09 Feb 24 - 12:33 PM (#4196819) Subject: Tune Req: The Exile's Lament From: GUEST,Gallus Moll This is a long shot! - Does anyone know of Clan Lamont tunes from the 1600s? I am seeking the music for: Lament: The Exile's Lament /The Wanderer's Lament (Cumha an Fhograich) Salute: A Hundred Thousand Welcomes To Thee, MacLamont (Mhic Laomainn ceud failte dhuir) March: Captain MacLamont's March (Spaidsearachd Chaptein) - or any other Clan Lamont related tunes from that era? I have composed a song/ballad about the Siege of Toward Castle and subsequent Massacre at Dunoon of many members of Clan Lamont in May, 1646 and would like to find suitable music from that era.... tho I realise much of it would have been transmitted orally and perhaps lost in the massacre? Fingers crossed!! |
14 Feb 24 - 12:40 PM (#4197179) Subject: RE: Tune Req: The Exile's Raturn From: GUEST,Gallus Moll erm..... it would help if I had titled the first one correctly? The Exile's RETURN (not Lament!) |
14 Feb 24 - 02:06 PM (#4197185) Subject: RE: Tune Req: The Exile's Raturn From: cnd Hi Gallus. You may find the following book interesting: The Lamont clan, 1235-1935 (1938) by Hector McKechnie. I'll quote a portion below (pp. 37-39): Of what tunes were once played on the clarsach Laomannach and its fellows one can have little notion now. The harp music of the Lamonts has been lost for ever, but of the pipe music there are at the least five tunes of which the air is preserved, with three more of which the memory survives (or did in the last generation). Its value is immense for the recapture of the spirit of the old highlands. As Neil Munro has said, the piper who can fill the bag at a breath may “have parley with old folks of old affairs. Playing the tune of the ‘Fairy Harp,’ he can hear his forefolks, towsy-headed and terrible, grunting at the oars and snoring in the caves; he has his whittle and club in the ‘Desperate Battle,’... where the white-haired sea-rovers are on the shore, and a stain’s on the edge of the tide; or, trying his art on Laments, he can stand by the cairn of kings, ken the colour of Fingal’s hair, and see the moon-glint on the hook of the Druids!” And now for the tunes which should move the Lamonts to have converse with their past.[40] Maybe you've already found this, but I think it answers your final request (for Captain MacLamont's March) while noting that your first and second requested tune were unpublished as of 1938 and in danger of perishing. |
17 Feb 24 - 04:57 PM (#4197410) Subject: RE: Tune Req: The Exile's Return From: GUEST,Gallus Moll Thank you so much cnd!! It is great to meet someone with knowledge of the Lamont history! I had read some of the old Lamont History books in Library HQ at Sandbank, also some stuff down at the Lamont Museum, run by Mary Lamb, in the old manse of (former) Inverchaolain Church - - had also asked local pipers and The Piping Centre in Glasgow - to no avail. I do think that some of the tunes will have been lost, probably having been transmitted orally. died with the people who could sing or play them? I would really like to source an old Lamont associated tune that I could perhaps use or modify to set with the ballad I have composed about the Lamont Massacre at Toward Castle and Dunoon.- It does seem unlikely that any music from 1640s still exists......? I'll check out the sources you mention - who knows, perhaps a fragment will surface,,,,, fingers crossed! (a few years ago I composed The Ballad of The Death of Baron McIntourner who was murdered in 1685 on the Larach between Craighoyle and Whistlefield, near Ardentinny. I just made up a tune, was fortunate enough to find some fragments of Gaelic telling of the incident.) There is more info about The Lamont Massacre - but sadly not much access to music of the time (so far...) Shall post the Lamont Ballad as and when I get it completed! Thanks for responding. |
19 Feb 24 - 08:52 AM (#4197516) Subject: RE: Tune Req: The Exile's Return From: cnd Thanks for the kind words, but unfortunately the majority of the writing above (and all the impressive parts) is really a subject about which I know nothing -- I just enjoy sleuthing on the internet and found the book. Please do keep us abreast of your composition's development. |