‘Recorded by the School of Scottish Studies…’ The Impact of the Tape-Recorder In a Rural Community Most people in Scotland interested in traditional songs and stories will have heard the phrase ‘they were recorded by the School of Scottish Studies’. From 1951, when the School was founded, those whose songs, stories and oral traditions were of interest to collectors and research staff enjoyed the prestige of having their names linked with what has become our national collection. For many years, the fact that a singer or story-teller had been ‘recorded by the School of Scottish Studies’ would often form part of an introduction at a ceilidh or a concert
As part of my study-abroad experience during the fall of 2018, I was awarded a Benjamin H. Gilman Sc...
Scottish Gaelic is still widely spoken in the Outer Hebrides, remote islands off the West Coast of S...
Blanche, Rachel - ORCID 0000-0001-7067-5108 https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7067-5108Summary of main fi...
The recording of traditional information by the School of Scottish Studies, at least in the Gaelic s...
The School of Scottish Studies was set up in 1951 to collect, research, archive, and publish materia...
This thesis focusses on the interaction between access to sound archives and the performance of tr...
The School of Scottish Studies (the ‘School’) was inaugurated on 31 January 1951 as a semiautonomous...
‘There is a need for haste’ formed the editorial message in An Gàidheal in May 1947, more pithily ex...
A recent report by UNESCO placed Scots Gaelic on a list of 2500 endangered languages highlighting th...
Scotland has a long history of collecting material from its oral traditions as illustrated by the va...
Iain MacNeacail of the Isle of Skye has been making songs since 1917, when he was fourteen years ol...
Since the first Scottish Gaelic-speaking settlers arrived in Nova Scotia in the late 18th century, t...
The focus of this dissertation is Andy Hunter, Scots narrative singer and songwriter. Hunter’s early...
"The bàird bhaile [village bard] was an important figure in Gaelic society for centuries and remaine...
Excerpt: A majority of the early settlers on the Appalachian frontier were immigrants from Lowland S...
As part of my study-abroad experience during the fall of 2018, I was awarded a Benjamin H. Gilman Sc...
Scottish Gaelic is still widely spoken in the Outer Hebrides, remote islands off the West Coast of S...
Blanche, Rachel - ORCID 0000-0001-7067-5108 https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7067-5108Summary of main fi...
The recording of traditional information by the School of Scottish Studies, at least in the Gaelic s...
The School of Scottish Studies was set up in 1951 to collect, research, archive, and publish materia...
This thesis focusses on the interaction between access to sound archives and the performance of tr...
The School of Scottish Studies (the ‘School’) was inaugurated on 31 January 1951 as a semiautonomous...
‘There is a need for haste’ formed the editorial message in An Gàidheal in May 1947, more pithily ex...
A recent report by UNESCO placed Scots Gaelic on a list of 2500 endangered languages highlighting th...
Scotland has a long history of collecting material from its oral traditions as illustrated by the va...
Iain MacNeacail of the Isle of Skye has been making songs since 1917, when he was fourteen years ol...
Since the first Scottish Gaelic-speaking settlers arrived in Nova Scotia in the late 18th century, t...
The focus of this dissertation is Andy Hunter, Scots narrative singer and songwriter. Hunter’s early...
"The bàird bhaile [village bard] was an important figure in Gaelic society for centuries and remaine...
Excerpt: A majority of the early settlers on the Appalachian frontier were immigrants from Lowland S...
As part of my study-abroad experience during the fall of 2018, I was awarded a Benjamin H. Gilman Sc...
Scottish Gaelic is still widely spoken in the Outer Hebrides, remote islands off the West Coast of S...
Blanche, Rachel - ORCID 0000-0001-7067-5108 https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7067-5108Summary of main fi...