Incorporating Grace Notes into Your Fiddling

by adminKFS on · 5 comments

How do I get over the hump of incorporating grace notes into my music?

This is an interesting subject for me to approach as a teacher of traditional music. As a child learning the fiddle in Cape Breton, I don’t remember learning style specifics like bowings or grace notes. I have a few memories of certain instructors like Sandy MacIntyre and Stan Chapman at the Gaelic College in St Ann’s, Cape Breton addressing these issues, but other than that, I learned these stylistic nuances by listening to the music as my second language. Listening – actively, and passively – is the only way that you will gain an inherent understanding of what grace notes are common to a style and get a sense of where to put them. I often get asked “how do you know which grace note to put where?”

This is a difficult question to answer. Grace notes are used to add accent and emphasis to certain notes. Speaking for the Cape Breton style, there is a common pool of grace notes and types of drones and bowings that each fiddler draws from and incorporates in their own way. No fiddler graces a tune the same way, but after you listen to many players in this style, you’ll notice that there are common sounds. When you do a lot of listening- a combination of transcribing and just listening for pleasure- you’ll gain a sense of these common sounds and an inherent understanding of how to use them. In my lessons, my goal is to not only teach the technique of common grace notes within the Cape Breton style, but to make students aware of the sounds so that they can better pick them out themselves when they are listening.

Incorporating grace notes into your playing can make it sound more stylistic. But often times when students try to put in grace notes before they have tunes down, the grace notes can get in the way of the melody. The timing can be lost trying to work them in. You may be anticipating the grace note and play the melody note ahead of the beat or the grace note may completely bog down the note and you may fall behind the beat. The best advice I can give is to first learn the tunes with good time without any grace notes. Check your timing against a metronome. Maybe start with a particular grace note that is easy for you and try to work in in one phrase. Make that phrase a drill that you practice over and over until you become comfortable with it. Then try playing through the whole tune and see how the grace note feels.

Also, listen to how you are playing the grace note. Is the grace note overwhelming the melody note? This is also a common issue when first beginning to incorporate grace notes. The grace notes sound busy and the melody notes get lost. In many cases, especially in quicker dance tunes like jigs and reels, the grace notes need to be very tight and percussive sounding. You are not aiming for a particular note with the grace note, but rather just a break in sound, a percussive sound.

Treat music like learning a language. The more you become immersed, stylistic aspects of the music will increasingly feel more like a part of you and that will come out it your music.

Please let me know of your experience incorporating grace notes into your music!

“Stories of AIDS” Please take a look at this great project…

by adminKFS on · Leave a comment

With this post I want to make you all aware of a great project called Stories of AIDS. This project is led by my good friend and fellow musician Andrew Magill from Asheville, North Carolina who was the winner of the fulbright-mtvU fellowship to travel to Malawi and record the stories of people there affected by the virus. Stories of AIDS is a concept album where each song has been inspired by a narrative Andrew collected while in Malawi. In his own words “Of 26 recorded narratives, ten were selected to be crafted into song, often weaving direct quotations from the narrators themselves with lyrics in Chichewa and English. The narratives reflect a range of socioeconomic backgrounds and personal relationships of people living with HIV/AIDS. Each song is designed to musically capture the story and personality of the individual profiled. Through these ten individuals the listener will learn about a diversity of issues which reveal the kaleidoscope of social contexts and dynamics of Malawi’s AIDS epidemic.

Andrew worked with social activist and popular Malawian recording artist Peter Mawanga to produce the project. The album features musicians from both Malawi and the US and draws on both Andrew and Peter’s musical influences- jazz, traditional Irish music, Congolese soukou music, traditional Chewa rhythms and more. By bringing together these musicians and styles of music, Andrew wants to emphasize the idea that “this music and these stories truly transcend culture. It is our hope that this music will open up a similarly cross-cultural conversation about AIDS between the people, personalities, and stories from other cultures singularly connected by this virus. The message of this music is hope not defeat. Reinvigoration not resignation. Life not death.”

I had the pleasure of performing for a fundraising concert for this project when I was teaching at the Swannanoa Gathering in Asheville, NC. In October, Andrew will be bringing over musicians from Malawi to the Asheville area for the CD release. Please visit storiesofaids.com to learn more about this fantastic project.

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