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Revision as of 17:16, 20 June 2012

The Music of Navarr

Style summary

Music generally for celebration not war, songs sung while performing work, songs about travelling, fate, forests, and blood. Navarr bards are very into their heritage; lost cities and sacrifice but music concentrates on remembrance rather than lamentation. Sources are primarily Scottish, Irish, Canadian, Galician and gypsy folk tunes, fast fiddle and pipes alongside soft unison singing.

Commonly known songs

Pick a few examples from the list below to specifically promote as well-known within that nation. Provide lyrics and score/chords. Preferably in a range of difficulties.

A musical tradition

Suggest how the music fits into the cultural behaviour in general (e.g. battle hakas, wassails).

One for the kids

Further examples

More examples for keen bards.

Songs

Instrumentation

Strings, whistles and bagpipes, drums and voices.

Other performance traditions

How to adapt your repertoire

No tradition would be 'wrong' in the Navarr as they travel throughout the Empire. However, to keep a distinctive sound for Navarr music, try to encourage unison singing.

Our sources

Credits, links to artists, further material etc.