Cross-pollination in Music

Feat. Nick Burbridge, Jamie Smith’s Mabon, Luthier, Ailie Robertson, Timothy Des Roches, Photography G, Kevin Burke and Cal Scott.

Just Water, written by Nick Burbridge, read by Gerard Murphy, directed by Andy Jordan, first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 – 25.2.1998.

Here is one of the best presentations I have ever heard. One must not narrate a story alone but he must bring the emotions to the fore. I don’t have to know what the story is all about because Gerard Murphy has a way of getting into your heart with his delivery. But yes it is important to note that this is written by this week’s featured artist Nick Burbridge.

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Jamie Smith’s Mabon is now on the second edition of their Windblown tour. Here is a shot of their gig last night.

“Thanks to all who came to the show in Abergavenny tonite.You were a Fantastic crowd. see you again in the future.” Click to enlarge.

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If you are in Denver Colorado and if you are looking for a photographer to take an awesome photo of your band then check out Photography G. So what is Photography G? G stands for the photographer by the name of Garrett. So who is Garrett?

“Garrett stands out among Colorado photographers because of his ability to “cross-pollinate” from one style to another, bringing a fresh and lively approach to all areas of his repertoire. Garrett’s remarkable ability to anticipate and capture moments instinctively and artfully gives the viewer a natural and organic experience of the real feelings and moments in our lives and world.”

Cross-pollinate. I like that term. That photo below is Damien McCarron of Celtic rock band The Indulgers. I think Garrett captured the spirit of Damien’s music.Or should I say Damien posed the spirit of his music!

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67 Music presents this exclusive chat with Kevin Burke and Cal Scott! This is really worth checking. ” Sometimes it’s interesting how life works. In this particular scenario, a certain fiddler from England & Ireland making his way in the world serendipitously meets an American traveling through Ireland.” I love that intro. Yes amazing thing happens when you really do something with what you’ve got. I love the rhythmic tone of Kevin Burke’s voice as he narrates his experiences. Cal Scott tells an interesting story about how he met  and collaborated with Kevin Burke.You might also take note of the topic around 20:00 about selling through niche market and about the economics of releasing though  a major label. There is also a this polarity between the classical and traditional world. This proves that something really exciting happens when two artists of different backgrounds work together to create something fresh. Still in the spirit of cross-pollination. Really worth your time. The interview is presented by Steve Behrens. Good job Steve!

Read more here: http://67music.net/features/kevin-burke-and-cal-scott-an-exclusive-67-music-interview/

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Ailie Robertson: Some hornpipes from her gig in the Netherlands on Saturday night. I think the beauty of music such as this one really shines when played at such an intimate venue that way it has always been played hundreds of years ago. The warm ambiance of having the audience huddled closer is really appropriate than the arena type that now dominates a lot of music today.

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Luthier Timothy Des Roches on the new harp he is working….

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Huzzah!

Yes you have noticed the thread running through this post today. It is all about cross-pollination of culture.  The merging of two opposite ideas to create something remarkable. In some cases it doesn’t have to be total opposites but a sense of relatedness. I remember that my venture into the realm of trad music could not have been possible if there was not something in me that likes Celtic music. Sometimes the ‘style on the side’ can play a role in getting the music out there because it is part that makes the music universal. That is why there are certain types of music that we can consider as having ‘universal appeal.’ Examples are that of Enya and Clannad.

While traditional music concentrates more on the specific regional style, Celtic music as a whole looks more into the continental aspect of that style. Thus incorporating every sound around it. Artists like Loreena McKennitt and Connie Dover and Alan Stivell have incorporated this kind of approach. It is through the general sometimes that we discover the specific of vice versa. Such is covered in the interview with Kevin Burke and Cal Scott by 67 Music.

There is also something powerful when one becomes an expat musician. There are great numbers of London based Irish musicians who are able to create an amazing combination of urban sophistication and tribal appeal. I have covered them in my past posts. And there are artists who continue to break barriers by fusing different genres as in the case of The Big Fat Electric Ceilidh led by Dave Martin. And the list goes on as in the case of Welsh band Jamie Smith’s Mabon that released a very important record late last year called Windblown. There are more coming our way. It is really a fascinating time to be in the music. If only the passion pays off because I still see  a lot of musicians releasing albums through their pockets.

Harp Builder Timothy Des Roches for Harp Talk (Interview)

Plus: The High Kings and Festival Interceltique de Lorient

Timothy Des Roches: The invisible noodle(string)

The harp  fascinated me since childhood. I owe that to the movies and also the late  Japanese jazz harpist Tadao Hayashi (in grade school) who started me in this path. He made me realize that the instrument can create a lot of sound  textures depending on the player.

With my journey to the discover of Celtic music, it was not hard to fuse the past and the present. Hearing the instrument gives you deeper meaning when you know its history and its construction. How or why does it make such sound? As what poet  Lao Tzu says about traveling..”A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step.” And also “For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel’s sake. The great affair is to move.” –– Robert Louis Stevenson. Learning is a great journey -by knowing the harp more.

You have to realize this didn’t take place in one day. Tim and I just sent messages and ideas back and forth as we went along:

I got a brilliant idea for the interview. Why don’t we make a picture discussion. I will go ahead and post pictures from your picture  gallery and let you explain further. We will make it as informal and chatty as possible.

Or if you prefer we will make it on the main conference with Scott(Hoye). Anything that makes you comfortable.

After sometime….

He said: This may be mildly interesting to you. I’ve been discussing the build of a traditional wire strung harp with someone for some time now. This person desires a replica harp with an English Walnut pillar and column (the sound box is to be carved from Linden/Lime ,latin: tilia. Our conversations started over a year ago. Well, after about one year I came upon a proper log for the carved sound box (the wood needs to be green/wet), and after countless hours of searching I just found the English walnut in the right thickness (rare) in Southern Poland. Enough for many harps and pleasantly priced – WAAAAY cheaper that it would be from a US vendor, even though the wood is actually more common here than in Europe. It’s very odd to me how these things seem to make themselves available when I’m close to being ready for them even if the odds are stacked against me. Money is always an issue – I have little and wood and transport are costly – and transport is always challenging as I haven’t a car.

In the picture the shorter lengths are about 1.5 meters long and 7 cm thick, the rest is 5cm thick and about 3 meters long. The wood has “seasoned” naturally for five years. Commercial wood is usually kiln dried, which is less desirable for musical instruments.

Now this is a great thread starter 😉

Hey, I know that pic (referring to the picture below).

Let us discuss about wood carving in this picture. How long did it take for you to finish this one?I am actually in your album now.

Hmmmm, 80 hours maybe. But “in the round” like that is a real pain and I never clamped that piece while working on it. Or rather, I clamped it with my left elbow while carving with the right and left hand.

You seem to take harp making a step further by adding intricate designs. How do clients react to your finished products?

The design took longer than the carving – I can take a long time to settle on a design. When it’s for me, as this harp was, I want something I can live with, something that fits the harp. If a carving is for someone else THEY decide; that makes things easier.

What clients? Thus far it’s all for my wife, except one small wire harp. They liked the carving a lot, it made the harp more personal. For myself, I enjoy finding what the wood has within and adjusting to the grain. Thankfully, every piece of wood is different so even if you’re making the same design over and over there’s always something new, but hand carving adds another layer to that.

Interesting!

I didn’t know you have so many” weapons” ( see picture). How did you get into harp building?

I like “les armes blanches!” There’s absolutely no such thing as too many chisels. Grab and air-sickness bag, love got me involved. It was my 5th anniversary that was approaching and I wanted to give Magda something special. The fifth anniversary calls for a wooden gift so I set myself to thinking. I remembered that she had once told me that as a little girl her dream was to play the harp, but in Communist Poland that was beyond the grasp of all but the luckiest of talented youths, so she opted for classical guitar. So, I researched and bought a harp kit from Musicmakers; it was a 26 string Limerick harp in walnut. I did some simple carving to to make it truly hers and found an interest in both harps and carving. Later I made a connection with the harp maker Rick Kemper of Sligo Harps and have been enjoying a kind of intl. apprenticeship with him. Rick’s harps are awesome and he’s been very patient and kind to me. It’s now four summers that I’ve been cluttering his shop with myself and one harp project or another.

That is the best gift I have ever heard in ages!Look at these gorgeous harps she got.These are wire strung harps right? How many of these are in your house now?

Actually Magda has an irrational preference for nylon or gut strung harps. Those floor harps in the picture are nylon strung (there’s no money in my piggy bank for gut). On the left is the second harp I “built” for her, a Muscimakers Voyageur (another kit) on which she wanted carved dragons. On her right is a cross-strung harp that was the result of my second summer spent in the company of Rick Kemper. So, that’s two, then there’s my little 19 string wire harp (bronze strung) of lime and cherry, a nineteen string wire harp of cherry and maple (strung in brass), the 32 string Lamont strung in bronze and silver, and a small 22 string nylon harp bought before I decided to build a kit harp. That makes 6, and I’m currently working on a triple strung harp (81 strings) for Magda because there’s still room to throw a cat in the music room. Oh, and we live in flat that’s right in the middle of Lodz.

That one is really tiny. I haven’t seen a size like that before.

Small wire-strung, that’s the lime/cherry – fruit flavoured! Except that lime/linden trees aren’t fruit bearing and the cherry is a wild and rather unpalatable fruit bearing variety – better for cabinet making than jam making. That is actually the first harp I made all on my own. The wood for the soundbox came from a tree being felled on my way to work.

Let us talk about construction. What are the yes and no of making levers and of the kind of materials you use?

Whoa! I don’t make levers and wouldn’t want to. Levers are made by elves and dwarves in unknown lands (I do fear that some of this activity takes place in China – at least component manufacture, but I may be wrong…I hope I’m wrong. I have installed levers, and shall likely do more of it in the future although it’s not my preferred way to spend time. The levers in the picture are Camac levers and are very popular for their quality of tone and ease of use – by the harpist. Other brands exist: Truitt, Delacour, Peter Brough, Loveland, Robinson… Each type has it’s advantages and disadvantages.

Peter Brough Brilliant bronze semitone levers

Thanks!

Nylon and steel strings…the difference in sound, construction and the challenges making each?

Wow, esoterica. Interestingly enough, nylon and steel strings both call for just about the same vibrating length. Wire harps are strung (usually) with brass or bronze. Brass and bronze call for shorter (significantly so) vibrating lengths for a given note than than nylon. Nylon, gut, nylgut (a synthetic), or fluorocarbon strings all produce a “typical” harp sound with some being darker, some brighter, some punchier… Brass and bronze strings sound closer to a harpsichord when played with great technical skill. The wire strings have a greater sustain and typically less volume from the harp although in some ways the sound carries better. Steel strings sound more like little bells, more tinkly.

Nylon harps are lighter built than wire harps and requiring a greater length of string material for any given note. Given a wire harp and a nylon or gut harp with the same range of notes, the nylon/gut harp will be bigger. Wire harps tend to be styled after existing historic harps or harps depicted in stone carving or period illustrations. There is a greater freedom of form and materials used that can be perceived in the nylon/gut strung harp arena. Many lever harp players cry out for lighter and lighter harps, one builder even builds in carbon fiber – ultralight. You’re more likely to hear wire harp types clamoring for archaic dry joinery (no adhesives) and specific woods. All types of harps have their merits and uses.

For more on string theory, try to get your head around my friend Rick Kemper’s brilliant explanations:
http://www.sligoharps.com/string.html

Tim, if people are looking for great harp manufacturers, where would you refer them?

Who are they? WHERE are they? What kind of music do they want to play?

Generally I’d tend to go with one woman/man operations. You get more of a dialog, more personal service. USUALLY a better instrument. Big name companies are more interested in NOT having to perform warranted repairs and that forcibly affects building strategies and sound. It’s nice to buy local. If not, make sure a competent luthier lives within a couple of hours drive. A floor harp can be expensive to ship for repair work!

Timothy Des Roches is the guy you might want to look for if you want a harp builder. His bio says:

I live in Lodz (woodge), Poland with my wife, Magda, my son, Mieszko (myeshkoh), and my dog. Life just keeps getting better.

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Featured video: The High Kings – “The Rising Of The Moon”

Check out the new video “The Rising Of The Moon”, from Ireland’s ‘Best Folk Group of the Year’ THE HIGH KINGS. Their new album “Memory Lane” is out now in the US.

Get your copy at Amazon here – http://amzn.to/h53CHG

My appreciation to Christi for posting this on her network. One of the best Irish groups!

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Today in Pictures: Festival Interceltique de Lorient Grande Parade 2012

Copyright Michel Renac- FIL2012