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Celtic Mouth Music | UbuWeb Ethnopoetics



1 Mrs. Arthur MacArthur – ... Just A Song You Can Dance To... 0:10

2 Audrey Saint-Coeur – Diddlage 0:33
Recorded By – Laurent Comeau

3 John MacDonald – Strathspey / The Reel Of Tulloch 0:48

4 Dolores Keane and John Faulkner – Mouth Music 2:25
Percussion – Fran Breen

5 Yann-Fãnch Kemener – Marie Louise 2:29

6 Benoît Benoît – Reel À Bouche 1:04

7 Grey Larsen and André Marchand – Reel À Bouche - Horses, Geese, And One Old Man 4:17
Vocals, Guitar, Performer [Feet] – André Marchand

8 McPeake Family Trio, The – The Road To Ballynure 1:35
Recorded By – Neil Boyle

9 Bridget Fitzgerald – An Sean Duine Dóite (The Burnt Old Man) 1:28

10 Kenna Cambell And Mary Cambell – B'Fhèarr Mar A Bha Mi 'N Uiridh / Fear An Dùin Mhír (Horo! My Regret / The Lord Of Dunmore) 1:00

11 Norman Kennedy – Puirt-A-Beul 2:08

12 Colm O'Donnell – Molly Brannigan 2:10

13 Eilidh Mackenzie – Puirt-A-Beul 2:41
Backing Vocals – Gillian Mackenzie
Percussion – Jim Kilpatrick

14 Tommy Gunn (3) – Lilting With Fiddle, Guitar And Bones 0:52
Fiddle – Brendan Gunn
Guitar – Jim O'Halloran (2)0:52 Percussion [Bones] – Tommy Gunn (3)

15 Gordon Easton – The Drunken Piper 0:42

16 Josie McDermott – The Collier's Reel 1:01

17 Tim Lyons – Within A Mile Of Dublin 1:30
Banjo – Charlie Piggo

18 Paddy Tunney – Scots Bagpipe Lilts 1:00

19 Joe Holmes (2) And Len Graham – The Girl That Broke My Heart 1:43

20 Elizabeth White (2) – Piping Imitation 1:02

21 Talitha MacKenzie – Uamh An Oir (The Cave Of Gold) 2:10
Pipe, Backing Vocals – James MacDonald Reid

22 Elizabeth Cronin – The Little Pack Of Tailors 1:01

23 Seamus Ennis – What Would You Do? 1:42
Recorded By – George Pickow, Jean Ritchie

24 Christine Primrose – Tha M'Inntin Raoir / A'Mhisg A Chuir An Nollaig Oirnn (Last Night My Mind Was... / The Drunkenness That Christmas Brought Us) 2:03

25 Annie Johnston – Bird Imitations 1:26
Recorded By – Alan Lomax

26 Finlay Maclean – Puirt Medley 2:00
Recorded By – George Pickow, Jean Ritchie

27 Mary Ann Kennedy (2) – Dh'Fhalbhainn Sgiobalta / Meal Do Bhrogan / Nead Na Lach' As A Luachair (I Would Go Quickly / Enjoy Your Shoes / Ducks' Nest In The Rushes) 3:13

28 Allan Kelly – La Cou De Ma Bouteille (My Bottle's Neck) 1:04

29 Jeannie Robertson – The Cuckoo's Nest 0:44
Recorded By – Hamish Henderson

30 Goadec Sisters, The – La Poule Qui Couve (The Hen That Lays) 1:15

31 Sarah Makem – As I Roved Out 0:55
Recorded By – George Pickow, Jean Ritchie

32 Charbonniers De L'Enfer, Les – La Luette En Colère (The Angry Uvula) 1:59

33 Jean Redford – Children's Songs In Lallans Scots 2:12
Recorded By – Tom McKean

34 Paddy Doran – The Roving Journeyman 1:09
Recorded By – Peter Kennedy (2)

35 Frank Quinn – The Four Courts Reel 2:51

36 Madame Bolduc – Mon Vieux Est Jaloux (My Old Man's Jealous) 2:51

37 Emma Shelton – Pretty Little Girl With A Red Dress On 1:07
Recorded By – Maud Karpeles


Celtic Mouth Music (puirt-a-beul)

a.k.a. diddling, lilting, jigging, chin music, cheek music, etc.

"Puirt-a-beul (= mouth music) are lyrics written primarily for dancing to. Consequently the lyrics are only of secondary importance – the rhythm in the song is the most important aspect and the rhythm takes precedence over the rhythm and stresses of the Gaelic. The lyrics in puirt (plural of the word port = dance tune) are generally meaningless or nonsensical. Many Gaelic singers therefore do not believe in publishing translations of puirt-a-beul. … The origins of puirt are unclear and may have resulted from the banning of pipes after the 1745 uprising, or the religious opposition to musical instruments (at its height in the mid-19th century). It is important to realise how interwoven is with both fiddling and various forms of dance – the song, tune and dance all go together as an entity. … In Cape Breton there is a dance and puirt about a loom weaving. In this dance, the dancers are squatted or crouched and leap up to simulate the rise and fall of the harnesses on the loom, whilst others weave in and out to indicate the shuttle flying back and forth. In Cape Breton also, people perform step dances around a row of lighted candles, which they extinguish one by one with the soles of their feet while dancing." (Craig Cockburn, Article on Gaelic puirt-a-beul for The Adult Learning Project, Scots Music Group)

further notes.

1"Diddlage": Recorded in Néguac, New Brunswick, in 1976. 2. "Strathspey" / "The Reel of Tulloch" : Recorded circa 1935 in Scotland. MacDonald sometimes diddled with a goat bell and a rattle. 3. "Marie Louise": Recorded 1977 in Brittany. An example of kan ha diskan (call-and-response singing). "The principle of kan ha diskan is simple: one of the executors, the kaner, reveals the first phrase. The second, or diskaner, sings the end of it with him, at least the very last notes, then repeats the entire phrase along. The first singer joins him on the last notes, then continues the next phrase alone. Until the end of the song, each sings thus turn by turn, the ends of the phrases being always said à deux. Whence a continuous unfolding, with a succession of reinforcements and diminutions of sound." (Jean-Michel Guildher, Le tradition populaire de danse en Basse-Bretagne) 4. "Lilting with Fiddle, Guitar and Bones": Recorded 1980 in Belfast. 5. "The Drunken Piper": Recorded 1980 in Scotland. "Up here in the northeast, they used tae supply the fiddle and melodeon players wi’ a dram o’ whiskey to get the best oot o’ them for the entertainment. The bottle wis put on a table, the glass set aside it, and ‘help yourself.’ But – the greedy divils – help themselves they did! They had to get someone to diddle and keep the music going till they revived." (Gordon Easton) "Easton kicks off this march in a deceptively simple manner, setting out the melody and introducing changes in the crisp northeast Scots fiddle style. Each new decoration is a minimalist delight, with Easton’s artistry becoming more apparent as he progresses." 6. Josie McDermott, "The Collier's Reel": from Ireland (Sligo) in 1976. 7. Tim Lyons, "Within A Mile Of Dublin": recorded 1978 in Washington, D.C. 8. Paddy Tunney, "Scots Bagpipe Lilts," recorded in 1952: An Irish style of lilting called "cantering," with a reference to piping like that in strict Gaelic canntaireachd (the practice of orally depicting and teaching the various moves in traditional bagpipe music). 9. Annie Johnston, Bird Imitations: Recording made by Alan Lomax on Barra in 1951. The album notes read: "Each of these jewels of mouth music sketches the briefest of stories in the voice of a bird. The birds include – as edited here – a grouse, a black-backed and an ordinary crow, a rook, a chicken, a puffin, a razorbill, some thrushes, and a seagull. ‘Lie down, sleep,’ the grouse tells her young, ‘you won’t get any more food until the morning.’ The crow sings to the crab: ‘Come out while I shape a red coat for you!’ eager to dash the crustacean against the rocks and get at its meaty insides. ‘I’ve lay two eggs,’ the rook brags. ‘I lay two eggs every day,’ the chicken retorts. The puffin and razorbill are enticing their young to fly. ‘Here I am at the edge of the sea,’ says one bird, ‘and I can’t swim a stroke!’" 10. Les Charbonniers de l'Enfer (Hell’s Coalmen), "La Luette En Colère" (The Angry Uvula) – a Quebecois performance group, recorded 1996. "We gathered around a table and started to sing. … We never talk about whether we’re doing something special – our sound is 98 percent accidents!" 11. Frank Quinn, "The Four Courts Reel": recorded February 1924 in New York City for Gennett Records ethnic series. Quinn, an Irish-born New York policeman, "unleashes cascades of stunning triplets, accompanying himself on accordion." The longest section of Irish lilting on a 78-rpm record.

[These and other notes, as well as the recordings, are from Celtic Mouth Music, Ellipsis Arts, 1997.]



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