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An earlier version of this article was posted on Nupedia. This article is Open Content. [edit] DiscussionThe term is also rather geographically inaccurate, and is often used to refer to music which originated in regions which can not really be considered to be Celtic. I'm not averse to the point you're making, but--for example? --LMS Is there indeed a tradition of Cornish music distinct from English music, that is sometimes considered "Celtic"? I played with a Cornish piano accordion player in Alaska one summer. :-) He mentioned something about this, but I have totally forgotten what he said. --LMS
Cornwall certainly doesn't have as many jigs as ireland but Compared to english music a lot of it does sound quite distinct, a certain portion of the tunes are related to tunes in brittany as well (ie developed from the same root tune). Having said that some of them aren't obviously different, I rpesume that some are older tunes relating to the previous traditions (probably when there were stronger links with brittany) whilst some are more modern, especially stuff like the furry/processional tunes. I was phoned up by somone who was actually planning to do some research for phd analysing whether there was a 'cornish style.' I don't know whether they're doing this, but It wouldn't be finished by now. One thing they did say though was that manx musicians had expressed an envy that cornwall (they said unlike the isle of mann) Did have a distinct style. I can't ctually remember his name off the top of my head but the guy who was famous for travelling across england collecting folk music, noted that the musical landscape changed as he crossed the tamar, with english lyrics fitted to different songs, often not fitting well. It has been ypothesised that the cornish language affected te cornish tradition, with traditional lyrics to older songs being lost, and also possibly preventing some songs from spreading as much. With regards to the 'celtic thing, then by the definition of music of celtic nations it obviously would be. As to whether they have any link way way back to actual celtic music, probablya few tunes do but then I know at least one has been traced back to italy... I don't know how much Irish music could really be traced back stylistically or whatever to real 'celtic' music.
(WMP) There is alas a considerable degree of musical homogeneity in this day and age. But there are musical forms which are traditionally Cornish, not the least of which is the Cornish choral tradition. sjc
You ask for examples about geographical inaccuracy. Its obviously hard to be precise since the term "Celtic" is a fairly loose one, especially when used as an ethnicity. If you take Scotland though for example "Celtic" only really applies to the highland populations. In the past Scotland was split into highland and lowland regions. These regions were divided by traditions and language (Gaelic in the highland, Scots, which is a strong dialect of English in the lowlands). And yet "Celtic" music comes from all over Scotland. And of course large parts of England (other than Northumbria and Cornwall which get an explicit mention). In some cases this is tracable to the population moves during the industrial revolution (the "navvies") in others not. The point is I think that the music spread more widely and more rapidly than many other traditions. Certainly music seems to have had fewer barriers to transfer than language. In the case of music in Britain it has always flowed around the entirety of Britain because of the maritime tradition. The shipping trade was in the past, as now, a very "ethinically" mixed trade, and professional musicians were a normal part of the ships complement. I guess what I am saying here is that the term "Celtic" in "Celtic music" has become a generic term which covers a certain style of music, and does not actually relate to other uses of the word "celtic", at least not directly. Its similar for instance to the use of the word "Champaign" which has a generic usage beyond what the region of France produces (at least in common usage, and despite what the lawyers say!). Probably I have not worded it very well in the article. PL I'm still waiting to learn about the geographic inaccuracies! :-) Meanwhile, some the above content could be transferred to the article itself! If it's good enough for the /Talk page, isn't it good enough for the main page? --LMS In the first paragraph. You state Celtic music comes in part from Scotland. Large parts of Scotland (the lowlands) are not "Celtic". Ditto Northumbria, only more so! I am not sure about the main page though. This stuff is perhaps somewhat orthogonal. PL I see. In other words, there are exceptions to the generalizations. --LMS The above appears to be positively ancient, but interestingly enough, I added a quote to this page from Alan Stivell and the page I got it from goes into the same issue, and concludes, like PL does, that Celtic music is a description of a genre that exists independent of the ethnic designation Celtic. It is a useful distinction and some mention should be made here, but I'm not sure how right now. The main reason I came to the talk page at all was to invite interested parties to weigh in. I made a Wikipedia:Article series about the Music of the United Kingdom, and included music of Ireland as a part of that series (because Northern Ireland is, obviously, a part of the UK yet too similar to music from RoI for an independent article). The table declaring that this article is a part of the music of the United Kingdom series looks strange since, I think, most readers will assume the article is about RoI, which is not part of the UK. I want to make a table for a Celtic music series as well (which will solve that problem, I think), but there are issues... The following articles would be a part of this series:
The above discussion should certainly be considered. For example, the article could explain that Celtic Cornish music is extinct, moribund or only recently revived, and focus on historical music. Scottish influence on American music should maybe be included, but I dunno there's enough material for a whole article. Irish-American music redirects to music of immigrant communities in the United States (which is part of the music of the United States series) but it may be difficult to get a whole article out of Irish-American music. Even if successful, this would seem to indicate that the music of the United States series table needs to be altered so as to give the new Irish-American music article semi-top-level status as part of the "other" category (see music of the United States if you don't understand what I'm talking about -- the last item on the table is the "other" category). I don't know if that's a good idea, though. The Celtic music series could maybe be expanded with historical articles on Gaulish music or something, but I haven't a clue about that, so I'm not including it for now... What about Asturias and/or parts of Portugal -- I know those are related, at least historically.... And are the Shetlands and Hebrides distinct enough to warrant a separate article? They are sometimes mentioned as having music distinct from Scotland... I don't suppose we have any Celtic music experts/enthusiasts around, do we? (I'm only a dabbler -- probably no experts on Wikipedia or this article would be better by now) Probably just rambling to myself, Tuf-Kat 02:06, Jan 16, 2004 (UTC) I have made a minor edit to the text of the article, simply to add the name "Asturias" at two points. --Lazloholifeld 01:15, 17 May 2006 (UTC) [edit] quoteI'm tempted to remove the whole quote (I'm pretty sure I added it, so that probably wouldn't be controversial) because I every time I see it, it bugs me because he makes the absurd claim that Celts view reality as liquid. I won't remove the whole thing though, just the first part, since it doesn't add much and the quote's pretty long anyway. The second part should probably just be incorporated in our own words, but I won't push it. Tuf-Kat 02:12, Oct 13, 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Reality Check: No Current Music is 'Celtic'People, there is no such thing as Celtic Music, merely music played by peoples that are wrongly called Celts. There are no longer any such people nowadays, merely their descendants. And as such, no one really knows what Celtic Music sounded like. Fergananim 7 August 2005
JA: By the same token, no contemporary music is classical. Moral of the Story? Don't take any Wodin tokens. Jon Awbrey 17:26, 4 August 2006 (UTC) Come on, nobody is going to call a musical genre "music influenced by traditions that are presumed Celtic". --Svartalf 18:28, 4 August 2006 (UTC) [edit] some help to understand what's about Celtic MusicI have followed a bit the work of Alan Stivell who is one time quoted by somebody in the discussion. If you go, for exemple, to his book "Telenn, la harpe bretonne" or to his presentations on his albums, you will have an idea more clear of the question. Why? How many people have really worked several decades studying, comparing the music of the 6 Celtic nations (that's to say " where a Celtic language is still spoken")? I know that Alan Stivell has done, and is still doing; who else? E2 [edit] a definition of Celtic MusicThere are two meanings: the first: is the same (as acceptable) as if you speak of french , european, etc. musics, a category based on any recognized group of people, without any musicologistic idea; the second: is musical (the man who made popular the idea is Alan Stivell).The idea is : there is a link between all the productions of a people (language, building, music,etc.); as there are special obvious links between the Celtic Nations (language, buidings, etc), there must be subtle links between their musics; they are not obvious at the first listen; the use of different fashions(reels, jigs, etc) is not of first importance in the identity of a music; what is important is the way the people transform these fashions, as well as how a music manage the use of defective or not defective scales, does it give importance to "tuilages", how works irish or breton "swing" for exemple; E2 [edit] revertI have reverted a change by User:No More POV Please because it replaces an unsourced claim presented as opinion with an unsourced claim presented as fact. Hence, I have reverted to the version that breaks only one Wikipedia rule, rather than two. Tuf-Kat 22:29, 10 April 2006 (UTC) [edit] Query about 2006 05 01 reversionsA question for Tuf-Kat: Why revert from the edits including Runrig and Capercaillie as examples of modern Celtic musicians who sing in Gaelic, while leaving more obscure examples? And why revert from the the reference to Port a beul? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 86.142.39.117 (talk • contribs) .
[edit] A definition of Celtic MusicAs I read this discussion, I observe that only a few people have seriously studied the question, but many have a position about it. To speak of it, it is necessary to have studied deeply enough the music of the (four) main Celtic nations. Kej
--maelor 10:36, 29 June 2006 (UTC) [edit] Useful sourcehttp://www.standingstones.com/celtmusic.html is an interesting discussion of the uses and abuses of the term "Celtic music". It probably shouldn't go in an "External links" section as it represents a particular POV, but I'm sure it has a lot that can be referenced in the article. -- Blisco 15:33, 23 June 2006 (UTC) [edit] artistsI wonder if someone more educated about this genre could make a list of prominent artists. ReverendG 06:16, 31 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] FlagsIf one wants to add flags, there should be an explanation of the reason why they are there. One contributor feels that to say in the editing page that they are the flags of the Celtic nations, duh. So what? We could also add maps, list capitals, etc. There is no relevance to simply plonking a list of flags in the middle of an article with no mention fore or aft as to their significance. Why also Galicia? If one feels that there should be a representation in flags of the Celtic countries, then there could be a link to another article for futher clarification on what are Celtic countries. Enzedbrit 20:45, 19 September 2006 (UTC) [edit] List of Celtic instrumentsI'd find it useful if someone made a list of instruments originally celtic (as opposed to modern instruments used to play music with celtic roots), and put it in the "celtic music" article instead of the "music from Brittany" article so we can have a list of instruments that are celtic, but not inclusively Breton. I'm not an expert, but here are a few I've found: 1.Celtic Harp, or lyre(?) pre-christian, pictures of it found on coins
Now Celtic Harps and Scottish bagpipes are used about everywhere in the Celtic countries. This by a natural inter-influence being possible again now that the English and French empires are much less powerful. 82.126.99.248 (talk) 17:11, 10 September 2008 (UTC) [edit] about Geoff Wallis and Sue WilsonYou speak of these authors as specialists of music in the Celtic countries. I am curious to know where have they studied Breton music? They should have been in many festoù-noz, many festivals, many farms, many concerts to have something to say about it. 82.126.110.130 12:52, 31 May 2007 (UTC) [edit] gaelic musicussually gaelic music is incorperated with irish folk dancing and stories [edit] Baffling phrase"...(though some argue the traditional music of the all Nation descend from that of the North during the Reconquista)..." This is not grammatical, and I don't understand what it means. I am guessing that whoever inserted it doesn't have English as his or her first language. If it can't be put in clear language, it should be deleted. What little glimmering of meaning is there looks as if it may be inaccurate in any case. Koro Neil (talk) 13:38, 4 March 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Galician is not a dialect from PortugueseThe article says that, and it should be corrected. They all descent from Galician-Portuguese, you can find that in Wikipedia. [edit] Some precisionsThe article is OK to my point of view. There are still 2 or 3 things which I think could be precised. Speaking of a Pan-Celtic fusion is alright if you speak of Alan Stivell, not if you speak of Fairport or others (as much for the music as for the promotion of the concept). It is true that Fairport, Horslips, Alan Stivell began about the same period. Bothy Band and Clannad came later. If it is not clear here, where young people can find the exact chronology? Perhaps would it be possible to give more clearly the three main points of view : Celtic music as a commercial idea, Celtic music as a geographic term, Celtic music as an ethno-musicologistic concept 82.126.56.145 (talk) 15:51, 11 September 2008 (UTC) [edit] Clarity and DivisionsI have just rewritten the article on Celtic rock which is now substantial. Unless there major objections I would like to incorporate a summary of the article in this one with a link, as is the wikipedia style. This would mean dividing the 'modern adaptions' sections up. I think this would actually be a good thing and add some greater clarity about chronology (a point raised above). Perhaps there should be sub-headings for the two Folk Revivals (one in the late 19thC and one in the c1945-1969). Then the Celtic rock section c1970-82. Then a summary of the Celtic Punk article (which probably needs revision) and ending with the most recent period. This is just a suggestion and does depend on how much here is to say on each topic.--Sabrebd (talk) 00:35, 25 January 2009 (UTC) Categories: Version 0.7 Nominees | Start-Class Regional and national music articles | Top-importance Regional and national music articles | Start-Class Roots music articles | High-importance Roots music articles | WikiProject Roots music articles | Start-Class music genre articles | WikiProject Music genres articles | Start-Class Celts articles | Unknown-importance Celts articles | WikiProject Celts articles | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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