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Union Pipes - Irish Traditional Music Archive

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9<br />

InTrODUCTIOn OF ‘UnIOn PIPeS’<br />

the piper was once compared. 20 ‘Courtney’ on the other hand is a<br />

surname common in Ireland, even to the present day, and, as well as<br />

also being a form of the norman-French Courtenay there, is an<br />

anglicised version of more than one gaelic surname. 21 Courtney the<br />

piper – or his media handler – may have made the change to an almost<br />

identical surname that was known and accepted in Britain, one with<br />

flatteringly topical and aristocratic overtones. his experiences in the<br />

British provinces may have suggested that a slight change in surname<br />

for his london launch would be advisable. he may likewise have felt<br />

that a name-change would render his <strong>Irish</strong> pipes more acceptable to the<br />

musical public of the metropolis.<br />

To understand why Courtney or his promoters may have felt this, it is<br />

necessary to know something of the relative positions in 1788 london of<br />

Scottish and <strong>Irish</strong> music; it is mainly within the context of these ethnic<br />

musics that the union pipes would have their British future. It was Scottish<br />

music that had long been popular in london, in print and on the stage and<br />

in general musical culture, not <strong>Irish</strong>. There had been a certain fashion for<br />

Scottish culture in london since the accession of James VI and I to the<br />

english throne in 1603, and an increasing number of Scottish melodies<br />

were to be found in english publications from the mid-1600s. But in the<br />

last fifteen years of the seventeenth century there ‘a liking for Scotchstyle<br />

music became a positive craze’. 22 It was a craze that would last for<br />

over a hundred years. Chiefly this came about because of the innate<br />

attractiveness of Scottish (and faux-Scottish) melodies and songs to the<br />

20<br />

John Courtenay, born ‘Courtney’ in Co louth, see Thorne 2004. For the comparison<br />

see below.<br />

21<br />

The surname Courtney is found in various parts of Ireland but principally clusters in<br />

Kerry and adjoining counties and in southern Ulster. In gaelic it is Ó Curnáin, Mac<br />

Cuarta, etc. (Maclysaght 1996: 65).<br />

22<br />

Fiske 1983: 5. See Fiske for a detailed discussion of Scottish music in eighteenthcentury<br />

england.

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