Piobaireachd lovers will enjoy the new additions to the PP Audio Archive added today, writes the Editor. They are of the playing of the celebrated master piper John MacDonald, Inverness.
He gives us the ground and first variation of the Lament for Donald Ban MacCrimmon, and the grounds of the Wee Spree and MacCrimmon’s Sweetheart. Of the latter, I think it is fair to say that we would seldom hear the tune cut so much as MacDonald does in this recording, and I wonder if judges today would accept this way of playing the urlar.
The Wee Spree is beautifully handled with all the expert timing one would expect from the maestro. Donald Ban is superbly played too though the first strikes of the double echoes are more tightly controlled than we would perhaps hear them in the 21st century. Bear in mind that these recordings may be 100 years old.
They are all from 78rpm discs on the Columbia label and we are grateful to British Columbia piper Ed McIlwaine for passing them on. How much John MacDonald felt he had to push his tempos to get the various excerpts on to the one side of the disc we will never know. But this will have been a consideration given that they would have been done live and probably etched as he played.
‘One last word about my teachers. John Macdonald justly merits the reputation which he possesses of being a most beautiful piobaireachd player. He is universally so described by all those who know anything about the music. [John] MacDougall Gillies is nevertheless his superior, incomparably so in knowledge and also as a player in everything but mere technique. There is far more feeling and expression in Gillies’s rendering of a tune than in anything Macdonald can produce….’
Listening to ‘the Sweetheart’ I would say Campbell has a point; but on the other hand I do not think John MacDonald’s Little Spree, as regards plangent emotion, could be bettered. It is one of our saddest tunes no question, and in my opinion he handles it beautifully. Others will have their own opinions. Going back to MacCrimmon’s Sweetheart, isn’t it strange – or perhaps not – that the playing of this tune is so different from that espoused by MacDonald’s greatest pupils RB Nicol and RU Brown – at least on the evidence of the Masters of Piobaireachd CDs?
Read more about John MacDonald here. You can access the new recordings and our complete library of music here. They are brought to you free of charge thanks to your support for our advertisers and the Piping Press Shop. In addition to the Masters of Piobaireachd CDs, there is much more on the teaching of John MacDonald and the Bobs of Balmoral in Jimmy McIntosh’s seminal work ‘Ceol Mor – Piobaireachd in the Balmoral Tradition’ available here.