I believe this is about as echt as it gets. As we stalk the poet through his poem, the assymetries of a pibroch mark our step, switching from ‘urlar’ (theme) to ‘siubhal’ (variation) and in this case ‘an crundludh’ (finale), preceded by again an ‘urlar’. That amounts to saying that Celtic oral, visual, and musical culture enjoyed common forms of coherence. John Tonge in his landmark study The Arts of Scotland (1938), referring to the absence of the humanist element in Celtic visual art, suggested that its ‘filigree technique’ characterises the ‘consummate and intricate… art-music’ of the pibroch. The situation is Homeric and the highly mellifluous song itself classical and impersonal, yet expressive of intense passion. ‘Moladh Beinn Dobhrain’ is all the more astonishing in being in its making a 500 line-plus feat of memory by a man who could neither read nor write. MacIntyre has long been celebrated in Scotland (but never enough) for his songs, and above all the virtuosic ‘Moladh Beinn Dobhrain’ – ‘Praise of Ben Dorain’, an intricately figured work of intensely visualised detail, composed ‘To the tune of a Pibroch’ – literally ‘pipe music’ – atonal bagpipe music, known as ‘ceol mor’, ‘big music’. Garry MacKenzie’s refreshingly original Ben Dorain can only summon before us the shade of Dhonnchaidh Bhain, as he was in Gaelic, known otherwise as Duncan Bàn MacIntyre.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |