Brochan Lom
"Brochan Lom" is a Scottish Gaelic nonsense song about porridge. The tune is popular and appears frequently at Scottish country dances and ceilidhs. It falls into the category of "mouth music" (Puirt a beul), used to create music for dancing in the absence of instruments. It is a strathspey song and is commonly sung or played for the Highland Schottische (a popular ceilidh dance),[1] and for the Highland Fling.
As an instrumental tune, Brochan Lom is also known as The Orange And Blue, Katy Jones’, Kitty Jones, Kitty Jones’, The Orange & Blue Highland, Orange And Blue, The Orange And Blue Highland Fling.[2]
Lyrics
The words vary in different traditions but a common variant is:
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"This above was a jocular song that arose about some ill-made porridge, which being very thin was declared to be like gruel, or even 'sowans' (the fermented juice of oatmeal husks boiled, in bygone times a favourite article of food in Scotland." [3]
Use in movies
- It appears as a drinking song in Whisky Galore! [4]
- It is a background music theme in The Bridal Path.[5]
Recordings
- The Highland Council website "Am Baile: Highland history and culture" has two versions:
- a version with voice and piano from the CD Cluich Còmhla - Òrain is Ranna where the words are very clearly pronounced.
- a version sung by Christina Stewart with instrumental accompaniment, from the album Bairn's Kist (2011).
- The website of Learning and Teaching Scotland has a version on violin.
- Calum Kennedy recorded this on the album "Songs in Gaelic" (2008)[6]
- Robin Hall & Jimmie Macgregor with The Galliards recorded this on the album Scottish Choice (1960)[7]
- Oran recorded a version on their album "Kith & Kin".
- The Glasgow Gaelic Musical Association recorded a choral version on the album "Orain Is Puirt-a-Beul" (1993).
- The Session lists 16 instrumental recordings of the tune.
External links
- Brochan Lom, Learning and Teaching Scotland. Includes a recording, a list of the musical concepts exemplified by the tune, and a score with the concepts as annotations
- Brochan Lom, Traditional, Scots Independent. Includes phonetic pronunciation of the Gaelic words.
- Sheet Music - Brochan Lom, Mama Lisa's World: International Music & Culture
- Lyric Request: Brochan Lom Tana Lom / Hot Porridge Cold, and Lyrics Add: Brochan Lom, discussions on the Mudcat Cafe Forum regarding the meaning and pronunciation of the words
Notes
- Learning and Teaching Scotland. "Music of Scotland: Strathspey - Brochan Lom". Archived from the original on 7 August 2010. Retrieved 1 November 2013.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
- The Session. "The Orange And Blue reel". Retrieved 1 November 2013.
- Frances Tolmie. One Hundred and Five Songs of Occupation from the Western isles of Scotland (1911).
- "Whisky Galore - drinking song". Retrieved 1 November 2013.
- "The Bridal Path (1959)". IMDb. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
- Kennedy, Calum. "Brochan Lom". Retrieved 8 December 2012.
- Hall, Robin; Macgregor, Jimmie. "Brochan Lom, Tana Lom / Bodachan A' Mhirein". Retrieved 1 November 2013.