Valde002 pid=69899 dateline=1581369296 said:
Hi, I am going to try to play some Irish music out to the public this St. Pattys day. Can anyone give me pointers as far as getting prepared for this? I want to be ready...
1. How many songs per set, 2-3?
2. Do I keep jigs with jigs and reels with reels in the same set, or mix and match?
3. How do I choose which songs in each set, by key, or theme, or what?
4. I believe reels are like 120 bpm, jigs slower? Should I vary the tempo or keep them similar in line with traditional pub music? Some hornpipe songs I like played slower, almost like a ballad...
5. I did see some comments about shifts to choose. I will probably vary them accordion to mood and feel of song (ha!)
6. anything else to consider?
I want to keep this light and short. I have like ~ 40 songs but not sure they will all be in polished form by mid March.
Thanks for any insights.
Hello again,
There are a handful of pro and semi-pro Irish members on the forum, but it seems that they havent been active now for some time.
Best advice I can give you is try to listen to the tunes on You Tube, and youll probably get some idea of what the players are doing with regard to tempo and phrasing.
Irish music tends to be pretty spontaneous with little regard for musical correctness, and if you heard three people play the same instrument I could bet my bottom dollar that no two of them would play a particular tune the same way. Playing by ear is the most common way of learning, so variations will exist with regard to keys and the actual notes played.
Dont know what your audience will be. If they have lived for any time in Ireland they might take a lot of persuading, but the chances are that if it sounds remotely Irish youll get away with it.
A friend of mine was a champion Scottish bagpiper and attended a Scottish themed function in Nova Scotia. At the end of the meal one of the Canadian dignitaries announced that in honour of their Scottish guests they would sing a tune he described as Shouldaulda . The Scots present were bewildered but after the first line was sung they realised the tune was Auld Lang Syne. Should auld acquaintance be forgot …….
The Canadians present were resplendent in tartan kilts, the lot, but none of them had ever been to Scotland and that was their name for one of the most famous Scottish tunes ever!
If the audience get bored just try singing Dixie in an Irish accent.
My mothers family come from the same area in County Tyrone as George Cunningham, the guy in this clip. Its easy once you get the hang of it:-
[font=Tahoma,Verdana,Arial,Sans-Serif] (apologies to those on the forum who have heard it before)[/font]
Please note that in Ulster we always pronounce th the same as other English speakers, and dont abbreviate it to just t, like they are prone to do in da sout of Ireland. Fact is that Ulster speech is very similar to the Scottish version of English, but just a little bit faster.
When George was repeatedly asked to slow down so that people could understand what he was saying his reply was Theres nothing wrong with the way I speak, youre just not listening quick enough!
Im sure it will be alright on the day, and good luck!