
The 3rd Annual
Music
Competition
unique to our Festival. It offers an opportunity for Celtic
musicians of all levels from beginner to professional to compete
with their peers and experience the fun of playing in front of a
live and appreciative audience. There are so many wonderful Celtic
Musicians in the Southwest and the Tucson Celtic Festival is a
wonderful venue for everyone to come together and enjoy the talented
musicians who come to perform.
Celtic music
is a term utilized by artists, record companies, music stores and
music magazines to describe a broad grouping of
musical genres that evolved out of the
folk musical traditions of the
Celtic peoples of
Northern Europe. As such there is no real body of
music
which can be accurately be described as Celtic, but the term
has stuck and may refer to both orally-transmitted traditional music
and recorded
popular music. The latter sometimes has barely even a
superficial resemblance to folk music of any of the Celtic cultures,
but on the other hand it sometimes represents sincere work towards
adapting Celtic traditions for modern, global culture.
Celtic music
means two things mainly. The first: the music of the peoples calling
themselves Celts (a non-musical, more political
definition), as opposed to, say, "French music" or "English music."
The second: whatever qualities may be unique to the musics of the
Celtic Nations *(a musical definition). Some insist there is
actually nothing in common, such as Geoff Wallis and Sue Wilson in
their book 'The Rough Guide to Irish Music', whereas others (such as
Alan Stivell), say there is.
Often, the term Celtic music is applied
to the
music of Ireland and
Scotland, because both places have produced well-known
distinctive styles which actually have genuine commonality and clear
mutual influences; however, it is notable that Irish and Scottish
traditional musicians themselves avoid the term "Celtic music,"
except when forced by the necessities of the market. They are famous
too because of the importance of Irish and Scottish people in the
English speaking world, especially in
America, where it had a profound impact on
American music, particularly
bluegrass and
country music.
[1] The
music of Wales,
Cornwall,
Isle of Man,
Brittany,
Galicia, Cantabria and Asturias and Northern
Portugal are also a part of Celtic music, the Celtic
tradition being particularly strong in
Brittany, where Celtic festivals large and small take place
throughout the year, and in Wales where the ancient
eisteddfod tradition still occurs. Additionally, the musics of
ethnically Celtic peoples abroad are vibrant, especially
in Canada and the
United States.