Library and Information Services, Royal Conservatoire of Scotland

Showing posts with label Karen McAulay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karen McAulay. Show all posts

Friday, 9 October 2015

Common Threads Linking Plainsong, Scottish Song & Fiddle Music, and ... Legal Deposit???

October 2015  

On Monday 12th October at 6 pm, Karen has been invited to give one of the regular Exchange Talks here at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.  

Admission is free, but you need to get a ticket from the box office.

Here's a teaser - see if you can work out what the common thread is!

 Karen’s Masters was about mediaeval plainsong; her PhD explored 18th and 19th century Scottish song collecting, and her part-time postdoctoral AHRC research investigated Scottish fiddle-tune accompaniments.  Next, she’ll be examining the University of St Andrews’ historic, but little-known Copyright Music collection. 


In her Exchange Talk, she will reveal the common thread which has interlaced all her research activities.

Monday, 15 September 2014

Scottish versus English, Folk versus National, Tradition Versus Revival

And NOTHING to do with the referendum!

Karen wrote a blogpost about folk music last night - find it on her own blog, Karen McAulay Teaching Artist.  She has been reading a Faber reprint of a biography of the ardent folk music collector and educator, Cecil Sharp.  It was written by his close associate, Maud Karpeles.

Would you be interested in reading this book?  Royal Conservatoire of Scotland staff and students should contact the Whittaker Library if they're keen!

Thursday, 13 June 2013

Scottish Songbook by a Victorian Glasgow Music Professor

Readers may be interested to read the Summer issue of Musical Times, which contains an article on a Scottish Songbook by the first Euing Music Professor at what was to become the University of Strathclyde.

NB - The Whittaker Library has the paper copy of this journal - we don't have online access.  However, it'll be on JSTOR by 2017!

‘Appropriate melodies’ and ‘natural modes’: two Victorian Scottish songbooks, Musical Times, Summer 2013 pp.91-106 – we don’t have it online here at RCS, though we do have the paper version.
 



Monday, 18 March 2013

Our Ancient National Airs: Scottish Song Collecting from the Enlightenment to the Romantic Era

Karen's book is published by Ashgate today, 18 March!  (Yes, it's in stock at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland's Whittaker Library.)

There's going to be a small book-launch in the Whittaker Library at 4 pm on Friday 26th April, with a few words spoken by Karen and by the Head of Academic Development, and musical illustrations by some of our students and Karen Marshalsay, clarsach.

Tuesday, 19 February 2013

Thursday, 24 January 2013

Library Forthcoming Events

Two dates for your diary!

We have two more events coming up in the Whittaker Library. 

Tuesday 29th January @ 5 pm

On Tuesday 29th January at 5 pm, folklorist Margaret Bennett will be giving an illustrated talk about Celtic music in Newfoundland.  There's always a good turn-out, and a good time is had by all.  Come and join in!

Friday 26th April @ 4 pm

Looking ahead, Music and Academic Services Librarian Karen McAulay’s book, Our Ancient National Airs: Scottish song-collecting from the Enlightenment to the Romantic Era will be launched at an illustrated talk in the Whittaker Library on Friday 26th April at 4 pm. Musicians have been enlisted.  It will be loud.  And she’s still looking for a sax quartet to play some of the louder musical examples … volunteers, please?

Monday, 12 November 2012

Music Team at the Whittaker Library

Introducing Catherine Small, our new Assistant Librarian, who is working Tuesdays and Wednesdays while Music and Academic Services Librarian Karen McAulay is seconded as part-time postdoc research assistant on an AHRC-funded project.

Catherine Small and Karen McAulay

Thursday, 1 November 2012

Little and Large

Tuesdays & Wednesdays in the Whittaker Library, Royal Conservatoire of Scotland


'Whittaker' (aka Music and Academic Services Librarian Karen McAulay) has news for you!  While Karen is doing her postdoc research secondment thing on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, we're getting a new assistant librarian to provide cover.  

Her name is Catherine Small, and she's a music graduate who has just finished her librarianship Masters at the University of Strathclyde.  Catherine did a work placement with us earlier this year, and has been a cataloguing volunteer to gain experience of a vital skill.  Despite her name, she is taller (and slimmer) than Karen, so you won't get us mixed up!

All together, now - a big, warm, Whittaker welcome to Catherine, and we hope she'll soon feel very much at home with us.

Wednesday, 23 May 2012

How far can a song travel?

This evening, I've been reading a new library book - The Fiddletree, by Cape Breton fiddle-maker, Otis A. Tomas.  He made a number of string instruments from an old sugar maple tree.  As well as describing the making of the instruments, he provides the music for a number of tunes he has written, and an accompanying CD.

Here I sit in Scotland, enjoying music written and recorded in Cape Breton.  Nothing very unusual about that, today.

Torloisk, Mull. Now a holiday home
How much more unusual, though, is the idea that some well-born sisters on the Isle of Mull in the early 1800s should enjoy playing Hindu airs on the pianoforte?  The Maclean-Clephane's manuscript music collection is now in Trinity College Dublin, because the first part of the manuscript consists of transcriptions of harp tunes by the Irish Carolan.  However, I was able to see photocopies of the entire manuscript in the National Library of Scotland.

(If you're interested, the references are:- Trinity College Dublin, TCD MS 10615 and National Library of Scotland,MS 14949a-c)

Apart from the Irish harp tunes, the rest of the manuscript is mainly Gaelic song, but there are a few exotic imports.  Such as these intriguing entries:-

A Hindustani Air
A Hindostanee Air
A Malay Tune
East Indian Dancing Girl's Air

When I indexed the manuscript a few years ago, I hadn't time to transcribe the airs, but there's every chance they came from late 18th century English transcriptions of Indian tunes, such as the often-cited Twelve Hindoo Airs with English Words Adapted to them, ultimately published by Biggs c.1805, to words by Amelia Opie.  One day, I'll have to go back to Edinburgh and identify them!

It is incredible to imagine the effort that went into transcribing such tunes, and making the difficult journey back from the colonies to England, to  get words set to them, and then have the book published.  The Maclean-Clephanes visited Edinburgh and London often enough, so they probably bought a piano book on one of these trips, or copied the tunes from a friend's copy.  There was much interest in what would have been considered exotic oriental music around this time; some people even speculated about links between Scottish and Oriental scales in early musical history.  

The eldest sister, Margaret, married the Marquess of Compton and spent the rest of her days between Northampton and Europe, so we can only conjecture whether this particular manuscript went with her, or stayed with one of her sisters.  It was by no means the only song collection in their possession.  How lucky that it survives to this day!

Incidentally, this posting was inspired by Bibliolore's blogpost, Hindustani Harpsichord Music.
Further proof of the exciting possibilities offered by social networking, because neither would have happened before the advent of Web 2.0!

Copyright Dr Karen E McAulay
Music and Academic Services Librarian
Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.  23 May 2012. 

Monday, 21 May 2012

Cellos and Bellows: librarians' tweetup #GLTU4

Glasgow Library Tweetups Pay Us a Visit


Assorted librarians gathered to visit the Whittaker Library at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, and then the museum and newly refurbished library at the National Piping Centre, last Friday (18th May).  This was a joint effort organised by Anabel Marsh, with Karen McAulay at the Royal Conservatoire and James Beaton at the Piping Centre coordinating the visits to each venue.

Preceded by the James Clark lunchtime concert at the Royal Conservatoire, and rounded off by a meal at the Tryst, a congenial and informative visit was had by all.

The event has been blogged by Anabel Marsh - here, on the Glasgow Library Tweetups blog.  (There are pictures!) Anabel has also compiled a Storify story, to collate participant feedback - here

James Beaton, piping librarian and oral history project manager ('Noting the Tradition') at the National Piping Centre, contributed his own limerick report on the event:-


The blogs are quite full of it
James and Karen's big hit
They came, saw our books
And our most learned nooks
And went off and thought for a bit.


Saturday, 17 March 2012

Airs and graces (and red-nosed faces)

Misplaced my Airs!

Laden with cold, 'Whittaker' dragged himself out of bed this morning to get on with his extra-mural musicologist obligations.  Because 'he' was fuzzy-headed, he couldn't FIND the Alexander Campbell airs that he'd carefully copied out and stowed away after 'his' last speaking engagement.  Arghh!  Must devise a better filing system at home.

Finally, 'he' found them (so the next speaking engagement is assured of musical examples!), but not before he also found his own arrangement of a few airs into a suite for flute, viola and cello.  Hmm.  Interesting.  Wonder what they sound like?  Wonder how they'd fit in at a book-launch?

New Book (pending)

Some time in 2013, there will be a book by Karen McAulay, called Our Ancient National Airs.  It's based on my PhD thesis but with the addition of a completely new chapter (with which I'm rather enamoured, but then again, I'm biased).  I want to get this into the blogosphere because, naturally, I want lots of people to read it!  Right now, I'm revising and finalising the manuscript for submission: only six weeks to go!  And I've been selecting images.  Share them here?  Not on your life!  Buy the book!

The book covers Scottish song collecting from 1760-1888.  It's not just about Alexander Campbell (though he's one of my many favourites).  It's about published and a couple of unpublished collections.  And there are English as well as Scottish collectors.  To follow the story of A Music Librarian's First Book, you can read my own personal blog, True Imaginary Friends.  I'm sure I'm blissfully unaware of what's ahead of me after Submission Day!

Wednesday, 8 June 2011

The Thesis Whisperer - first anniversary of researcher support blog

  • Doing a PhD?
  • Feeling isolated or in need of support?
The Thesis Whisperer is a blog for doctoral research students, by Australian academic Inger Mewburn.  This week she celebrates the first anniversary of a blog that is decidedly going places.  It's helpful, informative and friendly.  A commentator described it as providing 'big sisterly' common-sense advice to researchers.

RSAMD Music & Academic Services Librarian Karen McAulay is a recent contributor to this blog.  We're proud to be associated with such a successful and worthwhile project.

Link to anniversary posting
Link to The Thesis Whisperer homepage