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Union Pipes - Irish Traditional Music Archive

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COUrTney’S ‘UnIOn PIPeS’ AnD The TerMInOlOgy OF IrISh BellOWS-BlOWn BAgPIPeS 60<br />

Dublin in the same year a ‘Mr. Martin Carty, professor of the union<br />

pipes’ died in St Mary’s lane. 176<br />

Back in london, in April 1796, a Mr Topham, otherwise unknown,<br />

was briefly playing ‘<strong>Union</strong> <strong>Pipes</strong>’ with Weippert on harp in a london<br />

production of John O’Keefe’s The Lad of the Hills, or The Wicklow<br />

Gold Mine, 177 and in April 1797 a writer in The True Briton of<br />

london was complaining that the ‘<strong>Union</strong> <strong>Pipes</strong>’ had been left out of<br />

the overture to Oscar and Malvina in Covent garden. 178<br />

But by May 1798 ‘Mr. Murphy’, the piper-servant with Dublin<br />

connections noted earlier in edinburgh and london, Courtney’s<br />

fellow-piper before the highland Society of london in 1788 but long<br />

since eclipsed by him, was filling the gap left by Courtney on a more<br />

permanent basis and finally coming into his own. he was performing<br />

in Covent garden ‘Solo on the <strong>Union</strong> <strong>Pipes</strong>’, accompanied on the<br />

harp by Weippert in a musical interlude The Starboard Watch. 179 As<br />

seen, John Murphy had earlier described himself as a player of the<br />

‘<strong>Irish</strong> <strong>Pipes</strong>’ but he was now always using Courtney’s term, even<br />

when applying as before for a position in service or for playing for<br />

‘ladies and gentlemen at their houses, and Parties at taverns, 180 or<br />

advertising that he intends publishing his own compositions. 181 he<br />

seems also to have filled Courtney’s place for a time as the regular<br />

176<br />

Hibernian Journal, Dublin, 12 Dec. 1796.<br />

177<br />

The Times, london, 9 Apr. 1796. Topham may have belonged to a london family<br />

of dancers and actors of the name who had been prominent in the early<br />

eighteenth century (see highfill et al.: 15, 27–9). he is not heard of again. An<br />

edward Topham wrote four plays that were produced at Covent garden in the<br />

1780s (Stephens 2004), but he is not known to have been a musician.<br />

178<br />

15 Apr. 1797.<br />

179<br />

The Oracle and Public Advertiser, london, 23 May 1798.<br />

180<br />

The Times, london, 9 June 1798.<br />

181<br />

Morning Chronicle, london, 2 Jan. 1799.

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