Traditional Irish Flute Music

Traditional Irish Flute Music

  • 流派:World Music 世界音乐
  • 语种:英语
  • 发行时间:1979-01-01
  • 类型:录音室专辑
  • 歌曲
  • 歌手
  • 时长

简介

Irish Traditional Music on Concert Flute This is Fintan Vallely’s first album, recorded while in America in the early autumn of 1979, and released as LP and cassette in 1984. In it his style is raw and fresh, yet rounded and solid. He plays here with Mark Simos (guitar, who played on his second album also, The Starry Lane to Monaghan), CB Heinemann (bouzouki) and Lori Cole (piano and English concertina). Fintan Vallely was born in apple country in north county Armagh. He was brought up in the townland of Drumsill just off a mile-and-a-half long stretch of narrow road known as ‘The Dark Loanen’, so called because its high thorn hedges used practically meet at the top. Several of the local townlands had given birth to some of the better known céilí bands of the nineteen forties and fifties – The McCusker Brothers, Johnny Pickering and Malachy Sweeney bands – and in his father’s time the McCuskers often played for barn dances in the upstairs hayshed beside the family home each spring and early summer. By the time Fintan became interested in music, this céilí tradition was more one crack and telling yarns rather than of sessions and dances, and fiddles and accordions, pianos and drums prevailed rather than flutes or pipes. His maternal grand father however, Frank Kelly of Co. Derry, a fiddler himself and descendant of Derry harpmaker Cormac Ó Ceallaigh, had led one such band, centred on the Banba hall at Straw, Draperstown, a genetic strand which may have led Fintan to take up whistle, flute and uilleann pipes in the nineteen sixties. He began playing on a whistle he bought at Christmas 1963, devouring what he pick up between the wireless (radio) and the odd 78rpm record. Soon after, in collusion with his cousins Brian and Dara, who were – independently – also beginning to play whistle, flute and uilleann pipes, a routine of playing in local sessions and travelling to fleadh cheoils developed. The Armagh Pipers’ Club was formed out of this, and developed rapidly with Brian’s wife Eithne, a fiddler from Donegal; it now teaches a large number of learners of all ages and has made a huge contribution to the music life of the region. Fintan began playing flute on a nineteenth century ‘Blackman’ flute bought for him by Brian in an Edinburgh junk shop. Keyless by the time of the recording, and often held together in lean times with hose clips on the head joint, it is the flute used on this recording, with a strident and beautiful tone. The keyless state of the instrument, it might be mention ed, is responsible for Fintan’s distinctive ‘bent’ C, achieved by half-holing instead of cross gingering or using the C-natural key. Along with his cousins, Fintan spent a lot of time travelling about to sessions in South Armagh and Co. Tyrone. Brian had found out about numerous musicians from the areas, among them John, James and Malachy Comac from Donaghmore, John Hayden from The Rock, the McIlvennas from Coalisland way, Tommy John Quinn from the shore of Lough Neagh and John McCann from Dungannon. They in turn were close to the great Sligo musicians Fred Finn and Peter Horan and there was frequent travel back and forth between the two groups. Fintan’s technique is quite complex and among flute players he is known for his powerful and expressive playing. His style differs from that of most other flute players in his approach to breathing, which he developed more or less instinctively. Using his wind to punch out the rhythm of the tune he ‘pants’ as it were, on every other beat in reel and on every beat in a jig. In conjunction with his breath attack, he articulates notes with a tongued ‘K’ sound at the back of the throat. His fingering enhances the highly rhythmic breathing, incorporating techniques from the uilleann pipe playing he did from about 1968 until 1972. Overall his playing is akin to close or ‘tight’ piping and to Leitrim style fluting. On the personal side Fintan is a deeply thoughtful and humorous person, articulate and sharp’ these qualities are reflected in his music - Jane Kelton. Notes on the tunes 1. Chicago / Galtee - learned from John Loughran, fiddler from Pomeroy, Co. Tyrone. 2. Down The Broom – from the early Tyrone sessions; a great favourite of the Comacs and John Loughran. The Gweebarra [aka Killarney boys of Pleasure] was learnt later from Eithne [Carey] Vallely. 3. Mug of Brown Ale - learned from Jane Kelton in New York; An Port Ard is a composition of Junior Crehan of Co. Clare, learnt from Séamus MacMathúna. 4 Johnny Cope – Doolin whistle player Micho Russell’s version, as notated by Mícheál Ó hÁlúin. 5. Repeal of The Union / Boy in the Gap – from Breandán Breathnach’s transcriptions in Ceol Rince na hÉireann 1 (CRÉ). 6. Caoineadh an Spailpín – from Ceoltóirí Chualann. 7 Stone in The Field (CRÉ) / Knotted Cord (from sessions in Dublin) / Green Fields of Glentown (Tommy Peoples; from Eithne Vallely)/ Return to Camden Town (from Máirtín Byrne’s playing). 8 Christmas Eve [aka Tommy Coen’s; Trad. arr.] / Reel of Rio [composed Sean Ryan] – learned at Tyrone sessions. 9 Maid in the Cherry Tree / Castle Kelly – Learned from Jock Burns of Dublin who makes a terrific job of them on the concertina. 10 Battering Ram /Munster Buttermilk – from John and Malachy Comac, one of the popular session sets in the nineteen sixties in Tyrone and Armagh. The version of the first tune is a little different to the one usually heard around. 11 Bunch of Keys [Paddy on the Turnpike] – originally picked up as a two part skeleton from a céilí band ’78, later added to with some notes from ‘The Flowers of Limerick’ in O’Neill’s ‘1000 Gems book, and the third part added after hearing it played by musicians in Dublin. O’Neill’s version does not have the F natural favoured fiddle, box and concertina players; Humours of Ballyconnell / Mary McMahon are session tunes (the former is Scottish, originally called The Duke of Atholl’s Rant); Maudabawn Chapel [pronounced Mwidge-a-bawn] is a composition of the great Ed Reavy, born in Cavan who lived in Philadelphia and kept his connections alive through his tune names. 12 Colonel McRory was leant originally from CRÉ, but played widely in Tyrone and Sligo, where it is matched with McKenna’s No. 2, a set played and known as ‘McKenna’s’, by the iconic Leitrim flute player John McKenna on his recordings; Over the Moor to Maggie from Sean Casey and Daithí Sproule who in The Four Seasons players in Dublin would tack this one on at the end – a good way to de-escalate after the feverishness of the preceding two tunes. 13 Fred Finn’s Polka – The polka is by no means restricted to Kerry and Cork: “my mother, who is not so old [r/e 1979] remarks that a lot o f tunes she hears played now by Johnny Leary, Denis Doody or Jackie Daly on records were common at the dances she went to in Co. Derry and at The Gap, a well-known dance hall near Sixmilecross in North Tyrone. Sligo is no exception either, and this polka I learnt from a tape of Packie Daignean which was given to me by Gregory Daly. Peter Horan says it was learnt from Fred’s father who brought it over from America 14 The Beauty Spot – a Tommy People’s tune [not its correct title] learned from Eithne; Paddy Taylor’s / Humours of Loughrea –from the playing of Paddy O’Brien, the accordion player from Co. Offaly – Fintan Vallely All tunes Traditional arrangement by Fintan Vallely. The rights of the composers of some of the tunes – Junior Crehan, Paddy O’Brien, Ed Reavy - are acknowledged as indicated. Shanachie 29019. Recorded in October, 1979 in Times Square, New York for Shanachie records. Produced by Dan Collins. Engineer Richard Le Page; Master Lacquer Gladys Hopkowitz, Sound Technique, New York. Cover Design and hand lettering Anita Karl. Photography Clodagh Boyd. Originally produced on LP and Cassette in 1984; this edition licenced 2008 from Shanachie Records, Dalebrook Park, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey, NJ07423. Original notes by Jane Kelton, updated for this edition. Track mastering by George Brennan, CD duplication by Issued by imusic.ie © Shanachie Records, 1984

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