Top
Skip to Content
LOGO(small) - Queen's University Belfast
  • Our x-twitter
  • Our facebook
  • Our youtube
LOGO(large) - Queen's University Belfast

SARC: CENTRE FOR INTERDISCIPLINARY
RESEARCH IN SOUND AND MUSIC

  • Home
  • SARC 20
  • About
  • People
  • Facilities
    • Sonic Lab
    • Studios
    • Broadcast Studio
    • Fabrication
  • Research
  • Impact
  • PhD / MRes Programmes
  • Theses Archive
  • Ensembles
  • News
  • Events
    • Subscribe to our Mailing List
    • SARC Youtube Channel
    • SARC Radio
    • Archive 2024 Events
    • Archive 2023 Events
    • Archive 2022 Events
    • Archive 2021 Events
    • Archive 2020 Events
    • Archive 2019 Events
    • Archive 2018 Events
  • Home
  • SARC 20
  • About
  • People
  • Facilities
    • Sonic Lab
    • Studios
    • Broadcast Studio
    • Fabrication
  • Research
  • Impact
  • PhD / MRes Programmes
  • Theses Archive
  • Ensembles
  • News
  • Events
    • Subscribe to our Mailing List
    • SARC Youtube Channel
    • SARC Radio
    • Archive 2024 Events
    • Archive 2023 Events
    • Archive 2022 Events
    • Archive 2021 Events
    • Archive 2020 Events
    • Archive 2019 Events
    • Archive 2018 Events
  • Our x-twitter
  • Our facebook
  • Our youtube
In This Section
  • Subscribe to our Mailing List
  • SARC Youtube Channel
  • SARC Radio
  • Archive 2024 Events
  • Archive 2023 Events
  • Archive 2022 Events
  • Archive 2021 Events
  • Archive 2020 Events
  • Archive 2019 Events
  • Archive 2018 Events

  • Home
  • SARC
  • Events
  • Archive 2022 Events

Archive 2022 Events

Seminar - Dr Conor Caldwell: ‘Against Christianity, learning and the spirit of nationality’

Back to events

This illustrated seminar from Dr Conor Caldwell unpacks the hidden story behind Ireland’s dalliances with jazz and the unique sounds that were created between 1914-1939.

Date(s)
September 21, 2022
Location
Old McMordie Hall, Music Building
Time
13:00 - 14:00

Irish traditional music is widely recognised as a ‘magpie culture’, bringing together forms of music from different parts of the globe and arranging them in a coherent and structured manner. From Scottish reels to Eastern European polkas and English-language ballads, Irish musicians have for generations, received new musical forms with open ears and enthusiasm. However, the music which arrived in Ireland between the two world wars has largely been written out of history. As the jazz craze swept Ireland in the 1920s and 1930s traditional musicians did what they have always done and found ways to render its sounds and rhythms in the best way they knew how. This allowed a hybrid Irish jazz style to briefly flourish before it was denounced by the power brokers of the day and was finally swept away by the arrival of the showband era. This illustrated seminar unpacks the hidden story behind Ireland’s dalliances with jazz and the unique sounds that were created in this era.

Event type
Workshop / Seminar / Course
Department
Audience
All
Add to calendar
Share
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Weibo
  • Email
Events
  • Events
  • Subscribe to our Mailing List
  • SARC Youtube Channel
  • SARC Radio
  • Archive 2024 Events
  • Archive 2023 Events
  • Archive 2022 Events
  • Archive 2021 Events
  • Archive 2020 Events
  • Archive 2019 Events
  • Archive 2018 Events
QUB Logo
Contact Us
SARC: Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Sound and Music 
School of Arts, English & Languages
4 Cloreen Park
Belfast
BT9 5HN
United Kingdom

General Enquiries
Tel: +44 (0) 28 9097 4867
E-mail: sarc@qub.ac.uk

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About
  • Facilities
  • News
  • Events

Social Media

© Queen's University Belfast 2024
  • Privacy and cookies
  • Website accessibility
  • Freedom of information
  • Modern slavery statement
  • Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
  • University Policies and Procedures
Information
  • Privacy and cookies
  • Website accessibility
  • Freedom of information
  • Modern slavery statement
  • Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
  • University Policies and Procedures

© Queen's University Belfast 2024

Manage cookies