The Voice of the Carnyx was Heard in the Land - Joan Lennon
A few months ago, Mary Hoffman posted about The Celts: Art and Identity - a fabulous exhibition at the British Museum. Luckily for me, the exhibition then headed north, to the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh, where I got the chance to see it. Wow! Mary's favourite piece was the silver Gundestrup cauldron and I agree it is absolutely spectacular - and so cleverly displayed - in the round, so that you can see all of the carved images, inside and out.
(photograph of the cauldron in Berne by Rosemania - Wiki commons)
But what most caught my imagination was the carnyx - the Celtic horn. You can see three of them being played on a detail from the cauldron -
(photograph by Bloodofox - Wiki commons)
These towering, beast-headed horns, braying out across ancient valleys and hills - just imagining the sound can raise the hairs on the back of your neck. But you don't have to just imagine. Musician John Kenny was part of a project to recreate the Deskford carnyx, with its "skull in bronze, with a soft palate, a throat, a jaw that moves and a tongue that moves on a leaf spring" (Celts: Secrets of the Carnyx). And then, clearly fascinated, he composed a modern piece of music for the instrument, scored for 4 multi-tracked carnyces. Have a listen - I love it!
Let me know what you think - and if you are within striking distance of Edinburgh, do go to the exhibition. It's on until the 25th September and you can get all the details here.
2 comments:
Wonderful!
I've loved the Gundestrop cauldron for decades but never paid much attention to carnyxes until now.
Just played it. Husband wants one!
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