Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

James Goodman (musicologist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article includes a list ofgeneral references, butit lacks sufficient correspondinginline citations. Please help toimprove this article byintroducing more precise citations.(October 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Canon James Goodman (22 September 1828 – 18 January 1896)[1] was aChurch of Ireland clergyman, apiper and a collector ofIrish music and songs.

Life

[edit]

As a cleric

[edit]
Creagh Church
Creagh Church

Goodman was born in Ballyameen,Dingle,County Kerry[2] and was raised inVentry, County Kerry, aGaeltacht area, and studied atTrinity College, Dublin, having gained a scholarship in 1847. He was ordained in theChurch of Ireland in 1851 (his father the Reverend Thomas Chute Goodman had beenrector ofDingle). He married Charlotte King in 1852. They had three sons, one of whom later drowned while a student, the other two set up a medical practice inBrigg, Lincolnshire.

Goodman's first clerical appointment was to Creagh parish inWest Cork in 1852. In 1859, he moved to Killaconagh, on theBeara peninsula, where he preached in Irish. He was posted to the parish of Abbeystrewry inSkibbereen in 1866 as a Canon ofRoss, remaining there until his death in 1896. In 1867 he self-financed the rebuilding of the local church which had become dilapidated.

A statue to commemorate him, playing hisuilleann pipes, was erected in 2006 at the gate to the Abbeystrewery parish church in Skibbereen town.

He is buried at Creagh graveyard.[3]

As a music collector

[edit]

While still in Ventry, he learned to play theflute. InArdgroom,County Cork (his second parish) there is a strong local tradition of his skill as a piper. The townlands around his own were well known for traditional music in the 19th century. Around this time, Goodman began collecting music. There is evidence in his private manuscripts and in his letters that his song and music collecting had begun during his undergraduate days. His music collection was not published in his lifetime, but by May 1861 it consisted of over 700 tunes. Some 150 of the tunes were drawn from Tom Kennedy, a blind piper living on theDingle Peninsula.[4] In all, his collections numbered over 2000 tunes annotated in both Irish and English. This collection is in manuscript form and now resides in theLibrary of Trinity College, Dublin. Of the collection, 150 to 200 of the melodies are song tunes the words of which were, for many years, believed lost. In 2006, a manuscript with over 80 song-texts was discovered and was donated to Trinity College Library.[4]

He played a set of Taylor uilleann pipes, which he later gave to his friend Alderman Phair. He was widely admired and respected in the locality and is remembered for playing music seated under a tree outside his rectory or mending his pipes and sharing tunes with visiting pipers. He and his housekeeper Lizzie distributed alms to the local poor every Monday who came to his house for this purpose. They were known locally as "Goodman's pensioners".

As a Professor of Irish

[edit]

Goodman was appointed Professor of Irish inTrinity College Dublin in 1879 and combined this position with his clerical duties in Skibbereen, spending alternating six months in each location. Among his students at Trinity College wereDouglas Hyde andJohn Millington Synge.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Hugh Shields (ed.), Tunes of the Munster Pipers: Irish Traditional Music from the James Goodman Manuscripts, vol. 1,volume 1Archived 21 February 2016 at theWayback Machine (Dublin: Irish Traditional Music Archive, 1998).ISBN 0-9532704-0-8 (hardback), 0-9532704-1-6 (paperback).
  • Hugh & Lisa Shields (eds.),Tunes of the Munster Pipers: Irish traditional music from the James Goodman manuscripts, vol. 2,volume 2Archived 4 March 2016 at theWayback Machine (Dublin: Irish Traditional Music Archive, 2013).ISBN 978-0-9532704-5-3 (hardback), 978-0-9532704-6-0 (paperback).
  • Annotated online indexArchived 4 March 2016 at theWayback Machine of all the tunes in the four volumes of James Goodman's manuscript music collection.
  • RTÉ Radio, Christmas 2002,Tunes of the Munster Pipers (Rebroadcast on RTÉ Lyric FM on 2 December 2013).
  • Nicholas Carolan, "An t-Urramach James Goodman (1826–96), fear eaglasta, ceoltóir, agus bailitheoir ceoil", in:Foinn agus focail. Léachtaí Cholm Cille 40, in: Ruairí Ó hUiginn (ed.) )Maynooth: An Sagart, 2010), pp. 7–19.
  • Padraig O Fiannachta,Seamus Goodman (West Kerry Development Co-op, 1990).
  • Abbeystrewry. A Parish Memoir (On Stream Publications, 1991).
  • "An Seabhac 'An t-Oll. Séamus Goodman agus a Mhuintir", in:Béaloideas, pp. 13 and 23.
  • Breandán Breathnach, "Séamus Goodman 1828–1896, Bailitheoir Ceoil", in: J.K.A.H.S. (1973), No. 6.
  • Jim Byrne, "Canon Goodman", in:Skibbereen and District Historical Society Journal, Vol. 1 (2005).
  • Pádraig de Brún, "A Ventry Convert Group", in: J.K.A.H.S. (1980), No. 13.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Jimmy O'Brien Moran: "Goodman, James", in:The Encyclopaedia of Music in Ireland, ed. Harry White and Barra Boydell (Dublin: UCD Press, 2013), pp. 436–7.
  2. ^O'Brien Moran (2013).
  3. ^signpost off R595 saying "Canon Goodman's Grave".
  4. ^abThe man who saved a feast of music from the Famine years

External reference

[edit]
International
National
People
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=James_Goodman_(musicologist)&oldid=1285375287"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp