Riddle drum
Riddle drums are makeshift frame drums used in traditional English folk music, akin to the Irish bodhran. Originally riddle drums were large agricultural sieves used for winnowing corn, these sieves were made from sheepskins stretched across a wooden frames. Their use as musical instruments began in the South of England when agricultural workers unable to afford professionally made frame drums and tambourines began to play their winnowing sieves as an alternative, developing unique rhythms and playing styles suited to them. Riddle drumming is a unique English evolution of medieval frame drumming and tambourine playing, developing maybe as recently as the 19th or even early 20th century.
Etymology
The term “riddle drum” is of Southern English origin and is tied in with the agricultural process. In England winnowing corn is colloquially called "Riddling", and until the 20th century winnowing sieves were made by stretching an animal skin across a wooden hoop.[1] Holes were then burnt into the skin at close intervals of appropriate size for the corn to be sieved (barley, wheat) and were known as riddle sieves. In Cornwall riddle drums were called crowdy crawn. Davy Zennor (1812–1891) the last native speaker of the Cornish language, he describes, "a wooden hoop covered with sheep-skin, used for taking up corn. Sometimes used as a tambourine, then called crowdy-crawn." “Crowdy” in the Cornish language means, "fiddle playing" and “crawn” means "animal skin".[2] Riddle Sieves were also used in Ireland and were called, "riddles," or "English sieves.".[3]
Riddle drumming
Frame Drumming has been around since neolithic times developing across countries and regions into quite unique instruments with their own variants of drum, playing methods and rhythms. The Riddle Drum is quite distinct from other frame drums today and not musically interchangeable with them. Frame drum skins are thin and tight to create high harmonics when playing with the fingers, also frame drummers tend to play around the edges of the drum for a higher tone and a prime quality sought in a drum is lengthy resonance. Frame drumming is also quite a sophisticated form of drumming and can be difficult to learn, while Riddle Drumming is reasonably easy, so much more accessible as folk instruments than frame drums. Riddle Drum skins tend to be thicker and looser than those of frame drum giving them a bass tone, also they tend to be hit near the centre of the drum and the free hand pressed against the skin to reduce resonance. The reason the unique playing style developed is most likely because thin, tight skins would not survive the agricultural process and the other uses Riddle Sieves were put too, "filling sacks with grain, holding wool, when carded and ready for the spinning wheel, or feathers plucked three time a year.".[4] Surviving examples of Riddle Sieves from Scotland, France, Bulgaria, the Ottoman Empire and Nepal all show heavy wear and tear, skins stretched out of shape from carrying heavy weights, holes tearing into others holes and some with long tears across the skin sown up. So Riddle Drumming became quite distinct from other frame drumming. It also adopted a unique double ended stick held in a pencil grip (or sometimes a leather thong) with the player striking the drum in series of glancing blows (sometimes with both ends of the stick) rather than directly striking the drum with one end of a stick as done in most forms of stick drumming. Stick drumming may have emerged because the stretching and wear and tear on the sieves made them unplayable with the fingers. Also the nature of traditional English music, such as jigs and hornpipes, which require a heavy accentuated beat to inform the dancers when to place their feet.
Construction
Riddle drums are the a basic form of frame drum, simply a goat skin stretched across a wooden hoop, are usually 30 cm (12”) to 48 cm (20”). Riddle Drums historically were made from a crude wooden frame and sheepskin most likely due to animal availability, modern ones tend to use goatskin as they are more durable. They do not have any ornamentation.
History
Frame drums were common across Europe until late Medieval times and were mostly played Middle Eastern style holding the drum facing forward and playing it with the fingers, beating them with sticks also existed too, but was less common. Their popularity declined rapidly in post medieval period as newer more sophisticated drums emerged leaving only the tambourines as their legacy. Many frames drums are illustrated in medieval paintings.
Riddle sieves were not unique to England, skin winnowing sieves were used across Europe, the Middle East and India, however no tradition of using them as musical instruments is recorded in any other country. Two paintings of bodhran in Ireland, "a Halloween party," painted by Scottish artist Daniel Maclise, around 1842 and also in 1842, "A Shebeen in Listowel," attributed to Bridget Maria Fitzgerald, both show the Bodhran being played Middle Eastern style with hands as was the Medieval tradition in Europe.
The first mention of an English sieve tambourine comes from Davy Zennor (1812–1891) the last native speaker of the Cornish language, he describes, "a wooden hoop covered with sheep-skin, used for taking up corn. Sometimes used as a tambourine, then called crowdy-crawn.".[5] However the Zennor calls it a tambourine not a drum and makes no mention of playing with a stick, so he may only be talking about an antecedent to the Riddle Drum.
Research and revival
In the 1950s during the English Folk Revival the first evidence of Riddle Drum playing in modern form, with a stick, is found. Enthusiast Peter Kennedy set out to interview, record and preserve the folk music traditions of Dorset, he encountered several Riddle Drummers. He met a former agricultural worker, "ANDREW CURTIS, aged 81 when recorded at his house in Townsend Road, Corfe, was born at Puddle Mill, on the Isle of Purbeck. His father from Swanage was a carter and Andrew started doing delivery work for the Post Office at the age of 8. After that he did "every job on a farm", and then ran his own threshing tackle, taking it round the farms. When he retired he made toys in his tool shed.......... Like many others Peter (Kennedy) encountered in both Dorset and Wiltshire, Andrew (Curtis) had his own "Riddle Drum", a calfskin over a large farm sieve, which was used to accompany local melodeon players. It was beaten with a double-ended stick, then, particularly during step-dancing, it was vibrated by wetting the thumb and running it across the head of the drum."[6] Similarly in a series of folk music recordings he made in the South of England. The album description reads "15 years before the appearance of the BODHRAN drum in Ireland, Dorset and Wiltshire had similar stick-and-drum players like Alfie Tuck from Bridport who accompanies melodeon player, Bert Pidgeon." [7] The age of Andrew Curtis suggests that Riddle Drumming may significantly predate the 1950s.
References
- ↑ Roy Brigden: Agricultural Hand Tools, Volume 100 of Shire Library, Osprey Publishing, Oxford, U.K., 1983
- ↑ Margaret Ann Courtney and Thomas Quiller Couch. 1880. Glossary of Words in Use in Cornwall. London: The English Dialect Society, Trübner & Co., 1880
- ↑ Lights and Shadows of Irish Life, Vol. 1 of 3 (Classic Reprint) by Mrs. S. C. Hall
- ↑ Ireland: Scenery and Character, Mr & Mrs S. C. Halls, How and Parson, London, 1841
- ↑ Margaret Ann Courtney and Thomas Quiller Couch. 1880. Glossary of Words in Use in Cornwall. London: The English Dialect Society, Trübner & Co., 1880
- ↑ http://folktrax-archive.org/menus/cassprogs/408dorset.htm
- ↑ http://folktrax-archive.org/menus/cassprogs/408dorset.htm