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= Scales and Modes in Scottish Traditional Music =
= Jack Campin =
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Relative Mode Shifts and Double-Tonic Tunes
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1. Shifts of Centre
===================
A common trick in classical music is to shift between major and minor keys
using the same number of sharps or flats, like between C major and A minor;
this involves shifting the tonal centre. There are a few tunes in a
traditional style that do this:
X:0
T:Thunderhead
G:jig
C:Gray Larsen
N:as played around Edinburgh, drastically mutated from how Gray wrote it
N:I believe Old Blind Dogs are responsible for this version
N:lots of people believe this is a traditional Breton tune; it isn't
M:6/8
L:1/8
Q:3/8=120
F:http://www.campin.me.uk/Music/Modes/Modes-relatives.abc 2024-03-29 020344 UT
K:BMin
B>BB f>BB|e>BB d>BA|B>BB f>gf|e>cB A>Bc |
B>BB f>BB|e>BB d>ef|g>fe f>ed|e>cB A>Bc:|
K:D
a>fd d>cd|A>dd c3 |B>dd A>dd|d>cB c2A |
a>fd d>cd|A>dd c3 |B>dd A>dd|gec d3 :|
This pipe arrangement of a tune already given here moves between
mixolydian/dorian hexatonic in A and dorian in E:
X:0
T:The Ewie wi the Crookit Horn
G:jig
C:arr. John A MacLellan
M:6/8
L:1/8
Q:3/8=120
K:AMix
AAA A2B|G2A BGG|AAA A2B|d2B cAA|
d2c B2A|G2A BGG|A2B cAA|BGG A3:|
Bee e2f|d2e dBB|cee e2f|gee f2d|
[1 Bee e2f|d2e dBB|cee efg|fdd e3:|
[2 g2e fed|e2d cAA|Bee efg|fdd e3|]
This is a natural way of getting tonal variety on a bagpipe, since
changing the key signature is impossible. It can be useful on other
instruments. Here's an example of a set I constructed to play with
a friend who uses a lever harp. It never changes the absolute pitch
set, so she never needs to flip a lever. And for the hell of it,
there is no change in rhythmic pattern either, until the very last
tune. Instead the variety comes from a continual change in tonal
centre. It also alternates familiar and rarely-played tunes.
X:0
T:Two-Sharp Reel Set
G:set of reels
M:C|
L:1/8
Q:1/2=104
K:AMix
P:Kate Dalrymple
% A major/mixolydian hexatonic
A2Ac B2Bc|A2Ac B2Bc|A2a2 fedc|B2e2 c2A2:|
e2ef edcd|e2a2 e2c2|e2a2 e2a2|e2a2 e2c2 |
dddf ccce|BBBc edcB|A2a2 fedc|B2e2 c2A2|]
P:Prince Charlie
% E dorian
E2EF B2Bc|d2AG FDDF|E2EF B2Bc|dBAF GEEF |
E2EF B2Bc|d2AG FDDF|EFGA B2Bg|fdBd e2eB||
eBef geBg|fbag fddf|eBef geBg|bgaf e2eB |
eBef geBg|fdAG FEDe|geBg AfGe|FdAF E4 |]
P:Fairy dance
% D major
f2fd f2fd|f2fd cde2|f2fd gfed|cABc [1 d4 :|\
[2 defg||
a2af b2ba|gfge a2ag|f2fd gfed|cABc [1 defg:|\
[2 d4 |]
P:Hunter's Bog
% B minor
B2Bc d2ef|gfeg f2ed|c2BA e2dc|a3f ecAc |
B2Bc d2ef|gabg f2af|e3g fece|d2B2 B2c2 |
% D major
dAFA defd|gfed ceAc|d2ba gfed|ceBc A2dc |
B2gf edcB|Acdf a2gf|gbeg fadf|ceAc d2f2|]
P:Tail Todle
% D major/A mixolydian double tonic
d2fd g2fe|d2fd e2cA|d2fd g2fe|fgaf e2cA:|
g2dB B2dB|g2dB e2cA|g2dB B2dB|A2af e2cA:|
P:Short Coated Mary
% E mixolydian/dorian hexatonic
E2B2 BABc|d2AF DEFD|E2B2 BABc|d2AF E2E2:|
d2dB e2e2|d2d2 FFFD|d2dB e2e2|d2AF E2E2 |
d2dB e2e2|d2d2 FFFD|E2B2 BABc|d2AF E2E2|]
2. Double Tonic
===============
Some of the oldest tunes in the repertoire make systematic alternations
in mode between two tonal centres one step apart; most commonly between
the dorian mode and the relative major below it, or the mixolydian mode
and the relative minor below it. This technique is usually called a
DOUBLE TONIC. This is one way it is often used: the tune is centred on
G at the start (there isn't much more to it than G major arpeggios) but
ends with a broken chord of F.
X:0
T:Hielan Brochan
M:C|
L:1/8
Q:1/2=110
K:GMix
Bc|d2ge dBGB|dBgB d2Bc|d2ge dBGB|AFFA c2:|
Bc|dGBG dGGB|dGGB d2ge|dGBG dGGB|AFFA c2:|
Double tonic seems to be particularly common in 9/8 tunes, like these two
jigs where each half starts in the dorian and ends on the major a step
below. Almost all 9/8 tunes are circular dance melodies; the bars in the
major are intended to lead back to a repeat. (The first is also known in
England and Ireland under a variety of names; the second is one of the
oldest of a family of tunes which includes the recent Irish slip jig "The
Butterfly"). This kind of tune probably originated in northern England
late in the 17th century as a variant of the older 3/2 hornpipe.
X:0
T:Brose and Butter
G:jig
S:Bremner via Murdoch Henderson
M:9/8
L:1/8
Q:3/8=120
K:ADor
cde AcA AcA|cde AcA B2G|cde AcA ABc|B2G Gge dBG:|
cde ege ege|cde ege dBG|cde ege efg|f2d dge dBG:|
X:0
T:I Have a Wife of My Ain
G:jig
M:9/8
L:1/8
Q:3/8=120
K:EDor
EFE GGA B3|E2E G2A BGE |\
E2E GGA B3|D2D dcB AFD||
gag fgf e3|E2E G2A BGE |\
g2g fgf e3|D2D dcB AFD|]
Double tonic tunes may take a more emphatic form where the shift is not
between two relative modes, but between two keys with different signatures.
This tune hints at that. It's mostly in E dorian, but each part ends
in D, the same tonal shift as the previous two tunes. The E tonality is
reinforced by a sharpened leading note:
X:0
T:Mrs McDonalds Reel
S:M. Murray's MS for piano, 1817 (in my possession)
M:C|
L:1/8
Q:1/2=104
K:EDor
F|E2EF BEEF|E2EF dFDF|E2EF EFGA|B/c/d AG FDD:|
F|Eee^d eEEF|Eeec dDDF|Eeed Bcdc|Bbfe dDD:|
This tune by Niel Gow is the full monty, alternating between D major and
C major:
X:0
T:Lady Charlotte Murray's Favorite
C:Niel Gow
G:jig
M:6/8
L:1/8
Q:3/8=120
K:D
A/G/|F2D DFD|dFD AFD |E/=F/GE =CEG|dGE =CEG|
F2D DFD|dFD AFD |G=cG EFG|AFD D2:|
g |f2d dfd|afd de=f|e2=c cec|gec efg|
f2d dfd|afd efg |fdf ece|dAF D2g|
f2d dfd|afd de=f|e2=c cec|gec efg|
afa geg|fdf edc |Adc cBc|dAF D2|]
The country dance "Staten Island" (originally a Scottish tune from the late
eighteenth century called "Burns' Hornpipe") almost sounds like a parody of
that favourite compositional trick of Niel Gow's:
X:0
T:Staten Island
G:reel, country dance
M:C|
L:1/8
Q:1/2=108
K:D
AG|FDFG A2A2|dfed dcBA| B2GB A2FA | G2E2 E2AG |
FDFG A2A2|dfed dcBA| d2d2 efge | f2d2 d2 :|
fg|a2fa g2eg|f2df ecA2|=c2c2 e=fge|=c2c2 e=fge|
a2fa g2eg|f2df ecA2| d2d2 efge | f2d2 d2 :|
That tune may have been around for a while, but it still sounds more like a
joke that caught on than an organic outgrowth of the older Scottish idiom.
The earliest versions I've seen of it are in D major throughout.
This is an example from far outside Scotland where the double tonic is
explicitly marked by a moving drone. It's a two-part song from Abkhazia,
in dorian/minor hexatonic mode: each of the first seven phrases ends on
the tonic but the ending drops a tone below, suggesting major/mixolydian
hexatonic.
X:0
T:Untitled Abkhazian Song
S:Garland Encyclopaedia of World Music: Europe, p.852
M:2/4
L:1/8
Q:1/4=60
K:G#Min
[V:1] B4|[M:3/4] dB c2A2|G6 |[M:2/4] B4 |[M:3/4] dB c2 HA2 |[M:2/4] G4 |
[V:2] z4|[M:3/4] z4 z2|G,6|[M:2/4] F,4-|[M:3/4] F,4- HF,2|[M:2/4] G,4|
%
[V:1] B4 |dd c2|Bc A2|G4 |[M:3/4] B6 |dB c2 A2|[M:2/4] G4 |
[V:2] F,4-|F,4- |F,4 |G,4|[M:3/4] F,6-|F,6 |[M:2/4] G,4|
%
[V:1] [M:3/4] B4 BB|(3dBc B2 A2|[M:2/4] G4 |B4 |(3BdB (3cBc|B2 A2|G4 |
[V:2] [M:3/4] F,6- | F,6 |[M:2/4] G,4|F,4| F,4- |F,4 |G,4|
%
[V:1] B4 |dB cc|B2 A2|G4 |B4 |AB A2|HF4 |]
[V:2] F,4-|F,4- |F,4 |G,4|F,4-|F,4 |HF,4|]
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== (c) Jack Campin http://www.campin.me.uk/ October 2012 ==
== 11 Third Street, Newtongrange, Midlothian EH22 4PU, Scotland ==
== ==
== these pages: http://tinyurl.com/scottishmodes ==
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