10.03.2014 Views

Union Pipes - Irish Traditional Music Archive

Union Pipes - Irish Traditional Music Archive

Union Pipes - Irish Traditional Music Archive

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

31 COURTNEY’S ‘UNION PIPES’ AND THE TERMINOLOGY OF IRISH BELLOWS-BLOWN BAGPIPES<br />

favourite air of “Moggy Lauder” on the <strong>Union</strong> <strong>Pipes</strong>, by the<br />

celebrated Mr. Courtney’. 86 This venue could also hold 2,000; it was<br />

owned and managed by the <strong>Irish</strong> playwright Richard Brinsley<br />

Sheridan. In the same theatre two nights before Courtney’s<br />

appearance on 20 May, a group of Scottish Highland pipers appeared<br />

in a<br />

... new Divertisement, consisting of Dialogue, Singing and<br />

Dancing, The <strong>Union</strong>: Or, St. Andrew’s Day. In the Divertisement<br />

will be introduced, The Highland Competition Prize, Exactly as<br />

represented annually in the City of Edinburgh, by M’Lane,<br />

M’Gregor, M’Tavish, and several other celebrated Pipers, who will<br />

perform several Strathspeys, Laments and Pebruchs. 87<br />

Ironically, given his opening up of the London stage for Scottish<br />

pipers, Courtney’s own biggest stage success would be playing the<br />

union pipes in a Scottish role. James Byrn or Byrne, a dancing<br />

master, had choreographed a ballet pantomime ‘taken from Ossian’<br />

entitled Oscar and Malvina, with ‘the new <strong>Music</strong> composed, and the<br />

ancient Scots <strong>Music</strong> selected and adapted, by Mr. Shield. The<br />

Overture by Mr. Reeve’. 88 Courtney played in the new piece<br />

accompanied at first by a German harper Charles Meyer, 89 but<br />

thereafter and regularly by another German harper John Erhardt<br />

Weippert (1766–1823). 90 In this presentation he would reach the<br />

pinnacle of his career.<br />

The spectacular production opened in the Theatre Royal, Covent<br />

Garden, on 20 October 1791. It had a resounding success, and had<br />

been performed over forty times before the season ended on 31 May<br />

86<br />

The World, London, 16 May 1791.<br />

87<br />

Diary or Woodfall’s Register, London, 18 May 1791.<br />

88<br />

Morning Post and Daily Advertiser, London, 20 Oct. 1791.<br />

89<br />

Hogan 1968: 1399. Byrn danced the role of Oscar.<br />

90<br />

For Weippert see Highfill et al.: 15, 335–7.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!