How
to Play the Anglo - Part 3
by
John Kirkpatrick
From Free Reed (The Concertina
Newsletter), Issue No 13, July 1973
First of all I must offer my apologies for the long delay of this
article, which is entirely due to my own inefficiency, and hope
that the gap since the last one hasn't been so long that some of
you have abandoned hope and taken up the trombone or something.
Now then, before getting bogged down in the ins and outs of chords
it's worth considering some Anglo styles, because style is largely
determined by the manner and extent to which chords are used.
Simplest of all is the single-note melody played up and down one
row. Hardly a style but common enough to merit a mention. The A
part of Shepherd Hey would come out exactly as it looks in the music
books (fig. 1)
Fig 1:

This can sound pretty deadly if you play each note in exactly the
same way, so try putting in some expression by varying the volume
to emphasise the natural climaxes in the music, and by employing
contrasting legato and staccato techniques such as I suggested in
Part 2, issue 10. Fig 2 shows one way of using staccato notes to
add interest - cut short the notes with a dot over them.
Fig 2:

Try some other ways and see what you think sounds best. Time spent
at this stage in getting light and shade into your music will prove
invaluable later on. However fast and flashy you become later the
whole process is a sterile intellectual exercise unless you can
give your music life and feeling.
Decorations on the individual notes of the tune can enhance the
rhythm and add lift and bounce and danciness, as well as make life
much less dreary for the player. With a few twiddles in the appropriate
places Shepherds Hey can look like this (fig 3).
Fig 3:
It's a pretty terrifying sight when you write these quick ornamentations
down, but once you've worked them out they're much easier to play
than they look.
All the twiddles I've shown are done simply by going up to the
button above on the same row and then back again. This kind of thing
is dead easy on all squeeze-boxes with buttons, and although you
don't get it so much with traditional English players as with Irish,
it sounds well on morris and sword tunes and makes whatever you're
playing sound more interesting. Even if you decide you don't like
this sort of thing it's worth having a go as it helps develop the
quickness and accuracy of your fingers.
One style which seems to have been fairly common in bygone days
is that of playing the tune in unison on both hands an octave apart.
This is what Scan Tester did most of the time, as far as I can tell
from what little I've heard of his playing. Incidentally the only
commercial recording of Scan that I know is on a Folktape published
by EFDSS called 'Songs and Music of the Sussex Weald', recorded
by Tony Wales. Only a couple of tunes but better than nothing. The
LP Leader Records are preparing won't be out for at least several
months.
This unison style obviously requires equal agility on both hands,
so unless you're ambidextrous it will take a while to get them both
working completely together. If you can manage it you get quite
a full sound, more powerful than you'd expect from the individual
parts. (fig 4).
Fig 4:
However, one of the drawbacks with this style is that if a tune
goes down below the range of the right hand you have to go up an
octave in each part to accommodate the lower notes and at the same
time keep the unison effect (fig 5 - Bobbing Around).
Fig 5:
Sometimes this sounds great, sometimes it sounds a bit peculiar,
but don't take my word for it, - try it for yourself.
It's interesting to note that while this technique is not the most
apparent feature of William Kimber's playing, it does crop up in
some of his tunes very noticeably, eg: The Ribbon Dance on the EFDSS
LP. On the same record, compare his singing of The Willow Tree with
the way he plays it - the tune is almost identical to Bobbing Around.
And in his version of Jockey to the Fair the same phrase occurs
as in bar 4 of fig. 5, but this time the tune was actually noted
by Sharp as jumping up at that point - an example of the way an
instrument can change a tune simply because of the nature of that
instrument itself, rather than any deliberate move by its player.
Fig 6 shows what happens when you play two buttons at once all
the time, ie: the tune plus the next button down, so that you play
in thirds. This is quite easy and fits most major tunes most of
the time. In Shepherds Hey (fig 6) it's only in the last bar that
it doesn't really work.
Fig 6:
In Bobbing Around (fig 7) you need to be more discriminating, so
observe the lower melody line staying on E in bar 2 and dropping
out altogether in bar 4. Again don't take my word for it but try
yourself and judge whether you think it sounds OK.
Fig 7:

You can do a similar thing a sixth lower instead of a third, so
that you'd be playing more of the second part on the left hand.
(fig 8). This isn't quite my cup of tea and it sounds best on tunes
that don't jump around too much, but try it and see.
Fig 8:
These last two techniques - playing a parallel part a third lower
or a sixth lower - supplement the tune without drowning it out.
The ear usually picks out the highest notes most easily and so far
we've kept the tune on top all the time. But it is effective sometimes
to do exactly the same thing above the tune. If you do this it's
probably a good idea to keep the tune as your highest part for a
couple of times through, then add the higher line later after your
audience has got the hang of the first bit.
Fig 9:
Fig 9 shows the B part of Bean Setting. To keep a parallel part
the whole time you have to go over onto your second row some of
the time, and the phrases you have to play in this way are shown
in square brackets. The last chord can be played either by pulling
on the G row or by pushing on the C row, and in this case the former
is easier. Kimber sounds as though he used to cross rows a fair
bit although he never seems to have done it as explicitly as this.
Before we finally tackle chords another style must be discussed
- the Irish Anglo style from (mainly) County Clare. This involves
playing a single-note melody line, not in the basic keys of the
instrument but in the normal fiddle keys of G, D, A minor, E minor
etc, and picking notes from all over the keyboard to achieve this.
One of the Newsletter's previous correspondents, talking about the
concertina in Irish music, implied that it was generally regarded
as definitely inferior to the more common 'accordion' (- actually
a two row melodeon usually in B and C, but tuning of C/C ;
C /D,
D/D
are also found among Irish box players.) This is obviously not a
view likely to be shared by readers of this magazine, but to understand
it one must appreciate that both instruments are played in a similar
way. On the accordion the accepted style is to play chromatically,
ie: across the rows, in the normal fiddle keys mentioned above.
This system falls easily onto these boxes because the notes are
arranged fairly logically and you don't have to reach far for any
accidentals, passing grace notes, or alternative fingerings that
you might need. As I mentioned earlier the Irish put a lot of decoration
into their music and the less jumping about your hand has to do
the more freedom the fingers are allowed to execute complicated
patterns of ornamentation on a very few notes.
To achieve the same thing on an Anglo your fingers have to fly
all over both sides of the instrument, making the whole process
more laborious and less likely to succeed. Of course it can be done
and there are fine exponents of this school of Anglo playing, some
of whom can be heard on the records published by Comhaltas Ceoltoiri
Eireann, the Irish traditional music association. If you want details
write to the CCE, 6 Sr Fhearchair, Baile Atha Cliath, 2, Ireland.
The prospect of playing in different keys on what is basically
a 2-key instrument is a fairly daunting one and something that you
will have to cope with yourself. As your playing improves and your
aspirations rise you may be tempted to have a go at tunes in other
keys, and I would be the last to discourage you. However, reticent
though I am about expressing too many of my own preferences with
regard to style, I think that you should not lose sight of the fact
that the Anglo is a lovely medium for providing full, happy music,
and is a complete band in itself. To stick to a single-note melody,
even though it may cover the whole range of the keyboard, is to
completely ignore the massive potential that lies at your finger
tips. And so, at last, on to chords.
The beauty of the Concertina is that you can make up chords at
any pitch you choose, from simple two-note efforts right up to positive
palm-stretching fistfuls spanning the whole range of the instrument.
Whatever you decide to use depends ultimately on your own taste
and ability, but there are certain considerations to bear in mind.
If you're playing a tune you want people to be able to distinguish
it from the other notes that you're playing as accompaniment to
it, so you should not bury the tune in a cacophony of chords which
makes it unrecognisable. In Part 2 I suggested one way round this
was to play the tune on the right hand and add very staccato chords
on the left hand so that the tune comes over easily. This works
the other way round too, tune on the left and chords on the right.
The concertina can sound a bit thin on the very high notes and this
would avoid the problem of the tune not being loud enough to come
over the lower chords. Kimber did this sometimes too. Certainly
the tune always comes over very clearly in his playing, even though
he usually plays a fairly full style.
My own views on how to play chords have been largely determined
by the fact that I came to the Anglo from the melodeon, and was
already conditioned to playing the tune on my right hand and chords
on the left. After playing the Anglo for some time I still think
this is the most logical way of doing it and it comes most easily
to me, so this is the way I suggest you set about chords, at least
to start with. For dance music you need a strong rhythmic vamp,
and again influenced by the melodeon, I think a low bass note followed
by a high chord sounds best, to give an um-pa effect. Here's some
suggested chord shapes to get this melodeon-like effect.
| Chord |
Um |
Pa |
|
|
| C |
C
(L) |
C
(R); |
E
(M); |
G
(I) |
| G |
G
(L) |
B
(R); |
D
(M); |
G
(I) |
| |
G
(L) |
G
(R); |
B
(M); |
D
(I) |
| F |
F
(L) |
F
(M); |
A
(I); |
C
(R) |
B |
B
(L) |
D
(R); |
F
(M); |
Bb
(I) |
| D |
D
(M) |
F
(L); |
A
(R); |
D
(M) |
| |
D
(L) |
F
(I); |
A
(R); |
D
(M) |
| D min |
D
(R) |
F
(M); |
A
(I) |
|
| A |
A
(L) |
A
(R); |
C
(I); |
E
(M) |
| |
A
(L) |
C
(R); |
E
(M); |
A
(I) |
| A min |
A
(L) |
A
(R); |
C
(M); |
E
(I) |
| |
A
(L) |
C
(R); |
E
(M); |
A
(I) |
| E |
E
(L) |
E
(M); |
G
(I); |
B
(R) |
| E min |
E
(L) |
E
(M); |
G
(I); |
B
(R) |
Where you get chords that could easily occur on either direction
of the bellows I've given both alternatives. Practise each chord
separately, once you've found where the notes are, then try the
vamping action by playing the little finger first, then the other
three together. Once you can manage that, put your skill to the
test by accompanying a tune. You will find that the direction of
the bellows is determined by the notes in the tune, and this can
be frustrating sometimes if you can only get the chord you want
in the opposite direction. Such a problem occurs in Shepherds Hey
in the third bar, where the E at the end means you can't play a
chord of F, which would have been desirable. When this happens,
you can try changing the bellows direction in the tune by looking
for an alternative fingering, E on the pull in this case. E lies
on
and
but if you haven't got a 19a you'll find there are no spare fingers
for 15, so the easiest way out is to play the 'um' and the 'pa'
at the same time, and just leave a gap under the tune when the E
sounds. So Shepherds Hey would end up like this (fig. 10)
Fig 10:
The G's in the last bar are best played pulling the bellows -
and
or .
This enables you to play the G chord with less jumping around on
the left hand than if you pushed the bellows. Try it both ways and
find the easiest way for you.
To develop your little finger here's an exercise which fits in
as a bass run in quite a few tunes (fig 11).
| Fig 11: |
um |
pa |
|
|
| |
C
(L) |
C
(R); |
E (M); |
G
(I) |
| |
E
(L) |
C
(R); |
E
(M); |
G
(I) |
| |
F
(L) |
F
(M); |
A
(I); |
C
(R) |
| |
G
(L) |
E
(R); |
D
(M); |
G
(I) |
| |
|
|
|
|
| Giving: |
 |
Once you have grasped the idea of this um-pa accompaniment you
can experiment with your little finger and poke about for more runs
like this to have ready up your sleeve. However don't think that
I'm suggesting you should never vary your technique. This would
obviously be tedious for you and for anyone who's listening. Apart
from the other styles I've mentioned above, which can be introduced
in some passages to relieve the monotony, there are a number of
other ways of playing chords. As we have described already, you
can put the 'um' and the 'pa' down at once, to give a series of
repeated block chords. Or play the 'pa' with the 'um' as well as
in its own place. Or leave out the 'um' altogether, as long as there's
something going on to make up for its absence.
For songs, at first you'll find it easiest to stick to tunes with
a dancy rhythm that you can play in much the same way as dance tunes.
But once you feel the need to go onto greater things make sure you
can play the accompaniment first before you try singing with it.
Don't learn the song and the accompaniment together, as it'll take
ages and will just frustrate you. Learn the song first, work out
what you want to play to supplement it, learn to play it, then try
the two together. There are no rules for song styles, as long as
you remember that you've got to play quietly enough for your voice
to be heard over the top of the concertina. It's easy to make a
lot of noise on the Anglo, so watch it.
Well, that's it. I don't think it's possible or worthwhile to go
into any more detail in general articles like these. Apart from
anything else, I'm very conscious of influencing anyone who reads
this with my own views, and while this is reasonable to expect at
a basic level it may serve to hamper another player's development
at a more advanced stage. With a basic grounding such as I've tried
to provide the imaginative Anglo player can find the full potential
of his instrument and his ability on it for himself, so now I'll
leave you to get on with doing just that. If you've got any problems,
write and I'll try and answer them. Meanwhile, good luck.
|