Copperplate #1 [Reel] - Tune of the Month with Shannon Heaton

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024
  • Here's the first Copperplate (there are two of them, usually played as a set). This is the one in G, and it's a very danceable tune!
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Комментарии • 13

  • @lilunae
    @lilunae Год назад

    Fantastique !! You are the best ! I really hear well the way where you accentuate 2 and 4.. and I can do it with you !! Thanks a lot 🥰👏👍

    • @ShannonHeatonMusic
      @ShannonHeatonMusic  Год назад +1

      SO glad you can bring out the lift in this tune with me. Very exciting to have that dialog with the music... hope you enjoy!

  • @alisonk8840
    @alisonk8840 Год назад

    Thank you for this dear Shannon! I feel seen - and I'm getting that pulse - I think!

    • @ShannonHeatonMusic
      @ShannonHeatonMusic  Год назад

      LOVE this! It's a good tune, and thank you for reminding me of it.

  • @Jolene03
    @Jolene03 Год назад

    Thanks so much for doing these! As a person who is not familiar with this type of music at all (just beginning to dabble, but having so much fun!) I am so lost, but these are super helpful!

    • @ShannonHeatonMusic
      @ShannonHeatonMusic  Год назад

      It's a lot to digest--so many tunes, and so many different ways to play them (and lots of nuances, the deeper you get). Way to dive in, and so glad you are having fun. Immersion is such an excellent and often joyful way to learn, if overwhelming!

  • @sauliustb
    @sauliustb Год назад

    not an irish flute player(though I do have one laying around here), but I might give it a go on my recorder. Love the way how you go through the song!

    • @ShannonHeatonMusic
      @ShannonHeatonMusic  Год назад

      Doesn't matter what you play it on, it's how you play it! (I mean... within reason!). Also, if you learn to sing the song... and then learn it on the recorder or whistle or piano or anything... you can take it onto other instruments easily. Thanks for stopping by.

  • @harpbaby53
    @harpbaby53 Год назад

    Another nice one!
    Even though you do it for breath, I'm glad you say you sometimes alter the melody slightly to fit.
    I don't always have all the notes on my instrument, so sometimes it's neccessary, but I worry that some of my variations are straying from the melody a bit too much.
    Thanks for another great tune!

    • @ShannonHeatonMusic
      @ShannonHeatonMusic  Год назад +1

      The fact that you KNOW the melody--and know when you are straying from it--probably means your variations AREN'T too far afield!

  • @brucecollins641
    @brucecollins641 Год назад +1

    the copperplate is an irish variant of the scottish tune "caber feigh" musical priest....derived from the scottish tune...belhelvie house.....the boyne hunt.....from the scottish tune ..the perth hunt. there are too numerous to mention. type in.....routes and roots FINAL TEXT indb the donegal highland tunes origins and movement............then......irish traditional music feature ask about ireland.......then......music essays traditional irish ireland.....ceilidths/ceilidth music also from scotland accordians and all type in.....foster and allen set to bring their traditional magic to fife........you will see where they met their hero jimmy shand a well known scottish accordianist. he, alang with will starr and the earlier wyper brothers and more had a huge influence in irish accordian music. irish music only started in the late 50s early 60s(i know because a was around then). the clancies were actually actors. they sang a couple o irish ballads on the ed sullivan shoe. they then came back to the uk to their day jobs.they then got in to folk music and adopted many scots and english sangs. the dubliners formed in 62 and did the same. the furies in the 70s did the same and most more modern irish bands/singers are still singing from the same sangsheet.

  • @brucecollins641
    @brucecollins641 Год назад

    this is a scottish tune......maybe you should take time out to learn the origins of many"irish" fiddle reels.

    • @ShannonHeatonMusic
      @ShannonHeatonMusic  Год назад +1

      Ah, interesting. Thank you for helping me learn--the earliest recording of The Copperplate is Michael Coleman from Sligo in 1923. The oldest PRINTED version I could find was in Hugh McDermott's Irish fiddler from the 1920s (No. 55, p. 14). Please let me know an earlier source, so I can continue to learn about this classic old tune! Thank you. Bruce!