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Arthur O'Neill (c.1737-1816) was an Irish Harper, a virtuoso player of the Irish harp or ''cláirseach'': he was active during the final decades of its unbroken instrumental tradition in the later 18th and very early 19th century. He was closely associated with Edward Bunting, and the Belfast Harp Society's ultimately unsuccessful attempt to preserve the instrument, attending the Belfast Harper's Assembly and serving as the Society's harp tutor until 1813.〔Lanier, S C «"It is new-strung and shan't be heard": nationalism and memory in the Irish harp tradition». in: British Journal of Ethnomusicology; Vol. 8, 1999〕 He is best known for his lively and humorous memoir, collected by Bunting, which contained many reminiscences of famous harpers (such as Carolan) and of the environment in which they played. ==Life and memoirs== O'Neill said he was born in Drumnastrade townland in the parish of Clonfeacle, County Tyrone, around 1737. He was blinded as the result of an accident early in life: "At the age of two years I was diverting myself with a pen-knife which pierced my right eye, but was not deprived of the sight of it immediately. I had a Grandmother who loved me to excess, and she, perceiving my eye in danger, sent everywhere for Oculists and Doctors to cure me. I had to submit to all their prescriptions, and the result was, that in their efforts to cure one eye, I unfortunately lost the sight of both".〔'Memoirs of Arthur O'Neill' in Fox, C. M. ''Annals of the Irish Harpers'', Dutton, 1912, p.142〕 He began instruction on the harp at the age of ten with Owen Keenan of Augher, and by the time he was fifteen became an itinerant musician. His memoir consists largely of descriptions of journeys he undertook around the country, including several accounts of competitions at which he played, interspersed with broadly humorous anecdotes. He was aware that some of these anecdotes, or his estimation of other harpers' characters, might cause offence (he described Arthur Short of Tyrone, for example, as "but an indifferent performer () very peevish () I was informed he was about a hundred times married") but admitted he cared "not a pin" who might read the memoir.〔(Arthur O'Neill ), Eglish Historical Society〕 His chief musical rival was his friend Charles Fanning, who beat him at each of the Granard Harp Festivals in 1781-3 (O'Neill jokingly claimed that the first loss was due to him having worn his best clothes, leading the judges to think the shabbily-dressed Fanning more deserving of the prize). O'Neill claimed to have, in his youth, restrung and played the Trinity College Harp, then known as "Brian Boru's Harp", and which was then owned by a Counsellor McNamara, the Recorder of Limerick. At the latter's request O'Neill said that he played it through Limerick city:
In 1813 O'Neill retired on a pension to County Tyrone. He died in 1816 in Maydown, County Armagh, and was buried near his birthplace, in the churchyard at Eglish. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Arthur O'Neill (harpist)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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