Music in Post Famine Ireland - Overview (main points)
Different performance contexts
Emergence of amateur musicians and decline of professional musicians
• Wider range of instruments (new instruments suitable for domestic setting, and cheaper to purchase)
• Change in dance practices
—> from quadrilles to set dancing
• Socio-economic changes linked to changes in traditional music practices at the time
Reasons for the change of the traditional music practices in post-famine ireland
—> linked to socio-economic-changes
decrease in labour needed —> loss of work songs
Disappearance of clachán, labourer and the increase in single-owner farms
Improvements in houses
Disappearance of patronage and support for travelling musicians
Change in influence of Catholic church
Changes in the traditional music after the famine
Different performance contexts (eg. Houses)
Rise of `amateur´musicians and decline in professional musicians
Changes to the dancing tradition
—>Away from quadrilles and to set dancing and the introduction ofnew modern dances
New instruments
New Instruments (and changes) after the famine
thin whistle
Accordion, melodion, concertina
—>from aristocratic instruments for amusement to domestic and communal instruments for the “poor”
—> mostly played by females
Dance Practices 1 - before the famine
Quadrille
=root of set dancing
dance with 5 figures
taught by dancing masters
Music/dance culture after the famine
away from Quadrille —> set dancing and modern traditions
Clanchán
- = groups/clusters of farms communally working strips of land
- Rich cultural life of songs, stories, dances and music
- Purpose of music: work and entertainment
- Art was mostly related to agricultural cycle, the religious calendar or pre-christian rituals
- Clacháns were destinations for travelling musicians and dancing masters
Edward Cronin
Banish Misfortune
Jig
Fiddle
c. 1900
Traditional Context for Music and Dance in the 19th century
Patterns (Patron Day)
Prinkum
Maypole dances
crossroad dances
Hurlings
worksongs
on clachán
Before the famine - Professional/artisan musicians
since 1800
mostly Uillean pipes
contexts: houses, races, markets, weddings
Repertoire: dance tunes, non-dance-tunes, art music
playing style: variations
Social Context: Ireland around 1800
divergence in Irish and English (ruling) class
conflict and sectarianism
change in culture
—>decline of elite musical culture
—>changes in dance practices
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