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Waulking songs (Scottish Gaelic:Òrain Luaidh) are Scottishfolk songs, traditionally sung in theGaelic language by women whilefulling (waulking) cloth. This practice involved a group of women, who traditionally prepared cloth, rhythmically beating newly woventweed or tartan cloth against a table or similar surface to lightly felt it and shrink it to better repel water. Simple, beat-driven songs were used to accompany the work.
A waulking session often begins with slow-paced songs, with the tempo increasing as the cloth becomes softer. As the singers work the cloth, they gradually shift it to the left so as to work it thoroughly. A tradition holds that moving the clothanticlockwise is unlucky.
Typically one person sings the verse, while the others join in the chorus. As with many folk music forms, the lyrics of waulking songs are not always strictly adhered to. Singers might add or leave out verses depending on the particular length and size of tweed being waulked. Verses from one song might appear in another, and at times the lead singer might improvise to include events or people known locally. The chorus to many waulking songs consists ofvocables, in which some of the words are meaningless, while others are regular Gaelic words (such astrom), but sometimes have no meaning in the context of the song.
The vocables serve a function similar to 'tra la la' or 'hey hey hey' in other song forms. Some waulking songs have a strict verse-and-chorus structure. In other songs, the vocables are sung at the end of each line of a verse. In a song like'S Fliuch an Oidhche ('Wet is the Night'), also known asCoisich a Rùin ('Come on, My Love'), the last two lines of one verse become the first two lines of the following one. A tradition holds that it is bad luck to repeat a song during a waulking session, which may explain in part both the many verses of some songs and the large number of songs.
While fulling is a common practice across the world, it is only in Scotland that music became so strongly associated with it as to become an importantcultural feature of the country. Waulking is rare in Scotland today, mostly confined to theOuter Hebrides, where it is carried out as a celebration of heritage. The last true waulking (for the purpose of making cloth) is believed[by whom?] to have occurred during the 1950s.[citation needed]
During theHighland clearances, traditional methods of waulking spread with theScottish diaspora. InNova Scotia, and in particular, onCape Breton Island, waulking is known asmilling. Although in Scotland women waulked cloth, in Nova Scotia both men and women took part inmilling frolics. The practice continues as a cultural celebration today.
The act of waulking, complete with a song, was showcased in Season 1 of the television seriesOutlander. As Claire Fraser travels theMackenzie lands with her eventual husband Jamie's party to collect rents, she spends time with a group of women who are waulking wool.
The act of waulking, complete with a song and the phrase "waulking the tweed," are shown in the Season 9 Christmas Special ofCall the Midwife. When the midwives journey to the Outer Hebrides, one of their patients participates in waulking tweed, which is shown as a communal activity for the island's women.