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available for download:
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info on the annual
Scottish
Christmas Tour...
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A Scottish Christmas
featuring Bonnie
Rideout, Maggie Sansone, Al
Petteway
*New--listen to 2 minute audio samples, click
here: www.cdbaby.com/cd/brmsap
Traditional Scottish
carols, wassail tunes, strathspeys and reels for the
celebration of Christmas, Hogmanay & the New Year,
featuring Bonnie Rideout on Scottish fiddle, Al Petteway on
guitar & cittern, Maggie Sansone on hammered dulcimer,
Eric Rigler (the piper on "Braveheart" soundtrack) on Highland
bagpipes, Scottish smallpipes & Uilleann pipes, with cello
and percussion.
Order
#MM215 CD
$12.00 + shipping
(PayPal prices include
shipping)
60:20 minutes.
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REVIEWS:
"Ancient and
infectious...one of the best selling CDs of the season and so
compelling no matter what the listener's ancestry."
CBS-TV's Sunday Morning
"Top
10 Holiday Picks" Tempos
are leisurely, the better to let the melodies ring; the tone
is pristine."
The New York Times
Tune List
1 O Come, O Come Emmanuel/God Rest Ye
Merry, Gentleman 4:14
2 Here We Come A-Wassailing/Bottom of
the Punch Bowl 3:37
3 Christmas Duanag/Hark the Bonny Christ
Bells 3:00
4 What Child Is This (Greensleeves)
5:42
5 Rock Thee O' Child/Christ Child's Lullaby
4:31
6 Christmas Carousing/Ale Is Dear/New
Christmass 3:59
7 Da' Day Dawis/Christmas Day I' Da Moornin'
4:20
8 Adeste Fidelis (O Come All Ye
Faithful) 2:53
9 Baloo, Lammy 3:57
10 Gloomy Winter 2:22
11 The Huntsman's Bag of Grain/Goosegirl's
Song/New Year's Day 3:10
12 New Year's Day/On Christmas Night
3:26
13 Yeoman's Carol/Sound of Sleat
5:13
14 Rorate (Nativity) 2:54
15 All Sons of Adam 1:55
16 Auld Lang Syne 4:22
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Liner
Notes
MUSICIANS |
BONNIE RIDEOUT
MAGGIE SANSONE
AL PETTEWAY
ERIC RIGLER
...
ABBY NEWTON
JON QUIGG
PRODUCED BY
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Fiddle & viola
Hammered dulcimer
Guitar, cittern & bodhran
Highland bagpipe, Scottish smallpipes, & uilleann pipes
Cello
Highland fife drum
CHARLIE PILZER
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Dear Listeners,
When selecting music for this recording, I considered
two important factors. First, compositions that fit well
to both Maggie's evocative interpretations on the hammered
dulcimer and Al's fluid contemporary guitar style. Their
unique sounds combined with the Scottish fiddle, pipes and
cello created a wide pallet of textures. Also, I chose a
potpourri of repertoire to reflect the many moods of Christmas.
Included are familiar Christmas melodies, lesser known tunes
from Scotland with seasonal titles and a few choice classics
such as "Bottom of the Punch Bowl" and "Ale is Dear which
are too irreistible not to include. We hope that this recording
will bring a touch of Scots pine and peat fire into your
holidays for many years to come.
Merry Christmas from the bottom of our punch bowl!
Bonnie Rideout
- 1 O
Come, O Come Emmanuel/God Rest Ye Merry, Gentleman
(Fiddle, Highland bagpipes & fife drum) 4:13
A 12th century Latin carol followed by a traditional Christmas
carol popular around the world. In keeping with the Scottish
fiddle tradition, Bonnie composed a closing jig using
elements of the final melody.
- 2
Here We Come A-Wassailing/Bottom of the Punch Bowl
(Fiddle, hammered dulcimer & guitar) 3:44
The first carol is popular throughout the British Isles
and America. Wassailing is a lively tradition practiced
in many towns where villagers carry their favorite libation
from house to house. "Bottom of the Punch Bowl" harkens
back to dances of the eight-some reel.
- 3 DUAN
NOLLAIG (Christmas Duanag)/Hark the Bonny Christ Church
Bells
(Hammered dulcimer, bells & chimes) 3:04
Christmas chants such as the first in this medley were
common throughout traditional Scotland. In Carmichael's
"Carmina Gadelica," the author describes "rejoicers" -
- men dressed in long white shirts and hats -- venturing
out on Christmas Eve to sing from door to door. Delighted
neighbors often rewarded them with hot cakes called "bannocks."
The second tune is from an old hymnal Bonnie found in
a used book shop in Glasgow. The chimes were played with
great pomp by Abby and Bonnie, with beloved producer Charlie
as chimemaster.
- 4 What
Child Is This (Greensleeves)
(Fiddle, hammered dulcimer, guitar & uilleann pipes) 5:43
A 16th century English tune equally popular in Scotland.
The final jig is a uniquely 18th century Scottish version
of this familiar melody.
- 5 SUID
A LEINIBH (Rock Thee O Child)/TALADH AR SLANAIR (Our Savior
Thee)/TALADH CHRIOSTA (Christ Child Lullaby)
(Hammered dulcimer, guitar & viola) 4:30
This first Gaelic air was collected on the Isle of Skye
and may be an ancient Norse lullaby. Its lyrics refer
to singing birds, ending with a gentle "cuckoo" to draw
the listener into a famous Scots lullaby. The first version
Maggie plays here was originally a waulking song("waulking"is
a process for shrinking tweed cloth) from South Uist.
Catholics there adapted it for the church, singing all
29 verses during the Christmas Mass. The final rendition
on the viola reflects the version most widely known today.
- 6 A
MHISG A CHUR AN LOLIG OIRN (Christmas Carousing)/Ale is
Dear/New Christmass
(Hammered dulcimer, smallpipes, guitar, cello & bodhran)
4:04
These tunes can be found in the Skye, Kerr and Fraser
collections respectively. Eric starts the set with the
smallpipes, a bellows-blown bagpipe unique to the borders
of Scotland.
- 7 Da
Day Dawis (The Day Dawns)/Christmas Day I' Da Moornin'
(Fiddle, hammered dulcimer, guitar & cello) 4:15
Two tunes from the Shetland Islands off the northeastern
coast of Scotland. The first, possibly 15th century, was
performed door-to-door by fiddlers before sunrise to call
sleepers to the kirk (church) on Christmas Day.
- 8 Adeste
Fidelis (O Come All Ye Faithful)
(Highland bagpipe & fiddle.) 2:53
An 18th century hymn.
- 9 Baloo,
Lammy
(Guitar & uilleann pipes) 3:59
A 17th century Scottish Christmas carol set by Al and
Eric to a contemporary beat. The expressive uilleann pipes
are featured -- "uilleann" is Irish Gaelic for "elbow."
- 10 Gloomy
Winter
(Viola & fiddle) 2:23
Bonnie learned this tune from her primary school teacher
in a one-room schoolhouse in Maine. She was attracted
to the melancholy nature of this lovely Scottish air which
speaks of loneliness and the coming of spring.
- 11 POCA
SIL AN T-SEALGAIR (The Huntsman's Bag of Grain)/GAASEPIGENS
SANG (Goosegirl's Song)/'BHLIADHN UR (New Year's Day)
(Hammered dulcimer, guitar, fiddle & cello) 3:12
A Gaelic children's song collected on the Isle of Skye
and a cousin to the Norwegian tune which follows. The
Captain Simon Fraser collection (1816) is the source of
the last tune which was often sung to Fraser by his father.
- 12 New
Year's Day/On Christmas Night
(Guitar) 3:27
The first tune is from an 18th century Gow collection
of dance music. The second was collected by Ralph Vaughan
Williams at Monk's Gate, Sussex in 1904.
- 13 Yeoman's
Carol/Sound of Sleat
(Hammered dulcimer, smallpipes, fiddle & fife drum) 5:16
Maggie's distinctive dulcimer interpretation of "Yeoman's
Carol" gradually eases into a march tempo to blend with
her favorite pipe march, "Sound of Sleat" (pronounced
"slate"). She first heard the tune played as a slow march
by Christopher Layer, an instructor at the Hamish Moore
School for Cauld Wind Pipes in Vermont. The Sound of Sleat
is a body of water off the Southeastern tip of the Isle
of Skye.
- 14 Rorate
(Nativity)
(Guitar, cello & fiddle) 2:56
This Scottish melody has become a favorite Christmas carol.
"Heaven, earth, sea, man, bird and beast/He that is crowned
above the sky/Pro nobis puer natus est."
- 15 All
Sons of Adam (The Christmas Medley)
(Fiddle & cello) 1:55
This medley of Christmas favorites contains "I Saw Three
Ships" in perhaps its earliest version which dates back
to the courts of King James' IV and V of Scotland. John
Purser, author of "Scotland's Music," brought this score
to Bonnie's attention for the recording.
- 16 Auld
Lang Syne
(Fiddle, hammered dulcimer & guitar) 4:27
No holiday recording is complete without this famous Scottish
melody. The arrangement follows the evolution of the tune
over the centuries. It starts with an 18th century rendition
by Allan Ramsey, followed by an early Robert Burns version
and ending with the song embraced by cultures around the
world.
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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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