Conor Caldwell
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conorcbelfast.bsky.social
Conor Caldwell
@conorcbelfast.bsky.social
Feirsteach, traditional music, arts activist, Gaelic games (retired), Gaeilge. Associate Professor at Irish World Academy, University of Limerick. Most posts mo thuairimí féin. conorcaldwellmusic.com
Beautiful place! Báin sult as!
November 26, 2024 at 9:13 AM
8/ Bunting bound it with its own manuscripts which in turn found their way to the library T Queen’s University in Belfast where you hand view it today. To read more, you get Nicholas Carolan’s edition of the Neal collection from the Irish Traditional Music Archive Website ITMA.ie
ITMA
Championing the value and relevance of Irish traditional music
ITMA.ie
November 15, 2024 at 8:20 PM
7/ Through this book we see the many threads and strands of influence that shape Irish traditional music today. A century later only one copy of this book survived - it’s our luck that it found its way to the hands of Edward Bunting, himself one of the most important collectors of Irish music.
November 15, 2024 at 8:20 PM
6/ The music of the Jacobites is also found here in the airs Limerick’s Lament and Patrick Sarsfield, essentially the rebel music of its day referring back to the events of King William’s conquest only three decades earlier. That’s as recent as Italia ‘90 is to us.
November 15, 2024 at 8:20 PM
5/ A few tunes from the great harp composer Turlough Carolan were already famous enough to be published during his lifetime in this book. Carolan was referred to in Dublin as Signor Carrollini where he supposedly mixed with the composer Geminiani. One of his most beautiful airs is The Fairy Queen.
November 15, 2024 at 8:20 PM
4/ The authors ran in bohemian circles in Dublin during the penal laws and had. A friendship group that included Catholics and Protestants. They were largely allowed to go about their business without issue, telling us that the Penal laws were less harshly interpreted in Dublin than elsewhere.
November 15, 2024 at 8:20 PM
3/This might tell us a lot about how quickly knowledge of the Irish language was collapsing in the early c18th in Leinster. It’s also important to realise that these pieces were songs, but stripped of their Irish lyrics and arranged for ‘polite’ audiences. Cultural appropriation in essence.
November 15, 2024 at 8:20 PM
2/ This book of Irish music tells us an enormous amount about the Irish language, the Penal laws, Jacobite culture, the so-called Glorious revolution and Anglo-Irish Dublin. The first thing to take away is the transliteration of the tune tutors from Gaelic into English phonetics (see below).
November 15, 2024 at 8:20 PM