seriglerom (2012) The Music of Ireland: Jigs and Reels. Available at - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3xeTpgLP5o (Accessed on 12th October 2013).
An example of the structure:
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Figure 1.1 |
Another example with part C:
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Figure 1.2 |
Jigs are in 6/8 which gives it a kind of swing beat, this makes it perfect for dancing. Which is what it's used for to this day, being played in a pub for people to dance and have a good time. The music sounds very traditional and is the symbol for Irish music it's very old fashioned because they use gapped scales which are scales which use less than seven notes.
Ugur Bekas (2011) Live Irish Pub Music / Ireland Temple Bar / HD Quality. Available at - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UY11m0d3Bjs (Accessed 12th October 2013).
Ornamentation:
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Figure 2.1 |
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Figure 2.2 |
The Casadh
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Figure 2.3 |
The Short Roll
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Figure 2.4 |
The Tap
This is the Salamanca Reel. You can hear and see some of the different ornamentation used.
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Figure 2.5 |
mrleedra (2011) The Bothy Band: Salamanca Reel/The Banshee/The Sailor's Bonnet. Available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=taN_I4CRv9E (Accessed 12th October 2013).
They're many other different types of Irish music with various time signatures:
- Hornpipes 4/4
- Polkas 2/4
- Slip jigs 9/8
- Slides 12/8
- Waltz 3/4
- Mazurkas 4/4
- Highlands 4/4
Bibliography
Figure 1.1/1.2 - http://www.firepowr.com/structure.html
Figure 2.1/2.2/2.3/2.4 - http://www.tradschool.com/en/tunes/ornamentation-in-irish-music
Figure 2.5 - http://www.celticorbis.co.uk/tunesala.htm
A lot of good visual content, need more about the music rather than just the style :D x
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