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Simon McKerrell PhD thesis PDF

564 Pages·2012·36.9 MB·English
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@2=AA8@7 2=;>4A8A8=< 106>8>4 >4?5=?;0<24 . @=B<3" ;=34 0<3 04@A74A82@ @KNPO 0MCSFCKR ;E9GRRGMM 0 AJGSKS @UDNKTTGF HPR TJG 3GIRGG PH >J3 CT TJG ?PYCM Conservatoire of Scotland ! BOKVGRSKTY PH @T 0OFRGWS (&&+ 5UMM NGTCFCTC HPR TJKS KTGN KS CVCKMCDMG KO ?GSGCREJ/@T0OFRGWS.5UMMAGXT CT. JTTQ.%%RGSGCREJ#RGQPSKTPRY$ST#COFRGWS$CE$UL% >MGCSG USG TJKS KFGOTKHKGR TP EKTG PR MKOL TP TJKS KTGN. JTTQ.%%JFM$JCOFMG$OGT%’&&()%*,&- AJKS KTGN KS QRPTGETGF DY PRKIKOCM EPQYRKIJT Scottish competition bagpipe performance: sound, mode and aesthetics. PhD by Simon Alasdair McKerrell Date of submission: 09/02/2005 Declarations (i) I, Simon McKerrell, hereby confirm that I am solely responsible for the production of this submission which consists of: a written PhD entitled, "Scottish competition bagpipe performance: sound, mode and aesthetics" with an accompanying audio CD in appendix two, and that it has not been submitted in any previous application for a higher degree. • 1 0J-3 5 date 2 signature of candidate (cid:9) • (ii) I was admitted as a research student in October 2000 and as a candidate for the degree of PhD in October 2002; the higher study for which this is the outcome was carried out at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama between 2000 and 2005. ?(-7'° ZI (cid:9) date signature of candidate (cid:9) • (iii) I hereby certify that the candidate has fulfilled the conditions of the Resolution and Regulations appropriate for the degree of PhD in the University of St. Andrews and any additional requirements of the regulations of the RSAMD as approved by the University and that the candidate is qualified to make this submission application for that degree. date', 06t . 7f2‘signature of supervisor (cid:9) (iv) In presenting this submission to the RSAMD and to the University of St. Andrews I understand that I am giving permission for it to be made available for use in accordance with the regulations of the RSAMD library and the University Library for the time being in force, subject to any copyright vested in the work not being affected thereby. I also understand that the title and abstract will be published, and that a copy of the work may be made and supplied to any bona fide library or research worker. &L70() Date ?! Csignature of candidate (cid:9) ii Abstract This study is an ethnomusicological analysis of Scottish competition bagpiping, examining three fundamental aspects of performance: sound aesthetics, performance aesthetics and the modal complex of the core repertoire. Through a mixture of discussions, modal analysis and reflections upon performance, it deconstructs the music of the 2/4 competition pipe march and the aesthetics surrounding competition performance. Focussing on a small number of the world's leading Highland bagpipers, this research demonstrates how overall sound combined with the individual choices about repertoire and how to play it, results in the maintenance of individual identity. In chapter three, analysis of the 'modal complex', comprising pitch sets, hierarchies, phrasing-structure, the double-tonic, structural tones, melodic motifs and rhythm-contour motifs reveal the characteristics of various modes in the 2/4 competition pipe march. As an insider of this music- culture, I offer a definition of mode based upon motivic content rather than pitch set. The modal complex is framed by an understanding of how pipers themselves think about their competitive tradition. Understanding the concepts presented in this thesis provides an original and holistic picture of how Scottish bagpipe competition performance sounds the way it does. i Acknowledgements This study would not have been possible without the help of Dr Peggy Duesenberry. Peggy has guided and supported me from the very beginning to the end, over a four year period. Apart from having to deal with me, she had the added problems of illness to cope with; for all her help I am deeply grateful. Dr Gary West is like myself a piper and has wholeheartedly given of his vast knowledge, and for this I thank him. I would like also to thank Dr James Porter for his help in supervision in the middle of the research. His encyclopaedic knowledge and astuteness were invaluable. I must thank my family and friends; neither I or they knew the ups and downs that this process would take and they have been helpful and understanding throughout. Celia Duffy and Madeleine Stafford deserve a special mention, particularly where funding and general guidance are concerned. Celia has helped me greatly from beginning this study right through to the final stages. Thank you very much Celia. In order to research this thesis I had to have financial support and to every grant, trust or individual that has contributed, I offer my sincerest appreciation. They are, in alphabetical order:- • The Bertha MacDonald Trust • The EMI Music Sound Foundation iii • Mr Robin Fleming • The Gerald Finzi Charitable Trust • The Harriet Cohen Memorial Trust • The John Mather Scholarship • Mr kin McGlashan • The Musicians Benevolent Fund Education Awards • The RSAMD Trust • The Saint Andrews Society of Washington D.C. (USA) • The Sons of the Rock The pipers with whom I had the core discussions for this thesis have all been particularly helpful; Roddy MacLeod M.B.E., Willie McCallum, Chris Armstrong, Angus MacColl, Colin MacLellan, Finlay MacDonald, Nigel Richard and Greg Wilson. I hope that this work reflects their ideas about piping; they are central to this thesis. I would also like to thank the staff of the RSAMD library, in particular Karen McAulay, Matthew Barr and all the staff of the IT Department at the RSAMD, the staff of Glasgow University library, Jeannie Campbell and the Lismor records, the staff of Edinburgh College of Piping, Temple records, University and Kirsten Jenkins. errors or conceptual muddlement that remain in this thesis are Any entirely my own. iv Table of Contents Abstract (cid:9) i Declarations (cid:9) ii Acknowledgements (cid:9) iii Table of Contents (cid:9) v Chapter 1: Introduction (cid:9) 1 Introduction (cid:9) 2 Rationale for research (cid:9) 7 Methodology (cid:9) 14 Discussion Methodology (cid:9) 15 Etic - Emic issues (cid:9) 15 Introduction to the discussion pipers (cid:9) 23 Focus of Discussions (cid:9) 28 The semi- structured discussion (cid:9) 29 Tune Analysis: The Canon of tunes (cid:9) 30 Tunes and Notation (cid:9) 34 Mode (cid:9) 37 The ethnography of a bagpipe competition (cid:9) 39 The 2/4 competition march: Context (cid:9) 57 Chapter 2: Sound Aesthetics (cid:9) 64 Introduction (cid:9) 65 Blowing and Timbre (cid:9) 67 Bagpipe orientation (cid:9) 87 The Double tone (cid:9) 99 Drone Tonic and Scale (cid:9) 99 Pitch (cid:9) 103 Relative Pitch (cid:9) 111 Chapter 3: The Modal Complex (cid:9) 118 Methodology in Melodic Analysis (cid:9) 119 Motivic analysis (cid:9) 120 'Mode' and 'Modal Complex' (cid:9) 122 Perspectives on 'Mode' (cid:9) 124 Modal Complex defined (cid:9) 139 V 1. Pitch Sets/ hierarchies (cid:9) 141 2. Patterns of range (cid:9) 144 3. Phrasing Structure (cid:9) 147 4. Structural Tones (cid:9) 147 5. The double-tonic (cid:9) 151 6. Motifs and rhythm-contour motifs (cid:9) 156 Ornamentation in motifs (cid:9) 159 Performance and the book (cid:9) 161 Printed Editions (cid:9) 163 Mode and Emotion (cid:9) 183 Tune Family and Mode (cid:9) 188 The Canon of 2/4 pipe marches: Discussion evidence (cid:9) 192 The Canon of Tunes (cid:9) 198 Commonalities in the canon (cid:9) 201 Introduction to motivic terminology (cid:9) 204 Motivic function (cid:9) 205 1) The falling motifs (cid:9) 209 1.1) The 3 2 1 rhythm-contour motif (cid:9) 210 1.2) FECA motif (cid:9) 214 1.3) EDCA motif (cid:9) 215 1.4) ECBA motif (cid:9) 216 1.5) hA E C A motif (cid:9) 217 1.6) DCBA motif (cid:9) 218 2) The rising and falling motif (cid:9) 219 2.1) A B C A motif (cid:9) 220 2.2) G A B G motif (cid:9) 222 2.3) E F hG E motif (cid:9) 223 2.4) Function of the rising and falling motif (cid:9) 224 3) Rising grip motif (cid:9) 225 3.1) A B grip C D motif (cid:9) 225 4) Emphatic motifs and Band tunes (cid:9) 227 4.1) Emphatic anchor motif (cid:9) 232 4.2) hA E C E and F E C E motifs in the solo canon (cid:9) 234 4.3) 1 5 3 5 rhythm-contour motif (cid:9) 235 4.4) 5 1 3 5 rhythm-contour motif (cid:9) 239 4.5) 5 3 1 rhythm-contour motif (cid:9) 240 4.6) 5 1 3 1 rhythm-contour motif (cid:9) 243 5) Offbeat occurrences of motifs (cid:9) 246 6) Closing motifs (cid:9) 249 Motivic analysis of composers: a master table (cid:9) 252 Relationships between parts (cid:9) 256 Melodic entities and their overall structure (cid:9) 264 Modal Complex Conclusions: The traits of the 2/4 march (cid:9) 267 vi Chapter 4: The Performer's Aesthetics (cid:9) 276 Tradition (cid:9) 277 Competition (cid:9) 283 Closed-loop (cid:9) 286 Competition as a conservative force (cid:9) 288 As a conformist and individualising force (cid:9) 305 Traditional and individualised interpretation (cid:9) 306 Competition as affecting musical aesthetics (cid:9) 310 Judges (cid:9) 313 Phrasing and pointing (cid:9) 324 'Heaviness' (cid:9) 347 Band versus solo tunes (cid:9) 360 Notation and aurality (cid:9) 367 Conclusion (cid:9) 371 Chapter 5: Conclusions (cid:9) 373 Sound aesthetics (cid:9) 374 Tradition (cid:9) 378 Repertoire (cid:9) 383 Other genres (cid:9) 387 Traditionality (cid:9) 392 Tune 1: Mark McKerrell (cid:9) 399 Tune 2: Dr Mike Paterson (cid:9) 401 Tune 3: The A/G mode tune (cid:9) 405 Envoi (cid:9) 407 Bibliography (cid:9) 409 Appendices appendix 1: Master table of motifs (cid:9) 431 appendix 2: CD musical examples (cid:9) 456 appendix 3: Glossary of Pipers' terms (cid:9) 459 appendix 4: Canon of Tunes (cid:9) 464 appendix 5: Discussion listings (cid:9) 544 appendix 6: Miscellaneous (cid:9) 550 vii Chapter One Introduction 1

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PhD by. Simon Alasdair McKerrell. Date of submission: 09/02/2005 The pipers with whom I had the core discussions for this thesis have all been.
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