skills
and crafts, music. Having been established in Eastern
Europe since 500BC, the Celts were undoubtedly influenced
by the music of the East, and indeed, it is speculated
that the Irish Harp originated in Egypt.
While travelling to Ireland, the Celts left their mark
on the musical cultures of Spain and Brittany (Northern
France) as well as in Scotland and Wales. However, it
is here in Ireland that the tradition has evolved most
articulately, thrived most strongly and survived most
courageously.
The
harp is best known of all the traditional Irish instruments
and was most dominant from the Tenth to the Seventeenth
Centuries. In the Nineteenth Century it evolved into the
Neo-Irish Harp which, in structure, is much like that
of the classical concert harp. Before the Seventeenth
Century, the harp tradition was at its height and all
the harpists were professional musicians. The ruling Chieftains
employed them, under a system of patronage, to compose
and perform music.
The tradition enjoyed a steady and secure status under
this arrangement. However, in 1607 the Chieftains fled
the country under pressure from invaders. This came as
a serious blow to the professional harpists and the tradition
as a whole. They no longer held the title of professional
musician and were now called "travelling" or
"itinerant" harpists. Turlough O’Carolan
is the best remembered of the harpists during this period
and many of his compositions are still played by traditional
musicians today.
The
first written collection of Irish music appeared in 1762,
containing 49 airs and published by Neale brothers in
Dublin. However, it was not until the Belfast harp festival
of 1792 that the most significant notation of Irish music
was made by Edward Bunting. The manuscripts survive to
this day and are among the most important documents in
the history of the tradition.
Just
as the flight of the Chieftains in 1607 affected the harping
tradition, attempts at colonization adversely affected
Irish culture in the decades following the initial invasion.
Many of the laws introduced by the British crown were
aimed at crushing the Irish culture and, in the case of
the penal laws, it was forbidden to participate in any
traditional or cultural activities. Many would believe
that such laws were to some extent successful in suppressing
the hampering the growth of music in Ireland during the
period of their enforcement.
Due
to the Great Famine of the 1840’s, one million people
died and there is no doubt that much of the tradition
in the form of songs, stories and tunes, died with them.
The subsequent wave of emigration, of over two million
people, which accompanied the Famine, though a devastating
factor in Irish life, did help to bring the music tradition
further afield. Thousands of Irish people were spread
across the world from the USA to Australia. On leaving
Ireland, the immigrants brought with them their songs
and music and a traditional Irish music network was quickly
established in cities such as New York, Chicago and Boston
where there was a concentrated Irish population.
By the 1920’s, recordings of a number of Irish musicians
were being made in the USA, most notably the fiddle players
Michael Coleman, James Morrison, Paddy Killoran and the
Uilleann Piper, Patsy Tuohey. When these 78-RPM recordings
made their way back to Ireland they had a dramatic effect
on the tradition here. To the surprise of the listeners,
piano accompaniment was given to the fiddle and uilleann
pipes and the dance tunes were played at a quickened pace.
As a result of these recordings, musicians in Ireland
also began to speed up the tempo of the tunes as well
as using the piano as an accompanying instrument, an idea
previously unheard of in the tradition.
Up
to the 1960’s, Irish music still had as its main
setting the houses and pubs of rural areas, and music
was played mainly to be danced to. It was not until Sean
O’Riada’s involvement in the tradition that
the music found a wider audience. O’Riada had a
wide knowledge of Western Art Music and while working
as a music lecturer at University College Cork, he became
aware of Irish traditional music. As his interest in it
grew he began to explore it in greater depth. He set up
a band of traditional musicians in the early 1960’s
called Ceoltoiri Chualann, with the aim of creating a
new music built on the tradtition. He made use of many
Classical music forms within the workings of the band
which was made up of fiddle, flute, uilleann pipes, accordion
and bodhran, and came up with a formula of playing solos
within the group.
His music was played to be listened to and not danced
to, thus bringing the musc across a social divide. It
was no longer associated solely with rural areas and poverty.
When Ceoltoiri Chualann performed their first concert,
it did not take place in a public house or a concert hall
but in the grandeur of the Gaiety Theatre in Dublin. O’Riada
created the concept of an Irish music ensemble, which
gave rise to the whole idea of arranging the music.
As
the 1900’s were to become known as the traditional
music revival, the 1970’s were to earn the title
the golden age of traditional music, and not without good
reason, for it was in this decade that the music saw possibly
its finest years in term of popularity and innovation.
Probably
the most obvious development was the espousement of influences
such as contemporary, American and European folk, into
traditional music and with the arrival of the group Planxty
in 1972, a new sound had emerged. The arrangements of
pure traditional music in folk and ballad style, played
with the virtuosity of Liam O’Flynn’s uilleann
piping, along with the intricately captivating bouzouki,
mandolin and guitar accompaniment, created a sound that
was to prove them as the leader in a new musical movement,
and to play a vital part in the inspiration for many groups,too
numerous to mention here, that formed around this time.
They were the prototype for what was to be arguably the
most influential and ground-breaking band during the period
and possibly to date for it was the Planxty man, Donal
Lunny, who in 1975 formed The Bothy Band. This professional
group, characterised by a powerful core of pipes, flute
and fiddle with a driving rhythmic accompaniment, not
unlike that of rock music, played on bouzouki, guitar
and clavichord, achieved one of the most exciting combinations
of traditional music talents ever gathered. Their greater
use of harmony and occasional interdependence of instruments:
their more intricate use of O’Riada’s model
of arrangement: their professional rock-group like approach
to performance and mainly their master musicianship and
explosive sound, all served to win them the imagination
of a new generation the world over.
The
Bothy Band’s influence from their heyday to the
present is undiminished. It is because of bands such as
Dannan, Planxty and perhaps mainly the Bothy Band, that
certain traditional musicians can stand alone on stages
throughout the world and be appreciated and acclaimed
for playing in their own pure style.
Since
the ‘70’s, many interesting ventures in new
areas have been attempted, such as the traditional rock-fusion
initially tempted by Moving Hearts: experimentation with
the arrangement of traditional instruments with orchestras:
the attempted fusion of traditional music with world music
and jazz, etc. All these developments are notable in their
own right and have served to popularise the music, contributing
to the apparent situation today where it is seen to be
thriving.
But
if we were to study how music is performed at the present
time, one would notice some dramatic changes: (1): more
attention to tone and technique: (2) : material acquired
from public performers as opposed to one specific region:
(3): an increase in the tempo of dance tunes: (4): a greater
awareness of harmony and (5): the acceptance and popularity
among traditional players of accompaniment instruments
such as the Greek bouzouki which has been adapted in style
and structure thus further increasing its versatile ability.
Now,
in the twenty-first century, with traditional music enjoying
every success, it would seem as if its future is secure,
but today more than at any other time, this is the foremost
topic of debate among musicians and commentators. Through
the profusion of media, the influence of groups and individual
musicians filtering back into the tradition is viewed
with great concern by many as corrupting and detracting
from the essential purity and integrity of traditional
music. Indeed, it has been recognised that with few exceptions,
regional styles have, since the advent of recording, been
eroding at a frightening rate and are almost completely
erased.
But
to conclude, it should be simply stated that never before
has Ireland seen so many young and talented traditional
musicians and singers. I can see not reason why traditional
music in its purest form is coming under threat. Music,
traditional or otherwise, lives in its musicians and therefore
must be relevant to this generation. If it’s not
we will have failed to keep it alive for the next. With
one eye on the past and one on the future, traditional
music knows no boundaries and will continue to reflect
the nation’s spirit for generations to come.