-
Canntaireachd (Scottish
Gaelic for 'chanting';
pronounced [ˈkʰãũn̪ˠt̪ɛɾʲəxk]) is the
ancient method of teaching,
learning and
memorizing Piobaireachd...
-
predominant vocable system used
today is the
Nether Lorn
canntaireachd sourced from the
Campbell Canntaireachd m****cripts (Volume 1. 1797) and (Volume 2. 1814)...
- word "cantrip", of
Scots origin,
possibly comes from the
Gaelic term
canntaireachd, a piper's
mnemonic chant. A
Wiccan Dictionary defines a
cantrip as...
- Scotland),
mouth music, jigging, chin
music or ch**** music,
puirt à beul or
canntaireachd in
Scottish Gaelic, or
portaireacht bhéil (port a'bhéil, "mouth-singing")...
-
traditional musicians,
strathspeys are
occasionally transmitted as
canntaireachd, a
style of
singing in
which various syllables are used to vocalize...
-
Konnakol and bol (music),
syllables used
similarly in
Indian music Canntaireachd, a
similar system for
traditional Scottish Highland piping (pibrochs)...
- Children) by Pàdraig Mòr MacCrimmon". The Times. "Pibroch
songs and
canntaireachd",
Education Scotland Archived 2013-10-04 at the
Wayback Machine H. Munro...
- ke (epsilon), zo (zeta), ni (eta). In Scotland, the
system known as
Canntaireachd ("chanting"') was used as a
means of
communicating bagpipe music verbally...
-
Westwards Round the World, From July 6, 1874 to July 6, 1875 (1876)
Canntaireachd:
Articulate Music (1880)
Thermography (1883).
Campbell held a lifelong...
- recently, a
formal evening of
traditional Scottish Social Dancing.
Canntaireachd oral
notation for pipe music. Clan From the
compound form
clann pronounced...