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A Traveler's Dream
The ancient hammered dulcimer followed
the migrations of early travelers across Asia Minor and
onto the European continent -- from the Black Sea to the
North Atlantic shores. In Maggie Sansone’s hands, the visions
of the Celts come alive in the modern world.
Listen to the journey!
Hear
the music, click here: www.cdbaby.com/cd/sansone
Order # MM110 CD
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63:00 minutes

"The most exciting
and innovative hammered dulcimer player recording today...She
has a fire and passion to her playing...
a delight!
- Dirty Linen Magazine
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"Maggie Sansone can do no wrong. She has consistently released
albums that combine her singular and exquisite hammered
dulcimer playing, backed by top musicians playing semi-classical
inspired interpretations of traditional Celtic music. Among
the many standout tracks are two sets of tunes devoted to
Celtic pagan celebration days... 'The Samhain Set' combines
two Sansone originals devoted to the Celtic New Year features
Sansone using an E-Bow on her hammered dulcimer for a a
truely otherworldly effect."
- DIRTY
LINEN Folk & World Music Magazine
"As its title implies, A Traveler's Dream
will prove a transporting experience for many listeners,
especially those who are quick to fall under the spell of
an ancient Celtic melody. Indeed, this magical history tour
owes much of its charm to music that only recently has come
back into fashion, reprieved by the prevailing and still
surprising interest in all things Celtic. Sometimes interwoven
and always complementary, the musical strains lead hammered
dulcimer player Sansone and her talented bandmates on an
enchanting journey through time. The stops along the way
are devoted to a rich assortment of melancholy refrains
and sparkling reels and slip jigs. Also included is an ingeniously
arranged Northumberland pipe tune and, lest anyone hasten
to pigeonhole Sansone's music, a percussive homage to whirling
Sufi dancers and a Swedish 'bear dance' brimming with rhythmic
vitality. What's more,the album's title track, composed
by Sansone, is fully in keeping with the album's richly
evocative tone and boasts a richly textured arrangement
that makes wonderful use of hammered dulcimer, clarinets,
fiddle, harp and viola da gamba. Though hardly a purist,
the pure joy Sansone takes in resuscitating or composing
this music is evident on every track, no matter how subtly
orchestrated the performance, and she has plenty of similarly
inspired company, including reedman and percussionist Bobby
Read, fiddler Bonnie Rideout and guitarist Al Petteway."
- The Washington
Post
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Tune List
1 Humours Of Rockstown / Paddy Lynn’s
Delight / Ríl Roscomaín (5:46)
2 Samhain Set: All Hallows Eve / The Seeker
(5:45)
3 Bear Dance (6:28)
4 Go To Berwick, Johnny (3:54)
5 Farewell To Nigg (5:14)
6 The Seas Are Deep / Dervish
(6:01)
7 The Flower Among Us All / Johnny Armstrong
(3:46)
8 Helen O’Grady / Drops Of Brandy
(6:49)
9 The Banks Of The Barrow (5:24)
10 A Traveler’s Dream (3:00)
11 Lughnasa set: The Green Fields Of
Woodford / Summertime / A Morning In Summer (4:49)
12 Gaelic Reels (6:11)
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Liner Notes
MUSICIANS |
MAGGIE
SANSONE - Hammered dulcimer
BOBBY READ - Clarinet, bass clarinet, flute, bamboo
flute,
alto flute, melodica, soprano saxophone, xaphoon, accordion,
kalimba, piano, organ, electric bass, xylophone, piccolo,
frame drums,
medieval snare drum, bells, temple blocks & shakers
AL PETTEWAY Acoustic guitar
& Ashiko drum
BONNIE RIDEOUT - Scottish fiddle
& viola
ARAN OLWELL - Irish flute
DAVID SHEIM - Celtic harp
SARA NISENSON- Irish fiddle
ANDREA HOAG - Swedish fiddle
T.J.JOHNSON - Mandolin & cittern
DEBBIE HUNTER - Viola da gamba
PADDY LEAGUE - Bodhran, tabla
& dombek
ROBERT JOSPÉ - Slit drum, mondo
drums & marimba
Produced by Bobby Read
NOTES
An ancestor to our modern piano, the hammered
dulcimer is classified as a “chordophone” – an instrument
in which sound is produced by the vibration of strings
stretched across a soundboard. Hammered dulcimers are
played by striking the strings with wooden mallets or
hammers to create a percussive ringing sound with plenty
of sustain. The instrument originated in the Middle East
around 900 AD and migrated in many shapes, sizes and tunings
outwards to Asia and Europe. Today it is found all over
the world.
My hammered dulcimer, made by Nick Blanton,
has a trapezoidal shape with 74 strings stretched across
3 bridges. Among its unique features are pedal dampers
-- two metal bars covered with felt and operated by a
foot pedal to create short muted tones.
As I’ve grown musically, I’ve sought to
explore the expressive possibilities that I hear in the
hammered dulcimer. Producer Bobby Read and I set out to
expand the instrument’s musical palette by using pedal
dampers, different kinds of hammers and striking surfaces,
and techniques like bending and plucking strings with
picks and fingers and layering multiple parts. In pursuit
of its identity as a melodic percussion instrument, we
blended it with other members of its mallet family such
as the xylophone and marimba to create ostinato patterns
(repeated phrases that set up interesting layers underneath
the melody) in many of the pieces.
I was born and raised in Miami, Florida.
My father, a first-generation Italian, was my first and
most important musical influence. He was a professional
cartoonist who played jazz piano. At age eight I would
join him for improvised duets before bedtime - with feet
dangling I’d play the left-hand boogie part and listen
to his wonderful improvisations. At age 14 I fell in love
with early music when my mom took me to hear the New York
Pro Musica. During high school, I played bassoon in the
school orchestra and folk music on my own -- fingerpicking
styles on the guitar and bluegrass on the banjo. When
Celtic music hit America, I was at the jam sessions with
guitar and mandolin in hand. I saw my first hammered dulcimer
on the streets of Key West in 1980. I was completely captivated
and quickly made it my principal instrument.
I listen to early music, Celtic music
and the piano music of Chopin, Satie, Ravel and Bartok.
I love world music, especially that of ancient Persia,
India and the spiritual music of Gurdjieff/DeHartmann
and the Sufis. I am studying with Shahriar Saleh, a master
of the santur, the Persian equivalent to the hammered
dulcimer. I also play recorder, Scottish and Northumbrian
smallpipes, piano and hand drums. All of these sounds
play a part in my musical journey.
THE TUNES
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1 Humours
Of Rockstown / Paddy Lynn’s Delight / Ríl Roscomaín
A set of Irish reels. The first can be found in Ryan’s
Mammoth Collection of 1050 Reels & Jigs, ed. by Patrick
Sky. The second tune I adapted from the playing of accordionist
Karen Tweed. I learned the last tune from uilleann piper
Paul Levin. Hammered dulcimer, acoustic guitar, fiddle
(Sara), Irish flute & bodhran.
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2 Samhain
Set: All Hallows Eve / The Seeker
© Maggie Sansone
I began composing this on October 31, the day before
Samhain (“sow-win” in Irish Gaelic), the Celtic New
Year which marks the beginning of winter and the season
of darkness. At Samhain, barriers between the spirit
and concrete worlds dissolve and otherworldly spirits
walk the earth. In “All Hallows Eve,” I play the E-bow,
a hand-held electronic device that produces an ethereal
bowed-string effect. “The Seeker” follows -- a ghostly
march scored for chamber quintet to carry us to the
end of a dark season and into the light. Hammered dulcimer,
E-bow, flute, alto flute, bamboo flute, clarinet, bass
clarinet & Celtic harp.
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3 Bear
Dance (Björndansen)
The Swedish “bear dance” is an athletic dance traditionally
performed by a pair of men who act out the power and
grace of the bear. I learned these tunes from Swedish
fiddler Andrea Hoag who traces these two variants to
Dalarna, Sweden's "folklore province.” In the deep woods
of Dalarna, the bear is called “Twelve Men in the Woods.”
Hammered dulcimer, acoustic guitar, fiddle (Andrea),
clarinet, accordion, electric bass and percussion.
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4 Go
to Berwick, Johnny
A popular Northumbrian pipe tune I first heard played
by pipers Jerry O’Sullivan and Chris Orstead. In setting
it on the hammered dulcimer with its unique organization
of strings, I found that many new variations suggested
themselves, aided by the use of various hammers and
the muted sound of pedal dampers. Hammered dulcimer.
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5 Farewell
To Nigg © Duncan Johnstone
A four-part march written by Scottish composer and piper
Duncan Johnstone. I first heard the tune played by pipers
Sandy and Laurie Ross at the Hamish Moore School of
Cauld Wind Pipes in Richmond, Vermont. Hammered dulcimer,
acoustic guitar, fiddle (Bonnie), soprano saxophone
& organ.
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6 The
Seas are Deep / Dervish ©
Maggie Sansone
These tunes both spring from the same musical scale.
The first is a short but evocative melody attributed
to the great Irish harper, Turlough O’Carolan (1670-1738).
I hear it as a cry from the soul. It blends four dulcimer
parts: the melody, two tremolos, and a single bending
string. For the next piece I improvised with the images
of mesmerizing Sufi dancers, the Whirling Dervishes,
in my mind. Thus seemingly distant cultures are linked
by a musical scale and the pathos of the human heart!
The shimmering tremolo throughout comes from my santur
studies. Hammered dulcimer, xaphoon (one-octave bamboo
saxophone), tabla & percussion.
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7 The
Flower Among Us All/Johnny Armstrong
Two tunes from Northumberland in the northwest of England.
The first is a composite of several tunes --The Flower
Among Us All, Sir John Fenwick’s Flower Among Us All,
and Mary Scott -- melded over the years into one and
followed by the beautiful air, Johnny Armstrong. It’s
all performed in a chamber ensemble style with the rich
harmonies of woodwinds and a lilting ostinato part on
the kalimba (African thumb piano). Hammered dulcimer,
clarinet, flute, piano, kalimba, fiddle (Bonnie) & Celtic
harp.
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8 Helen
O’Grady / Drops of Brandy
Two slip jigs popular in Scotland. I heard the second
tune played with some variations by piper Chris Orstead
at the Northumbrian Pipers Convention in North Hero,
Vermont which inspired a few variations of my own. As
the tune progresses, the mesmerizing 9/8 rhythm of the
slip jigs takes on an Afro-Celtic spirit with two dulcimers
playing an ostinato part against the percussion. Hammered
dulcimer, guitar, organ, piano, bells, mandolin, cittern,
melodica (a hand-held mouth- blown keyboard – a cousin
to the concertina), soprano saxophone, slit drums, mondo
drums ( kick drum and two toms played with the hands),
marimba, bodhran & Ashiko drum.
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9 The
Banks of the Barrow
Another musical find from O’Neill’s Music Of Ireland.
This beautiful Irish air has a medieval quality to it.
Hammered dulcimer, acoustic guitar, fiddle & viola (Bonnie),
clarinet & frame drum.
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10 The
Traveler’s Dream © Maggie
Sansone
An original composition written in five parts (also
titled Dream of the Magi). I imagined the three kings,
travelers in the night, moving steadily across the windswept
desert sands on a journey of discovery. Hammered dulcimer,
clarinet, bass clarinet, fiddle (Bonnie), Celtic harp
& viola da gamba.
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11 Lughnasa
Set: The Green Fields of Woodford / Summertime / A Morning
in Summer
A perfect set of jigs to celebrate the ancient Celtic
summer festival of Lughnasa (loo-nah-sa). The first
jig is from East Galway in Ireland, learned from the
playing of flute player Jack Coen. The second is from
Northumberland. The third, from O’Neill’s Music of Ireland,
joins the dulcimer and its family of mallet-struck instruments
in a sunny rhythmic accompaniment. Hammered dulcimer,
Celtic harp, Irish flute, piccolo, piano, kalimba, wooden
xylophone & marimba.
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12 Gaelic
Reels
I learned this set -- a bit of South Uist mouth music,
a Cape Breton wedding reel and another Gaelic reel --
from the playing of piper Christopher Layer while attending
the Hamish Moore Cauld Wind School of Piping. All three
tunes use the standard Highland bagpipe scale. Hammered
dulcimer, acoustic guitar, fiddle (Bonnie), soprano
saxophone, accordion, bamboo flute, clarinet, bass clarinet
& percussion including medieval snare drum, bodhran,
dombek & tabla.
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Maggies Music now
available for download:
Maggie's
Music ~ PO Box 490 ~
Shady Side, MD 20764
Office: 410/867-0642 ~ FAX: 410/867-0265
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