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Music Ethnomusicology

Traditional Gaelic Bagpiping, 1745-1945

by (author) John G. Gibson

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
Sep 1998
Category
Ethnomusicology
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780773521346
    Publish Date
    Nov 2000
    List Price
    $29.95
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780773568907
    Publish Date
    Sep 1998
    List Price
    $29.95

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Description

The bagpipe is one of the cultural icons of Scottish highlanders, but in the twentieth century traditional Scottish Gaelic piping has all but disappeared. Few recordings were ever made of traditional pipe music and there are almost no Gaelic-speaking pipers of the old school left. Recording an important aspect of Gaelic culture before it disappears, John Gibson chronicles the decline of traditional Highland Gaelic bagpiping - and Gaelic culture as a whole - and provides examples of traditional bagpipe music that have survived in the New World.

Pulling together what is known of eighteenth-century West Highland piping and pipers and relating this to the effects of changing social conditions on traditional Scottish Gaelic piping since the suppression of the last Jacobite rebellion, Gibson presents a new interpretation of the decline of Gaelic piping and a new view of Gaelic society prior to the Highland diaspora. Refuting widely accepted opinions that after Culloden pipes and pipers were effectively banned in Scotland by the Disarming Act (1746), Gibson reveals that traditional dance bagpiping continued at least to the mid-nineteenth century. He argues that the dramatic depopulation of the Highlands in the nineteenth century was one of the main reasons for the decline of piping.

Following the path of Scottish emigrants, Gibson traces the history of bagpiping in the New World and uncovers examples of late eighteenth-century traditional bagpiping and dance in Gaelic Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. He argues that these anachronistic cultural forms provide a vital link to the vanished folk music and culture of the Scottish highlanders.

This definitive study throws light on the ways pipers and piping contributed to social integration in the days of the clan system and on the decline in Scottish Gaelic culture following the abolition of clans. It also illuminates the cultural problems faced by all ethnic minorities assimilated into unitary multinational societies.

About the author

John G. Gibson is a scholar of Gaelic culture and musicologist who lives in Judique, Nova Scotia. He is the author of Traditional Gaelic Bagpiping, 1745–1945 and Old and New World Highland Bagpiping. Born in Edinburgh in 1941, he spent much of his childhood in Craigag near Glenfinnan but attended both school and university in Edinburgh before his emigration to Canada.

John G. Gibson's profile page

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