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Music of Ireland

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Irish Music is the generic term for music that has been created in various genres on the entire island of Ireland, North and South of the border.

The indigenous music of the island is termed Irish traditional music. It has remained vibrant through the 20th into the 21st centuries, despite globalising cultural forces. In spite of emigration and a well-developed connection to music influences from Britain and the United States, Irish music has kept many of its traditional aspects; indeed, it has itself influenced many forms of music, such as country and roots music in the USA, which in turn have had some influence on modern rock music. It has occasionally been fused with rock and roll, punk rock and other genres. Some of these fusion artists have attained mainstream success, at home and abroad.

In recent decades Irish music in many different genres has been very successful internationally. However, the most successful genres have been rock, popular and traditional fusion, with groups such as Thin Lizzy, The Pogues, The Corrs, The Chieftains, Enya, Riverdance, Boyzone, Rory Gallagher,the Wolfe Tones, Van Morrison and U2 achieving success nationally and internationally.

Celtic music
Asturias
Brittany
Cornwall
Galicia
Ireland
Isle of Man
Scotland
Wales
Celtic US
Celtic Canada

Traditional music

In the seventeenth century harp musicians were patronised by the aristocracy in Ireland. This died out in the eighteenth century. Turlough Carolan (1670 - 1738) was the most famous,[1] [2] and over 200 of his compositions are known. He wrote in a baroque style that is usually classified as classical music, but is played by many folk musicians today. Edward Bunting collected some of the last-known harp tunes at the Belfast Harp Festival in 1792.Other important collectors[3] [4] include George Petrie and Francis O'Neill. The earliest known descriptions of folk musicians are as soloists. By the middle of the nineteenth century ensemble playing was probably common.

Irish dance music at weddings and saint's days would have included reels (4/4), hornpipes and jigs (the common double jig is in 6/8 time).[5] [6] The polka arrived at the start of the nineteenth century, spread by itinerant dancing masters and mercenary soldiers, returning from Europe.[7] Set dancing may have arrived in the eighteeenth century. [8] Later imported dance-signatures include the mazurka and the highlands (a sort of Irished version of the Scottish strathspey).[9] In the nineteenth century folk instruments would have included the bodhran, the flute the fiddle and the uilleann pipes. The latter is a uniquely Irish very sophisticated instrument, which was probably not played alongside other instruments until the twentieth century, because of the difficulty of tunings.

By the start of the twentieth century the button accordion and the concertina were becoming common. [10] [11] Irish stepdance was performed at ceilis, organised competitions and at some country houses where local and itinerant musicians were welcome. [12] Irish dancing was supported by the educational system and patriotic organisations. An older style of singing called sean-nós ("in the old style") was still found, mainly for very poetic songs.[13] The soloist would vary the tune to emphasise tragic events, leaving the words exactly the same each time.[citation needed] From 1850 to 1918 over one million Irish emigrated to the USA, creating a Celtic diaspora in Chicago (see Francis O'Neill), Boston, New York and other cities. Irish musicians who were successful in the USA made recordings which found their way around the world and re-invigorated musical styles back in the homeland. [14]

In the late 1950s The Clancy Brothers became famous in the USA. This was the first time that sales of Irish music records became substatntial. The explosion of interest also brought new instruments into Irish folk music: the guitar, the bouzouki and the mandolin. There was a moderate revivial in the uilleann pipes and the harp. [15] [16] The bodhran, almost unheard since 1900, returned because of its use by The Chieftains.[17] Irish traditional music sessions became popular in the 60s. The earliest Irish folk festivals wre in the 70s.

Traditional music since 1960

The Dubliners had top-ten hits in the UK and toured heavily. The Chieftains recorded their first album in 1963. Dozens of groups and soloists followed: Clannad, Planxty, The Bothy Band, Enya, Christy Moore, Moving Hearts, Horslips, Altan and others.

1994 saw a revival interest in stepdancing, due to the popularity of the show Riverdance. World-class performers of Irish music include Frankie Gavin and Martin Hayes (fiddle) and Matt Molloy and Kevin Crawford (flute). There is a guaranteed audience for Irish musicians who travel to the US.

Late 20th century: Rock and more...

The Waterboys performing in Dublin in 2004.

Traditional music, especially sean-nós, played a major part in Irish popular music later in the century, with Van Morrison, Hothouse Flowers and Sinéad O'Connor using traditional elements in popular songs. Enya achieved enormous international success with New Age/Celtic fusions. The Pogues, led by Shane MacGowan, helped fuse Irish folk with punk rock to some success beginning in the 1980s, while the Afro-Celt Sound System achieved considerable fame adding West African influences and drum n bass in the 1990s.

In the 1980s, major bands included De Dannan, Altan, Arcady, Dervish and Patrick Street. Punk rock entered Ireland in full in the late 1970s, and flowered in the following decade with performers like Gavin Friday, Bob Geldof, while the Belfast scene inspired a legion of punk bands from Northern Ireland, of whom Stiff Little Fingers are the best known. Later in the 80s and into the 90s, Irish punk, like the scene in the UK, US and elsewhere, fractured into new styles of alternative rock, which included the critically acclaimed That Petrol Emotion, the renowned underground band My Bloody Valentine and the popular punk sound of Ash.

The '80s also saw the rise of Irish international stars. The biggest Irish musical performer of any kind is undoubtedly U2, who entered the mainstream beginning in 1980 with Boy, and continuing to incorporate a number of styles on later albums into the next century. Other rock bands of the era included Aslan, The Undertones, Energy Orchard and The Boomtown Rats. A growing interest in Irish music at this time helped many artists gain more recognition abroad, including Mary Black, Andy White, Sharon Shannon, Hothouse Flowers and others. The BBC screened a documentary series about the influence of Irish music called Bringing it all Back Home (a reference to both the Bob Dylan folk song and the way in which Irish traditional music has travelled, especially in the New World following the Irish diaspora, which in turn has come back to influence modern Irish rock music). This series also helped to raise the profile of many artistes relatively little known outside Ireland. The fashionability of Irish folk music at this time may be judged from the huge success that non-Irish band The Waterboys enjoyed with their albums Fisherman's Blues and Room to Roam, both of which are full of Irish folk influences. Meanwhile, Sinéad O'Connor's confrontational style won her a legion of fans as well as controversy.

In the 1990s, pop bands like the Corrs, B*Witched, Boyzone and the somewhat rockier The Cranberries also became internationally renowned.

During the 1990s, Ireland also contributed a subgenre of Folk metal known as Celtic metal with the earliest exponents of the genre consisting of Cruachan, Primordial and Waylander.

Top 5 biggest selling Irish acts of all time

Irish acts Sold Genre Years active
1. U2 150 Million + Rock 1976 - Present (31 Years)
2. Enya 75 Million + New Age 1986 - Present (22 Years)
3. Van Morrison 55 Million + Soul 1967 - Present (40 Years)
4. The Cranberries 45 Million + Rock 1990 - 2003 (13 Years)
5. The Corrs 43 Million + Pop 1996 - Present (11 Years)

Classical music in Ireland

Classical music in Ireland has always been in the shadow of other genres. Associated in the past with the ruling English class, it is only in recent years that it has begun to tentatively find its own voice. There is a clear division on the island between the North and the South of the Country, with Northern Ireland coming under the umbrella of the UK and the South being governed by the Republic of Ireland. Classical music, or Art music as it is sometimes known, has produced a number of successful composers including Thomas Moore and Turlough Ó Carolan. John Field, who lived in the early Romantic era has been credited with the creation of the nocturne form, later developed by the young Frédéric Chopin. Charles Villiers Stanford achieved great success in England in the 19th and early 20th centuries, but invariably success for composers has come mainly outside of the Irish state. Today, the best-known living Irish composer is Gerald Barry whose operatic works have been particularly successful in the UK and Europe.

Performers of classical music of note include Sir James Galway (b. Belfast, 1939) who is considered by many to be one of the finest concert flautists in the world today, while pianist Barry Douglas (b. Belfast, 1960) achieved fame in 1986 by claiming the International Tchaikovsky Competition gold medal and has become a successful soloist internationally. Singers Bernadette Greevy and Ann Murray have also had success internationally.

In Northern Ireland the art of choral singing is very strong, with many choirs of very good quality both a junior and senior level. The story in the South is very different. Choral music has seen considerable neglect over the last number of decades. There is one professional choir The National Chamber Choir of Ireland which has been heavily subsidised over the last two decades by the state, but the lack of any choral strategy on the part of the Arts Council of Ireland has resulted in a general stagnation of the entire choral infrastructure. A study undertaken by the Council, begun in 2007, may help correct this. Despite this, choral music in Ireland has produced one of the most successful choirs in the world Anúna, who, while best known for their contribution to Riverdance in the early 1990s, have also been nominated for a Classical Brit Award in the UK and were invited to give the first ever Irish Prom at the BBC Proms series in the Royal Albert Hall in 1999. They have continued to tour internationally, most recently for a nine week tour of the USA.

A recent trend in Irish Classical music has been a borrowing of style and forces between Traditional Music and Art Music. Seán Ó Riada is seen as one of the most significant writers in this field, with his soundtrack for the documentary "Mise Éire" having a profound effect on the general public in the 1960s. Although his writing encompasses contemporary Art music vocabulary, he also experimented with the integration of traditional modes and ornamentation. The composer Michael McGlynn has been successful at adapting modal forms to his choral compositions, many of which integrate contemporary techniques with more traditional ones. Perhaps the most successful writers in this field have been Shaun Davey, Ronan Hardiman and Bill Whelan. Contemporary music is served by The Crash Ensemble, Concorde and various solo performers of note. As the contemporary style encompasses many of the new digital technologies, the line between the avant-garde and popular music has become blurred, with the size of the country allowing for some very interesting cross-pollenisation, one example being the popular singer Julie Feeney, who this year gave a performance of her latest record in the Waterfront Hall in Belfast of her debut album, entirely orchestrated by herself. While she is seen as the current darling of the popular music press in Ireland, she is also a trained composer and continues to work in the field of Art music despite her recent success.

Audio samples

Contemporary Music

Ireland has numberous talented artists with which the mid-90s and 2000s saw an increase in arists which present pop, electronic, rap, soul and rock music to local and international audiences including B*witched, Gemma Hayes, Autamata Paddy Casey, BellX1, Nina Hynes, The Script, Cathy Davey, Ham Sandwich and many others...

References

  1. ^ Sawyers, June Skinner (2002), The Complete Guide to Celtic Music, London: Aurum, p 28.
  2. ^ "Popular and famous during his lifetime
  3. ^ [http://www.harpcenter.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Store_Code=SWHC&Screen=PROD&Product_Code=7431B "Among the most important"]
  4. ^ [http://www.irishcultureandcustoms.com/AMusic/FrancisONeil.html "The Man who saved our music"]
  5. ^ ]Whistle Workshop
  6. ^ Irish dance time Signatures
  7. ^ Sawyers, June Skinner (2002), The Complete Guide to Celtic Music, London: Aurum, p 48-49.
  8. ^ Inside Ireland
  9. ^ Sawyers, June Skinner (2002), The Complete Guide to Celtic Music, London: Aurum, p 48.
  10. ^ Concertinas in Ireland
  11. ^ "very popular during the early twentieth century"
  12. ^ [http://www.setdancingnews.net/news/quotes3.lp Country House music
  13. ^ Sean nos
  14. ^ Clarke, Gerry (2006), Oldtime Records Vol 1, Galway: Oldtime Records, Liner notes to CD.
  15. ^ [(click on the option called "The Pipes")
  16. ^ Revival in the harp
  17. ^ The Chieftains and the bodhran

See also

References

  • Vallely, Fintan. "The Companion to Irish Traditional Music" Cork University Press, ISBN 1 85918 148 1
  • Carson, Ciaran. Irish Traditional Music. Appletree Press ISBN 0-86281-168-6
  • O'Connor, Nuala. "Dancing at the Virtual Crossroads". 2000. In Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.), World Music, Vol. 1: Africa, Europe and the Middle East, pp 170-188. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books. ISBN 1-85828-636-0
  • Mathieson, Kenny. "Ireland". 2001. In Mathieson, Kenny (Ed.), Celtic music, pp. 10-53. Backbeat Books. ISBN 0-87930-623-8
  • Carson, Ciaran. "Last Night's Fun", Jonathan Cape ISBN 0-224-04141-X
  • Geoff Wallis and Sue Wilson "The Rough Guide to Irish Music" ISBN 1-85828-642-5
  • Barra Boydell: Music and Paintings in the National Gallery of Ireland, 1985, ISBN 0-903162-22-9