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Folklife Festival 2003 > Scotland > Crafts > Scottish Harp
 
clarsach / scottish harp
   
CLARSACH - THE SCOTTISH HARP

 

Over the years, Scottish traditional music has been played on a variety of instruments: fiddles (violins), flutes, whistles, cellos, accordions, concertinas, guitars, mandolins, citterns, bodhrans (single-headed flat drum), and pianos. But none are more closely identified with Scotland than the bagpipe and the clarsach (harp).

Ancient images of small, triangular Scottish harps and harpers dating back to at least the 8th century C.E. are found on Celtic crosses and stone carvings throughout Scotland. In 1187, the Welsh monk and historian Giraldus Cambrensis wrote that many people preferred Scottish harpers to those of Ireland. Historically, the term "harp" was used for gut-strung instruments plucked with the fingers; clarsach referred to wire-strung harps, which were played with long fingernails.

During the Middle Ages, harpers were employed by Scottish clan chiefs and nobility. In the Highlands, harpers often accompanied clan chiefs into battle until the 16th century, when they were replaced by bagpipers. One of the best-known early harpers was Rory Dall Morrison (known as "The Blind Harper," circa 1660 - circa 1713), who served the Chief MacLeod of Dunvegan on the Isle of Skye.

After the decline of the Highland clans in the 18th century, the Scottish clarsach waned in popularity and was replaced by larger, pedal harps introduced from England and the Continent. In 1891, Lord Archibald Campbell commissioned an Edinburgh bagpipe maker to build a replica of an ancient clarsach in the National Museums of Scotland. In 1892, Campbell sponsored a clarsach competition at the Gaelic Mòd to encourage use of the instrument. It worked, and the past century has seen a major revival in clarsach playing.

Scottish harp-maker Jack Yule was born into a family of plowmen and foresters in East Lothian, Scotland, and served a formal apprenticeship as a boat builder at Cockenzie on the Firth of Forth before establishing himself as a joiner and cabinetmaker. He turned his skills to harp-making in the early 1980s, and his instruments are now played by leading Celtic harpers throughout the world. He recently moved from Scotland to Colorado.

 
 
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Yule Harps/Jack Yule

—This Scottish harp maker recently moved from Silverburn, Midlothian, to Colorado. Born into a family of ploughmen and foresters in East Lothian, he served a formal apprenticeship as a boat builder at Cockenzie on the Firth of Forth before establishing himself as a joiner and cabinetmaker. He turned his skills to harp making in the early 1980s, and his instruments are now played by leading performers of the Celtic harp throughout the world.

 
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