Canntaireachd (Scottish Gaelic: literally, "chanting") is the ancient Scottish Highland method of noting classical pipe music or Ceòl Mòr by a combination of definite syllables, by which means the various tunes could be more easily recollected by the learner, and could be more easily transmitted orally. Nowadays, however, pipers tend to use standard musical staff notation to read and write various tunes, and anyone attempting to read this particular system needs some familiarity with Scottish Gaelic phonetics. It does still linger on in one or two places however. In general, the vowels represent the notes, and consonants the embellishments, but this is not always the case, and the system is actually extremely complex, and was not fully standardised. As Niel MacLeod of Gesto, who published the MacCrimmons' tunes in canntaireachd, took them down phonetically it is rather difficult to describe the system minutely. (The MacCrimmons of Skye were commonly considered to be the great piping dynasty of Scotland). This must not be lost sight of when "translating" tunes. It was first written down at the end of the 18th century, in the Campbell Canntaireachd (in the National Library of Scotland).
William Donaldson, in The Highland Pipe and Scottish Society 1750-1950 states:
The key note "Low A" is always represented in this notation by "in", probably a contraction of "An Dàra Aon", the second one, to distinguish the key note from the first note on the chanter—"low G". "High A" is always "i", but in a canntaireachd, it is often denoted by a preceding "l", thus "liu", and so confusion is avoided. "Low A" is either "in", "en", "em", or simply "n" after some notes. The alternatives seem to have been used for the sake of euphony.
"D" note is "a" and "B" note is "a", but the qualifying effect of the grace notes — "high G" represented by "h", and "D" represented by "d" or "h" (the latter a contraction of "a’ chorrag", the Gaelic name for the finger playing "D") prevents any confusion.
The note "E" is represented by "i". At the beginning of most of the MacCrimmon tunes and variations is "l", which gives the keynote. It stands for "E" (soh), the dominant of the "low A" (doh). Where it does not occur, the tune will be found to start with a word like "hien", which denotes "E" with "High G" grace note, and then "low A".
The vowel for "F" note is "ie", and it is always made certain by the grace note "d" or "h".
"High G" is "u", often distinguished by a preceding "h".
"High A" is often "vi" to distinguish it from the "E" note. When "F" succeeds "high A" in a tune, the word is often "vie".
The shake on "high A" is "vivi". The other shakes are represented by "rr", according to where the beats and shakes are taken from. This seems to be a contraction of "gearradh" meaning a "shake". A simple touch of a note before opening is always represented by a single "r". For instance, such a word as "radin" signifies that "B" is to be touched with "Low G" ("lùdag") before opening; "-din" is "low A" with "D" grace note. "Ho radin" is the "C" note "o" with "high G" grace note keeping the "ra-" below "D" note, also an "A" note.
2 – All grace notes in canntaireachd are represented by consonants.
3 – All compound forms are made by combining single forms.
4 – All leading or scale notes are represented by vowels.
5 – All note forms with "m" or "n" in them contain "low A".
6 – Grace notes "h" and "d" are qualifying or modulating grace notes.
7 – Doublings are represented by "dr", triplings by "tr", compound types by combinations of these.
8 – Open doublings above "D" are represented by "dir", such as "dirie", where the note is doubled by itself, and the note above it. "Dr" represents closed doublings, and "dir" open doublings.
"Hiodratatiriri" is a pure "cliabh-lugh"—the chest or creel of fingers, because every finger on the chanter is engaged in some way, either acting or acted on. In bagpipe music, the variations are all named from the acting fingers, and the old pipers counted their time from the number of fingers engaged in the several parts of the tune. "Chin-drine" may be taken as an example of the "leum-lugh", the jump of the fingers. This is "low A", played by "D" gracenote, then "G" doubled by "D", "low A" then opened, and "F" rapidly opened from it. "Hiriri" is an example of a beat form. The playing of two "low A"s by touching "low G" twice with the little finger is "ririn", or "rurin". The prosodic quality of the syllables, together with the spacing and punctuation, give the time and rhythm of the tunes.
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"Canntaireachd".
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