“Irish”
flutes
People play Irish traditional music
on all kinds of flutes: bamboo, polymer, modern metal ‘Boehm System’ concert flutes, even bicycle pumps with holes
drilled in the side! But the flute most identified with Irish traditional music
is the wooden, six-holed instrument sometimes called the ‘Irish’ flute.
It’s usually made of blackwood or grenadilla, the same tropical wood used to make clarinets, but in recent years
the tree has been on the verge of becoming endangered, and new woods are being adopted.
These wooden flutes are the descendants
of the common flutes of the eighteenth and early nineteenth century, with some improvements and tweaking by modern makers
to allow them to hold their own in sessions or solos. These flutes were known
as “simple system,” because they had the same six toneholes as whistles, with keys added randomly over time to
allow accidentals to be played. They survived in two traditions, Irish dance music and Cuban charanga.
Other
than their material, they differ from the familiar modern flutes because of their conical or tapered bore or shape, which
helps focus the sound. Back in George Washington’s time, the ideal sound
of these flutes was somewhere between an oboe and a clarinet, and no one made flutes that epitomized this better than the British firm of Rudall & Rose. Today,
most modern flutemakers base their designs on those of this long-gone firm.
No one knows exactly when or how flutes
were incorporated into traditional playing. The first recordings of Irish
flute were made of Leitrim player John McKenna in the U.S. in the 1920s. McKenna’s
home area of Leitrim, along with neighboring parts of Counties Roscommon and Sligo, was one
region where flutes were common in house dances. East Galway, where modern
players Mike Rafferty and Jack Coen emigrated from, was another. These two areas
developed distinct styles, but today players may incorporate all kinds of influences.
Some like Matt Molloy, the acknowledged master among modern Irish flute players, imitate piping techniques.
The wooden Irish flute lacks the volume
of modern metal flutes, but blends in with most other instruments and emerges in slowed down versions of dance music, in slow
airs, and in fast rhythmic tunes as well. Although traditional music can also be played on the metal flute, as great players
like Joannie Madden and Noel Rice demonstrate, the unkeyed holes of the wooden flute make it easy to keep the fingers flying
along with the lively dance music of the tradition.Some flutes have keys for common accidentals, but the instrument can often
do just as well keyless.
Among the best-known and most respected of the many wooden flutemakers of today are Patrick Olwell of Virginia, Michael
Grinter of Australia, and Sam Murray and Hammy Hamilton of Ireland.