- Celtic music in the United States
Irish and
Scottish music have long been a major part of American music, at least as far back as the 19th century. Beginning in the 1960s, performers like theClancy Brothers become stars in the Irish music scene, which dates back to at least the colonial era, when many Irish immigrants arrived. At first, these were mostlyScots-Irish Presbyterian s, whose music was most "closely related to a Lowland Scottish style" ref|lowlandScots.The most significant impact of
Celtic music on American styles, however, is undoubtedly that on the evolution ofcountry music , a style which blends Anglo-Celtic traditions with "sacred hymns andAfrican American spirituals". Country music's roots come from "Americanized interpretations of English, Scottish, Scots and Scots-Irish traditional music, shaped by African American rhythms, and containing vestiges of (19th century) popular song, especially (minstrel songs)" ref|Irishcountry. This fusion of Anglo-Celtic and African elements "usually consisted of unaccompanied solo vocals sung in a high-pitched nasal voice, the lyrics set to simple melodies (and using) ornamentation to embellish the melody"; this style bears some similarities to the traditional song form ofsean-nós , which is similarly highly-ornamented and unaccompanied ref|seannos.Celtic-Americans have also been influential in the creation of
Celtic fusion , a set of genres which combine traditional Celtic music with contemporary influences.Irish American Music
Irish émigrés created a large number of "emigrant ballads" once in the United States. These were usually "sad laments, steeped in nostalgia, and self-pity, and singing the praises... of their native soil while bitterly condemning the land of the stranger" ref|emigrantballads. These songs include famous songs like "
Thousands Are Sailing to America " and "By the Hush ", though "Shamrock Shore " may be the most well-known in the field.Francis O'Neill was aChicago police chief who collected the single largest collection of Irish traditional music ever published. He was a flautist,fiddle r and piper who was part of a vibrant Irish community in Chicago at the time, one that included some forty thousand people, including musicians from "all thirty-two counties of Ireland", according to Nicholas Carolan, who referred to O'Neill as "the greatest individual influence on the evolution of Irish traditional dance music in the twentieth century" ref|ChicagoIrish.In the 1890s, Irish music entered a "golden age", centered on the vibrant scene in New York CityFact|date=August 2007. This produced legendary fiddlers like James Morrison and Michael Coleman, and a number of popular dance bands that played pop standards and dances like the foxtrot and
quickstep s; these bands slowly grew larger, adding brass and reed instruments in abig band style ref|goldenage. Though this golden age ended by the Great Depression, the 1950s saw a flowering of Irish music, aided by the foundation of theCity Center Ballroom inNew York Fact|date=August 2007. It was later joined by aroots revival in Ireland and the foundation ofMick Moloney 'sGreen Fields of America , an organization that promotes Irish music ref|modernIrish.During the late 20th century came the rise of Celtic inspired rock groups like
Flogging Molly , who reside inLos Angeles ,Black 47 fromNew York , The Shillaly Brothers, also fromLos Angeles and theDropkick Murphys fromBoston .amples
References
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*cite book|author=Sawyers, June Skinner|title=Celtic Music: A Complete Guide|year=2000|publisher=Da Capo Press|id=ISBN 0-306-81007-7Notes
# Miller, Rebecca. "Irish Traditional and Popular Music in New York City: Identity and Social Change, 1930-1975", cited in Sawyers, pg. 225
# Sawyers, pg. 229
# Carolan, cited in Sawyers, pgs. 237-239
# Sawyers, pgs. 242-243
# Sawyers, pg. 247
# Sawyers, pgs. 189-190
# Sawyers, pg. 198Further reading
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*External links
* [https://home.comcast.net/%7Eccusane/Festivals.html CCUSA-Northeast Region] The listing for Scottish, Irish,and Celtic concerts and tours for the Northeast United States and Eastern Canada
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