whose End is Pleasure.
The heart of the ScotMus project is "the music itself" — without knowing that, there's not much point reading about it. But listening to the music without grasping its cultural meaning is equally pointless. There's a much longer and deeper tradition of Scottish writing about music, and writings about Scottish music, than most folks realise. The story actually begins in Late Iron Age Latin, developing through native Latin, Cymric, Gaelic and Anglian/Scots/English traditions.
Writing per se is far older than musical writing (notation). So our earliest evidence for Scottish (or any other) music isn't actually "the music itself", but a precious scattering of ancient scribblings (often poetry & lyric). Of course, archaeological evidence pre-dates even the oldest writings. But, ironically, our knowledge of that evidence is a fairly recent development. Nonetheless, you'll find it here, too.
| Author | Text | Type | Language | Date |
| Cornelius Tacitus | "The Caledonian Cantus" | excerpt | c.Latin | c.AD 98 |
| Aneirin Gwawdrydd, et al | The Book of Aneirin [ external preview ] | Verse | o/m.Welsh * | c.600+ |
| Giraldus Cambrensis | "Gaelic and Welsh Instrumental Music" | excerpt | m.Latin | 1188 |
| Thomas Rymour, et al | "Musical Signs of the May-Queen" | excerpt | o.Scots * | c.1280+ |
| anonymous | "Sir Fergus, Saint Ninian and Minstrel Jack" | excerpt | o.Scots | c.1368 |
| Richard Holland | "Blessed Birdsong vs. Bardic Babble" | excerpt | o.Scots | c.1450 |
| Robert Henrysoun | The Traitie of Orpheus Kyng | Poem | m.Scots | c.1508 |
| [ Robert Sempill ] | The Life and Death of the Piper of Kilbarchan | Poem | Scots | c.1645 |
| Allan Ramsay | To the Musick Club | Poem | English | 1721 |
| Robert Bremner (jnr?) | Instructions for the Guitar | Tutorial | English | 1758 |
| Benjamin Franklin | "Letter to Lord Kames on the Scotch Tunes" | Letter | English | 1765 |
| William Tytler | Dissertation on the Scottish Music | Essay | English | 1779 |
| William Tytler | Entertainments in Edinburgh in the Last Century | Essay | English | 1792 |
| Adam Smith | Of the Imitative Arts | Essay | English | 1795 |
| [ Rev. Dr. MacKnight ] | A Brief Biographical Account of Neil Gow | Article | English | 1809 |
| Thomas Carlyle | The Life of Robert Burns | Essay | English | 1828 |
| Thomas Carlyle | Luther's Psalm | Article | English | 1831 |
| [ Joseph Macgregor ] | Nathaniel Gow | Article | English | 1835 |
| anonymous | Neil Gow | Article | English | 1835 |
| Thomas Carlyle | The Opera | Article | English | 1852 |
| Robert Glen | The Ancient Musical Instruments of Scotland | Essay | English | 1880 |
| Marjory Kennedy-Fraser | Lowland Scots Song: Its Interpretation | Essay | English | 1922 |
| Marjory Kennedy-Fraser | Pronunciation in Lowland Scots Song | Essay | English | 1922 |
Language Key: c.Latin = Classical Latin; m.Latin = Medieval Latin; o.Welsh = Old Welsh; m.Welsh = Middle Welsh; o.Scots = Older Scots (Inglis); m.Scots = Middle Scots (Scottis); Scots = Modern Scots. * asterisks indicate particularly-hybrid dialects.
Translations: Most texts in pre-Modern / non-English languages are printed here in bilingual editions, ie. with modern English translations (normally my own, as time allows). The main exceptions to this rule are some of the longer texts in older forms of Scots, not least those in forms relatively close to modern Scots. If you have difficulties with any period of Scots, then I can warmly recommend using the excellent online and free-to-access Dictionary of the Scots Language (DSL), hosted at the University of Dundee. The DSL is built on a reliable and thorough digital combination of two vast and classic resources that would otherwise cost you a very pretty bawbee indeed — the Dictionary of the Older Scottish Tongue, and the Scottish National Dictionary.
Authors: Authors' names as given are those either known, proven or generally accepted either by scholarship or by tradition. Names given in square brackets are probable or widely-accepted hypotheses for otherwise anonymous texts.
Titles: Titles given in italics are either the author's original, given by another in one or other manuscript or in the first print edition, or otherwise generally accepted by scholarship or by tradition. Titles given in "quotes" normally indicate my own labels for excerpts I've made myself from larger source texts. In either case, details of my sources and their provenance are given in the notes to each of my editions.
A Selection of Forthcoming Titles:
(sources already acquired)
The "Taliesin" Poet(s), excerpts re North Brythonic traditions, etc. (various dates)
Bede, excerpts on Northumbrian music, etc. (C8th)
Giraldus Cambrensis, excerpts on Welsh & Northumbrian singing (C12th)
Gawyne Dowglas, The Palis of Honoure (c.1501)
King James VI, Ane Schort Treatise, Conteining Some Reulis & Cautelis to be Observit and Eschewit in Scottis Poesie (1584)
John Burel, The Queens Majesties Maist Honorable Entry into the Town of Edinburgh (1590)
John Forbes, A Brief Introduction to Musick (1682)
Alexander Malcolm, A Treatise of Musick, Speculative, Practical and Historical (1721)
Alexander Gerard, Of the Sense or Taste of Harmony (1759)
John Gregory, Discourse III (1763)
Robert Fergusson, The Daft Days (1773; repr.1779)
Robert Fergusson, Elegy on the Death of Scots Music (1773; repr.1779)
James Burnett, Of the Origin and Progress of Language (1773-92)
James Beattie, Essays on Poetry and Music (1776)
Edward Topham, Letters from Edinburgh (1776)
Thomas Blacklock, "Music" from Encyclopædia Britannica (1784)
Jean le Rond d'Alembert (trans. ?Blacklock in Enc.Brit.), "Of the Fundamental & Continued Bass" (1784)
Archibald Alison, Of Composed Sounds, or Music (1790)
John Gunn, "Of Shakes, Turns, and Other Graces" (c.1795)
Alexander Campbell, A Dialogue on Scottish Music (1798)
Alexander Campbell, Some Curious Particulars Respecting Our Highland Dances (1804)
John MacCulloch, "Letters to Walter Scott on Highland Music" (1824)
William Dauney, Enquiry Illustrative of the History of the Music of Scotland (1838)
Finlay Dun, Analysis of the Structure of the Music of Scotland (1838)
John Alexander Smith, Notice... of a Bronze Ornament like a "Swine's Head", found in Banffshire (1867)
R.W. Cochran-Patrick, Note on the Caprington Bronze Horn (1878)
Charles D. Bell, Notes on the Queen Mary and Lamont Harps (1880)
James Dick, "Auld Lang Syne"—Its Origin, Poetry, and Music (1892)
D.P. Menzies, Note on the "Bannockburn" Bagpipes of Menzies (1895)
Marjory Kennedy-Fraser, Hebridean Song and the Laws of Interpretation (1922)
Also Various Readers/Sourcebooks for the Following Figures:
John Knox
John Skene of Hallyards
John & Henry Playford
William Thomson
Niel Gow & Sons / Gow & Shepherd
Robert Burns
Robert Louis Stevenson
And, of course, a series of new essays by myself dealing with the issues raised by all of the above,
and, most importantly of all, the albums in the music section.
Meanwhile, here's some I made in a previous incarnation:
Steve Sweeney-Turner, Bibliography of Scottish Writings on Music (1994)
— reprinted here from Appendix 2 of my PhD
Steve Sweeney-Turner, Reading "Scottish Classical Music": A Historiographical Critique (1997)
— reprinted here from The Journal of Area Studies No.10: "Nation, Place & Culture: Issues of Identity in Contemporary Europe"
Steve Sweeney-Turner, The Pastoral Celt: Images of the Gàidheal in Lowland Scots Song (1998)
— in Celtic Cultural Studies No.1: "Music & Identity"
Steve Sweeney-Turner, "Borderlines: Bilingual Terrain in Scottish Song"
— in ed. Leyshon, Matless & Revill, The Place of Music (New York: Guildford, 1998)
Steve Sweeney-Turner, "Pagan Airts: Reading Critical Perspectives on the Songs of Burns and Tannahill"
— in ed. Carol McGuirk, Critical Essays on Robert Burns (New York: GK Hall, 1998)
Steve Sweeney-Turner, "The Political Parlour: Identity and Ideology in Scottish National Song"
— in ed. Harry White & Michael Murphy, Musical Constructions of Nationalism (Cork: Cork University Press, 2001)