Canntaireachd: Difference between revisions
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The MacArthur family of pipers are reported to have had their own oral form of canntaireachd, but it was not documented. A further variety of Canntaireachd and distinct collection of pibroch tunes was sourced from Simon Fraser, whose family emigrated to Melbourne in the 19th century. It is assumed that different lineages of pipers developed distinct forms of Canntaireachd that were variations on a broadly similar system of sung vocable notation. |
The MacArthur family of pipers are reported to have had their own oral form of canntaireachd, but it was not documented. A further variety of Canntaireachd and distinct collection of pibroch tunes was sourced from Simon Fraser, whose family emigrated to Melbourne in the 19th century. It is assumed that different lineages of pipers developed distinct forms of Canntaireachd that were variations on a broadly similar system of sung vocable notation. |
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==Canntaireachd in contemporary piping== |
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For many instructors, canntaireachd singing remains the preferred means for conveying piobaireachd when teaching or rehearsing a tune. This school of thought maintains that written scores published by [[Angus MacKay (piper)|Angus MacKay]] and authorized by the [[Piobaireachd Society]] are oversimplified. As MacNeill noted: "There is a growing tendency, particularly among younger players... to place too much reliance on the printed score....The method of singing the tune is still of tremendous value, but it is not used often enough. Singing can bring out the nuances of expression in a tune, whereas staff (as every soloist knows) is limited, and must at times be very freely interpreted."<ref>{{cite book |title=MacNeill's Piobaireach op cit p. 30}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=MacNeill |first1=Seumas |title=Tutor for Piobaireachd |publisher=The College of Piping |location=Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom |page=5}}</ref> |
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==Explanation of ''canntaireachd''== |
==Explanation of ''canntaireachd''== |
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In general, [[vowel]]s represent the melody notes, and [[consonant]]s represent the [[grace note]]s and other embellishments; but the system has inconsistencies and was not fully standardized. |
In general, [[vowel]]s represent the melody notes, and [[consonant]]s represent the [[grace note]]s and other embellishments<ref>{{cite book |title=MacNeill's Tutor op cit}}</ref>; but the system has inconsistencies and was not fully standardized. |
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The following explanation uses the convention of indicating standard notes by capital letters between quotation marks, and ''canntaireachd'' notes by lower case letters in italics, i.e. "A" is not the same as ''a''. In a couple of cases, [[solfege]] is also used. This description is based on the advice of Charles Bannatyne of Salsburgh, Holyhead. Some of the notes resemble each other very closely, but the changes used are indicated, and the pronunciations are given approximately in brackets. |
The following explanation uses the convention of indicating standard notes by capital letters between quotation marks, and ''canntaireachd'' notes by lower case letters in italics, i.e. "A" is not the same as ''a''. In a couple of cases, [[solfege]] is also used. This description is based on the advice of Charles Bannatyne of Salsburgh, Holyhead. Some of the notes resemble each other very closely, but the changes used are indicated, and the pronunciations are given approximately in brackets. |
Revision as of 12:44, 26 March 2022
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2022) |
Canntaireachd (pronounced [ˈkʰãũn̪ˠt̪ɛɾʲəxk]; Error: {{language with name/for}}: missing language tag or language name (help)) is the ancient method of teaching, learning and memorizing Piobaireachd (also spelt Pibroch), a type of music primarily played on the Great Highland bagpipe. In the canntairached method of instruction, the teacher sings the tune to the pupil using syllables which signify the sounds to be produced by the bagpipe.
History
Author and piper Seumas MacNeill has stated that written staff notation was unknown in piping prior to 1803. In those days, instructors passed on tunes to pupils by singing them as well as playing them on the bagpipes.[1]
According to The Piobaireachd Society, bagpipe music composers and instructors did not begin using written staff notation until the latter half of the eighteenth century. Prior to that time, the only notation written, or more commonly sung, was canntaireachd.[2]
The Nether Lorn canntaireachd
Efforts were made to translate the vocal tradition into written form, the most developed of which was produced by Colin Mòr Campbell of Nether Lorn in Argyll at the end of the 18th and the beginning of the 19th Century. While Campbell's system had its origins in chanted notation, the Campbell Canntaireachd is now viewed as written documentation, to be read rather than sung. Author William Donaldson noted: "Although Campbell's work was almost immediately superseded by a form of staff notation adapted specifically for the pipe, and remained unpublished and unrecognised until well into the 20th Century, it remains an important achievement and gives valuable insight into the musical organisation" of piobaireachd music.[3]
Other systems
Neil McLeod of Gesto also published a system of canntaireachd. It was reputedly based on the singing of John MacCrimmon, one of the last practicing members of that well-known piping family.
The MacArthur family of pipers are reported to have had their own oral form of canntaireachd, but it was not documented. A further variety of Canntaireachd and distinct collection of pibroch tunes was sourced from Simon Fraser, whose family emigrated to Melbourne in the 19th century. It is assumed that different lineages of pipers developed distinct forms of Canntaireachd that were variations on a broadly similar system of sung vocable notation.
Canntaireachd in contemporary piping
For many instructors, canntaireachd singing remains the preferred means for conveying piobaireachd when teaching or rehearsing a tune. This school of thought maintains that written scores published by Angus MacKay and authorized by the Piobaireachd Society are oversimplified. As MacNeill noted: "There is a growing tendency, particularly among younger players... to place too much reliance on the printed score....The method of singing the tune is still of tremendous value, but it is not used often enough. Singing can bring out the nuances of expression in a tune, whereas staff (as every soloist knows) is limited, and must at times be very freely interpreted."[4][5]
Explanation of canntaireachd
In general, vowels represent the melody notes, and consonants represent the grace notes and other embellishments[6]; but the system has inconsistencies and was not fully standardized.
The following explanation uses the convention of indicating standard notes by capital letters between quotation marks, and canntaireachd notes by lower case letters in italics, i.e. "A" is not the same as a. In a couple of cases, solfege is also used. This description is based on the advice of Charles Bannatyne of Salsburgh, Holyhead. Some of the notes resemble each other very closely, but the changes used are indicated, and the pronunciations are given approximately in brackets.
- The key note "Low A" is always represented in this notation by in, probably a contraction of An Dàra Aon, the second one, to distinguish the key note from the first note on the chanter—"low G". "High A" is always i, but in a canntaireachd, it is often denoted by a preceding l, thus liu, and so confusion is avoided. "Low A" is either in, en, em, or simply n after some notes. The alternatives seem to have been used for the sake of euphony.
- "D" note is a and "B" note is a, but the qualifying effect of the grace notes — "high G" represented by h, and "D" represented by d or h (the latter a contraction of "a’ chorrag", the Gaelic name for the finger playing "D") prevents any confusion.
- The note "E" is represented by i. At the beginning of most of the MacCrimmon tunes and variations is l, which gives the keynote. It stands for "E" (soh), the dominant of the "low A" (doh). Where it does not occur, the tune will be found to start with a word like "hien", which denotes "E" with "High G" grace note, and then "low A".
- The vowel for "F" note is ie, and it is always made certain by the grace note d or h.
- "High G" is u, often distinguished by a preceding h.
- "High A" is often vi to distinguish it from the "E" note. When "F" succeeds "high A" in a tune, the word is often vie.
Grace notes are indicated as follows:
- h the aspirate qualifies all notes down to "low A", but often where ha obviously means "B" note, it must be concluded that it should be written cha (xa). Similarly, ho ho should be ho cho (ho xo).
- The letter d is used, as is t to denote both "High G" and "D" grace notes, but an examination of the notation word makes a mistake unlikely. Thus dieliu means "F" with "high G" grace note, and then "high A" and "G".
- Tihi means two "E"s played with two "G" grace notes.
- T and d resemble each other very closely in Gaelic, but the context in canntaireachd makes it always easy to see whether "high G" grace note or "D" is meant.
The compound grace note systems are as follows.
- Dr is doubling of "low G" by a touch of "D" grace note, and open "low A", and so on, over the whole scale. The letters dr are obviously a contraction of dà uair, two times, or twice.
- Trì means doubling of "low G" by "D" grace note, and as "A" is opened, double "E" by "F" and "E" and open "E". This is a "Crunluath" form.
- Tro is the same, at first, but the doubling of "E" is done with the grips from o or the "C" note. This is "Crunluath-a-mach" (outer "crunnluath").
These examples will make the rest easy. In many tunes where the tr type appears, it obviously when translated should only have been a dr type, this confusion being only to the similarity of d and t in Gaelic.
Vivi is the shake on "high A." The other shakes are represented by rr, according to where the beats and shakes are taken. This seems to be a contraction of "gearradh" meaning a "shake". A simple touch of a note before opening is always represented by a single r. For instance, such a word as radin signifies that "B" is to be touched with "Low G" (lùdag) before opening; -din is "low A" with "D" grace note. Ho radin is the "C" note o with "high G" grace note keeping the ra- below "D" note, also an "A" note.
All grace notes and grace note types are forestrokes, that is they occur before the notes they embellish. They are "appoggiaturas" or "semiquaver" notes, or "Caciaturas" or demi-semi-quaver notes, which predominate.
All grace notes in canntaireachd are represented by consonants.
All compound forms are made by combining single forms.
All leading or scale notes are represented by vowels.
All note forms with m or n in them contain "low A".
Grace notes h and d are qualifying or modulating grace notes.
Doublings are represented by dr, triplings by tr, compound types by combinations of these.
Open doublings above "D" are represented by dir, such as dirie, where the note is doubled by itself, and the note above it. Dr represents closed doublings, and dir open doublings.
Grace note forms consist of single, double, and compound:
- The single group includes all simple forms, together with the "dà-lugh" variation form.
- The double group includes the single and double types of "trì-lugh" and "ceithir-lugh".
- The single type of "trì-lugh" is composed of three "low A"s graced by "G", "D" and "E" gracenotes, and it precedes the note embellished. An example of this is "hininindo", the syllable do being "C" graced by "D". This type is called "fosgailte" (open), and is opposed by the double or closed form, represented by such a form as hindirinto. The latter is called "a-steach" (inside), which is taken to a type like hodorito, which is said to be "a-mach" (outside), as the grips are taken from the note played. The types last named are also "breabach" (kicking) forms, having a "kick” note at the finish. The "crùn-lugh" or "ceithir-lugh" forms are also "fosgailte", "a-mach" and "a-steach". The word hadatri is "a-steach" when opposed to "hadatri" which is "a-mach".
Hiodratatiriri is a pure "cliabh-lugh"—the chest or creel of fingers, because every finger on the chanter is engaged in some way, either acting or acted on. In bagpipe music, the variations are all named from the acting fingers, and the old pipers counted their time from the number of fingers engaged in the several parts of the tune. Chin-drine may be taken as an example of the "leum-lugh", the jump of the fingers. This is "low A", played by "D" grace note, then "G" doubled by "D", "low A" then opened, and "F" rapidly opened from it. Hiriri is an example of a beat form. The playing of two "low A"s by touching "low G" twice with the little finger is ririn, or rurin. The prosodic quality of the syllables, together with the spacing and punctuation, give the time and rhythm of the tunes.
See also
References
- ^ MacNeill, Seumas (1968). Piobaireachd: Classical Music of the Highland Bagpipe (1976 (reprint) ed.). Edinburgh: Broadcasting Council for Scotland, British Broadcasting Corporation. p. 30. ISBN 563074876.
{{cite book}}
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value: length (help) - ^ Book 1: 12 Tunes edited by The Piobaireachd Society in staff and Canntaireachd notations with a Preface and Explanatory Notes (2007 (reprint) ed.). Great Britain: The Piobaireachd Society. p. iii.
- ^ Donaldson, William. The Highland Pipe and Scottish Society 1750-1950 (2008 ed.). John Donald. ISBN 1904607764.
- ^ MacNeill's Piobaireach op cit p. 30.
- ^ MacNeill, Seumas. Tutor for Piobaireachd. Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: The College of Piping. p. 5.
- ^ MacNeill's Tutor op cit.
Other sources
- This article incorporates text from Dwelly's [Scottish] Gaelic Dictionary (1911). ((Canntaireachd) with minor corrections, and additions)
- Collins Encyclopedia of Scotland