| Based on some limited research on the Internet, the bodhran apparently was not widely used beyond certain limited circles until the 1960's. For example, here's a quote from the Wikipedia article on the bodhran: Dorothea Hast has stated that until the mid-twentieth century the
Bodhran was mainly used as a tray for separating chaff, in baking, as a
food server, and for storing food or tools. She argues that its use as
musical instrument was restricted to ritual use in rural areas. She
claims that while the earliest evidence of its use beyond ritual occurs
in 1842, its use as a general instrument did not become widespread
until the 1960s, when Sean O Riada used it.[3] If true, this makes even less likely that the bodhran would be spotted among banjo players in the U.S. in the 19th century. --- On Thu, 6/19/08, Joel H. <deuce...@verizon.net> wrote: |
From: Joel H. <deuce...@verizon.net> |
We are grateful to the Chieftains who successfully
introduced the bodhran to Irish traditional music in the
1960s. But we have evidence that a frame drum played with a
beater accompanied fiddle tunes at dances in North America
(Quebec) as far back as 1801. And tambos w/jingles were
played that same year at what appears to be the same venue.
Is this an early bodhran?
A watercolor painting by George Heriot, entitled the "Dance
in the Chateau St. Louis, Quebec" (1801), depicts a dance
with two fiddlers - and what appears to be a drummer with "a
stick in his hand, perhaps a beater for a small tambourine
hidden from our sight behind the man to his left."
http://www.lewis-clark.org/content/content-article.asp?ArticleID=1229
Painting of 1801 dance shows tambo w/jingles:
This watercolor of Heriot's "Minuets of the Canadians"
depicts two tambourine players.
1801 version
http://artefactscanada.chin.gc.ca:8015/Webtop/CHINApps/artefacts/newImgWin.jsp?currLang=English&i=0&j=0
1807 version:
http://www.lewis-clark.org/content/content-article.asp?ArticleID=1241
And the beat goes on, eh?
All the best,
Scott Miller
Saint Louis, Missouri
..
>..."Sixth-plate daguerreotype, ca. 1850s... These
>boys, most likely recent Irish immigrants, play a bodhran and a
>fiddle, probably to accompany traditional Irish dance tunes." I guess
>he drew the "Irish immigrants" conclusion based on the "bodhran" being
>played. Unfortunately the "bodhran" clearly has jingles attached...
| It's hard to tell details from the image. Perhaps a higher resolution image would help. Here's a link ( http://www.lewis-clark.org/content/content-article.asp?ArticleID=1813) from the same web site to a page entitled "That Tamboreen." It begins... There's no indication from the article that a bohdran is depicted. --- On Fri, 6/20/08, Scott C. Miller <sc...@bonedrymusic.com> wrote: |
It's hard to tell details from the image. Perhaps a higher resolution image would help. Here's a link (
http://www.lewis-clark.org/content/content-article.asp?ArticleID=1813) from the same web site to a page entitled "That Tamboreen." It begins...