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They have no idea what they missed that day.
Hurrying down Galway's Shop Street many of them barely acknowledged the
man standing on a huge wooden barrel, wearing a cap topped off with a
huge feather. After all there's no shortage of people dressed peculiarly
and busking along this busy stretch of road.
They didn't give themselves enough time to be drawn in by the music of
this man, the nearest I've seen to a medieval minstrel in a long time.
The majority were prepared to give only the briefest of glances or a minute
of their time, and then they were off to spend more money.
"What is that?" asked one, pushing through the curious onlookers, pointing
at the wooden instrument in the dextrous hands of the bearded musician.
"That" was a hurdy-gurdy, also known in France – where it is extremely
popular – as a "Veille a Roue"
The sun lit up Lynch's castle; it was one of those afternoons that made
you think the summer might still make a last minute appearance, no matter
how late. The road was dry enough and warm enough to sit down, so as to
let this man gradually draw you into the web he weaved with his timeless
music.
Dressed in a suede shirt, the shoulder worn shiny by the bell-adorned
strap holding the 110 year old "Veille a Roue" to his chest, he beat out
a rhythm on the brown barrel with clog-clad feet, his eyes closed in rapture.
The complexity of the sounds he made was revealed with time – a melody
danced intricately over the constant drone of the background bass, punctuated
with the rhythmic rattling of the "chien".
The more he played the more the spell worked its magic, Breton and Basque
melodies both making their presence felt, and Irish reels and jigs giving
way to traditional Scottish airs. As instrumentals would blend into songs
his voice, verging on the unearthly, would lay down words I couldn't understand,
sometimes almost frenziedly, and other times mournfully.
His hurdy gurdy was an ornate work of art – intricate mother of pearl
perfectly complemented the decorated wood, the carved face of a woman
smiling enigmatically, as if she was lost in reverie, remembering all
the music played over the century of her life.
He took me from the bawdy revelry of a medieval banquet to a forest full
of trees and sunshine, from thoughts of things I knew, to things I'd never
dreamed of. And all while sitting on a street that had, until only 6 months
ago, been a choked nightmare of traffic, noise and fumes.
Pol O Ceallaigh got it right that afternoon – as soon as I closed my eyes
it all made total sense – it was trance music without a studio full of
electronics, a room full of people, or a head full of chemicals.
And then the music stopped, and I was back in Shop Street.
It was the first time I'd ever heard the hurdy-gurdy man, and it transformed
a day of duties in the city, making me glad I'd taken the time to listen.
To really listen. (14/9)
More Hurdy-gurdy info can be found @ http://www.hurdygurdy.com/hg/hghome.html,
http://www.mhs.mendocino.k12.ca.us/MenComNet.
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