Song in Ireland - characterisitics and developement
Wide variety of songs in English
Unaccompanied
Huge variety of themes
Songs were the basis for the folk music revival and ballad boom in the 20th century
Today:
More accompanied
Loosely termed folk song
Combining old with new compositions
Types of songs/singing techniques
Portaireacht/Port Béil/Lilting
Macaronic Songs
come-all-yes
ballads
lays
= vocal performance of dance music
—>vocalization of instrumental tunes
original use: to create music for dance, when no instruments were around
no words/context
sung on vocables —> articulates set rhythmic patterns
example: Nora Cleary “The garden of daisies”
Nora Cleary
The Garden of Daisies” ; “Maggie in the Wood”
English Song
Lilting
Macaronic songs - definition and origin - one example
song in which both english and irish language are used and mixed
—> follow grammar and syntax rules
also used in other cultures
origin in irish repertoire:
—> 19th century
—> influences from medieval europe
example: cucanandy
Macaronic songs - main types (6) + examples
use of both languages in one line (Example: one morning in June)
two languages change in alternate lines
two languages alternate in regular patterns (2 lines in irish, 2 in english etc.)
macaronic coda: last line of a verse/final couplet is finished in the second language
words/phrases are scattered in haphazard fashion
—> 2nd language as ornamentation to the song
macaronic paraphrase: alternating verse and translation
—> eg. first irish verse, then english verse as repetition
—> Example: Táim Cortha Bheith “Im Aonar Im Luí / Weary from laying alone”
Eithne Ni Cathain - One Morning in June
macaronic song
type 1 - both languages mixed in one line
Ballads - Historical context
= a narrative lyric song
origin: south of france, middle ages
Old Ballad
= old europaea language lyric song
would have exsisted alongside with the lay (= narrative song in irish language)
Characterisitcs
—> verbally composed
—> non-aristocratic
—> usually in 3rd person
example: Lord Gregory / The Lass of Aughrim
Elizabeth Cronin - Lord Gregory
example for an old ballad
Elizabteh Cronin:
well-known irish traditional singer
big influence on modern singers
key constituents of her repertorie have permeated practically the entire present day irish trad. singing world
New folk songs - characteristics and two main types
mixture of styles and forms
became widespread during the 18th century because of invention of printing
adaptation of many native irish airs
drawn on local environment, events, individuals
themes: love, loss, war, politics
they did not mix/influence irish language songs
two main types: come-all-ye- and broadside-ballad
come-all-ya-ballad
narrative ballad as earliest form of anglo-irish songs
irish composed narrative song in the english language
often explicit—> deal with real events/people/places
structures borrowed from Britain, but developed their own irish idioms
follow a structure: set a scene, introduce characters and plot, developement, conclusion
often repetition of one phrase as invitation to join in with the soloist
how were the new anglo-irish songs written?
writing verses in english to tunes or strains of music generally accepted as Irish
Molly Bawn
Packie Manus Byrne
all-ye-ballad
supernatural themes
repetition of phrase “Molly Bawn”
Broadside/braodsheet ballad - characteristics and historical context
= single sheet of paper with a ballad on one side
narrative and told stories relating to politics, war, famous individuals
comic/satirical
mostly printed in English
use: as a medium of vocal politics —> political controvery and action were channeled into a resilient and expressive art form
purpose: to bring politics to urban and rural lower class (esp. during times of rebellion and revolutions until WW1)
—> not a high-brow-genre
The Nation : Newspaper that initiated this new era of irish ballads
Paddy Tunney
The Rambling Boys of Pleasure
broadside/sheet ballad
Manchester
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