From The Irish Time - 19 aprile 2014
Harpists have had mixed fortunes
since their early medieval heyday. Now Cormac de Barra is helping to
restore the instrument’s status. As part of his efforts, he tries
teaching it to an ‘Irish Times’ journalist
Once
upon a time, says Cormac de Barra, the harpist was given pride of
place in Irish society. De Barra is collaborating with Moya Brennan
on Ten14 , a musical Brian Boru-themed show for all the
family, which debuts today in the Ark in Dublin’s Temple Bar, and
he’s offered to teach me how to play a tune on the harp.
“In
those days the taoiseach got the best cut of meat,” he says. “The
poet got the second best cut and the harpist got the third. And so it
went, all the way down to the professional farters who got the
giblets and guts.”
“Professional
farting?” I say. “Was that a thing?”
“Yes,”
says de Barra.
“Can
you teach me that too?”
Qui trovate l'articolo originale e il video!!!
“No,”
says de Barra, he shakes his head sadly and then laughs. Professional
farting is, like so much else, a lost art. (Online, I find a
reference to an academic essay entitled “Rectal Music in Gaelic
Ireland”.)
The
harp – which was present in many ancient cultures – has been a
symbol of Ireland for centuries, says de Barra. There are harps
carved on high crosses and when Henry VIII claimed dominion over
Ireland, he minted coins with the crown sitting on the harp “to
represent his subjugation of the country”.
But
the heyday of the Irish harp ended with the Flight of the Earls in
1607, after which the formerly cosseted harpers lost their homes and
their patrons and began to wander, like the blind composer and
satirist Turlough O’Carolan.
“O’Carolan
was the last of the big harper, composer bards,” says de Barra.
“Nobody after him made such an impact. He would have been playing
in the big houses of whoever would have him. Other harpers may have
written better tunes than O’Carolan but those are lost or went into
the repertoire of the pipes and fiddle and mutated from airs to dance
tunes.”
In
1792, says de Barra, there was a harp festival in Belfast. “There
was a national callout to harpists and only 11 people, 10 from
Ireland and one from Wales, came. One was a woman called Rose Mooney.
Another was a very old man called Denis Hempson who lived to see
three centuries [it seems he lived from 1695 until 1807].”
Hempson
was already grumbling that the old style was lost. “By the 1820s
and 1830s, when those harpers were all dead, the tradition had died
away,” says de Barra. “Then the Famine killed off any memories of
the harp. It was one of the minor casualties of the Famine, in
fairness, but the famine destroyed any living memory and broke the
line entirely.”
The
Irish harp was reanimated with the Gaelic Revival in the 1890s but
nobody is quite sure how authentic the newer techniques are. “I
said before that it’s like trying to rebuild a Georgian house with
a pile of bricks and a sketch of the house, with no one knowing or
remembering where each brick went,” says de Barra.
Still,
he grew up with this instrument. His mother played it as did his
grandmother Róisín Ní Shé who played it on the Irish language
children’s programme Dil ín Ó Deamhas . The
ornate harp she played is in de Barra’s living room. “One of my
first ever memories is hiding behind that thing and Mary O’Hara
coming to visit my grandmother to learn a song from her,” he says.
And
now I’m learning a song from de Barra. He positions me at the harp,
my left hand poised to pluck out bass-notes and chords, the right
ready to pluck the higher strings.
“I’m
used to playing six strings on the guitar,” I say. “Not. . . ”
I pause to try counting the number of strings on the harp. “A lot
of strings,” I say.
“It’s
like a piano turned sideways,” says de Barra.
The
show he has cocreated is a musical celebration of the Battle of
Clontarf and the story of Brian Boru. De Barra is going to teach
me the traditional tune,Brian Boru’s March .
He
shows me how to pluck out the melody. When I’ve got that, he shows
me how to accompany myself with the underlying chords. It has the
linear logic of piano, with left hand used to play the bassier notes
and right hand for treble (the lost Irish harp tradition was
apparently the other way around).
I
play too fast initially, but de Barra encourages me to slow down and
get my fingers out of the way of the tune. Unlike say, the trumpet,
which I’ve also tried to learn, the harp sounds sweet even when
played badly.
And
it looks amazing. De Barra lends me a beautifully carved wooden harp,
made in the 1930s in Glasgow and modelled on the one that featured on
the Irish penny. It was once owned by the actor and balladeer
Christopher Casson.
When
I play it later that night at home, my wife is impressed . . . by the
harp, not by my playing. “It’s sort of magical,” she says,
running her hand down the curved edges. “As if you when you played
the right tune something mystical might happen.”
“I
feel like I embody Ireland when I play it,” I admit, plucking out a
strident, not quite melodious version of the song I’ve learned.
“ Mise É ire ,” I say, and try to look noble.
Then she has a go and tries to look noble.
It’s
strange that our national symbol is an instrument that was out of use
for so long. There is now, says de Barra, a revival of harp playing
in Ireland, largely led by traditional musicians who have taken it up
as a second instrument.
“There
was an embryonic revival of harp playing in the 1960s and 1970s,”
he says, “but it was always a bit laughed at. It was ‘Sit in the
corner and play your sweet little chords’.”
Indeed,
Comhaltas, the body charged with promoting traditional music, was
reluctant to include the harp on its list of approved instruments for
some time. “But people played it,” says de Barra. “My mother
was one. Moya Brennan was another. And there’s a whole new
generation turning to it now.”
De
Barra plays the harp very well, and playing alongside him makes my
ropy playing sound bearable.
Still,
I may be better than Brian Boru was. Despite the fact that the
14th-century harp in Trinity College named after him, Brian Boru may
not have played the instrument at all. “I know!” says de Barra.
He is good-humouredly exasperated by this inconvenient historic fact,
given that he’s been composing harp music about the man.
“Here’s
the thing,” says de Barra. “We decided we were going to do all
the folklore around Brian Boru that you couldn’t disprove and then
all the facts that we know, but that we wouldn’t go near the stuff
that was purely myth.
“It’s
said he played the harp right before he got killed at Clontarf, but
there’s absolutely no mention anywhere about him playing the harp
in any of the annals . . . I suppose nobody wanted the truth to get
in the way of a good story.”
“I
won’t tell anyone if you don’t,” I say. Then I play a sequence
of harp notes to indicate it was all a dream.
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