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REVELATIONS
Jessie
Christopherson was giving me Violin lessons and at the same
time I was learning about the Fiddle at home from my parents'
record collection and from family friends. Most of the musicians
I was hearing at home played 'by ear' and Jessie was teaching
me to read so, to combine the two skills, we thought it would
be a good idea to bring Jessie a few Irish tune books and
let her take me through them. She was quite happy to do so
and before long I had learned several fiddle tunes at my violin
lessons. But there was a problem - they sounded strange! And
not just because I was a beginner! So we brought Jessie up
to the house and played her some recordings of Irish music
and asked her why they sounded so different from what I was
playing. She explained that what was written in the books
was very different from what we were hearing. This was a revelation!
I realized that "don't believe everything you read" does not
only apply to newspapers! So, how do you make written notes
spring to life and become sounds that could justifiably be
called music? This became "the Quest".
I
discovered that Irish players had many ways of ornamenting
the notes of a tune and that these were often left out of
the books. In Jessie's lessons I had learned that I should
play just what is written down - no more, no less. From the
Irish players I learned to treat the printed page simply as
a guide and to add grace notes and triplets more or less when
I felt like it! They also had a list of terms that I hadn't
heard in my Violin classes - shakes, rolls, crans, to name
a few and there were other odd words I heard them use quite
a bit, strange words like "The Nyaah" and "Corfibbles". "The
Nyaah", apparently, was very important. Nobody seemed to be
clear on what it was but all the good players had it and you
were no good without it! This was very tricky. Where would
I get "The Nyaah"? Where would I find it? Well, some of the
older musicians advised me and encouraged me that when playing
I should "lean on it" and "give it stick". I was told to "twist
it and turn it" (and "kick it down the hall" said someone
else.) All this was a long way from the language Jessie used
when talking about music. But it was helping. I knew I was
gradually playing better when one day I heard some old lad
say "He has the Nyaah!" I didn't know what it was, I didn't
know I had it, I didn't know where I had found it, but I believed
him!
One of the things which Jessie said that stuck in my mind was
about Michael
Coleman. We had played her several recordings of great players
to listen to but she singled him out and told me "He finds the
soul of his instrument". Nobody had ever told me before that
musical instruments even had souls! That was an exciting bit
of news - another revelation!
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