Thursday, April 28, 2011

Music and the Royal Wedding

william and catherine
william and catherine at st andrews
As with the design of the wedding dress, just what music will be played at the wedding of Miss Catherine Middleton and HRH Prince William of Wales is being kept on the quiet until the day itself. The London Chamber Orchestra, two choirs, and two fanfare teams will be involved, and an original fanfare will be played after the ceremony as the couple signs the wedding register. Other than that, word is that there will be newly commissioned pieces as well as familiar hymns, all chosen by William and Catherine themselves.

What do you think? Elgar, Purcell, John Rutter, something else entirely? Princess Diana’s choice for her wedding hymn, I Vow to Thee My Country? Music that references the couple’s time together in Scotland? Traditional Anglican hymns are likely to be included, and, since the 1860s. that has encompassed a wide range of music.

In any case, if you like what you hear. music as recorded during the service will be available both digitally and on disc beginning just a few days after the service,. It is the first time music from a royal wedding is being offered digitally, and the CD is said to come with a souvenir booklet.

two songs that may not be on William and Catherine’s playlist (but then again...)
but go well with the wedding spirit

White Dress by Cathie Ryan

Wedding Dress by T with the Maggies

update: here is a list of the music which was played at the royal wedding service. It did, in fact, include Elgar and a newly commissioned piece by John Rutter, which was a wedding gift to the couple from Westminster Abbey. more thoughts on this music to come. meanwhile, you may order the official recording of the music The Royal Wedding: The Official Album


you may also wish to see

Music Road: from Donegal: T with the Maggies
Music Road: Cathie Ryan: Songwriter
Official Royal Wedding site

photographs of William and Catherine courtesy of Clarence House

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posted by Kerry Dexter at 5 Comments

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

silence and music

Musicians often have a practice of taking a moment of reflection before going on stage. This may be, literally, a moment, which isn’t apparent to anyone but the musician, or it may be a shared time with others working the gig. That moment of interior silence, of centering, then flows out into the music. Here are three moments of stillness within the sound.


lauren maccoll with fiddle copyright kerry dexter
laoise kelley in glasgow copyright kerry dexter
cathie ryan in ennis copyright kerry dexter











the artists here are
Cathie Ryan, with bodhran
Laoise Kelley, with harp
Lauren MacColl, with fiddle

photographs taken at the Tron, in Glasgow, Scotland, and Glor Music Center in Ennis, Republic of Ireland and were made with permission of the artists, and are copyrighted. thank you for respecting this.

you may also wish to see

Music Road: Celtic Connections 2011: images
Music Road: Cathie Ryan: Songwriter
Music Road: artists of the decade

and

Delicious Baby's Photo Friday, where travelers offer new insights to the world each Friday.

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posted by Kerry Dexter at 1 Comments

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Music for Easter

sunrise county louth ireland copyright kerry dexter

Two albums which go especially well with the many facets of rejoicing at the Easter season (Passover and spring, as well) are Hanneke Cassel’s Some Melodious Sonnet, a collection of original and traditional fiddle tunes grounded in Scottish tradition, and Shannon Heaton’s The Blue Dress which comprises lively and thoughtful adventures in Irish flute. Both of these women are fine interpreters of traditional music, and gifted composers as well. Give a listen.





you may also wish to see
Music Road: voices: hanneke cassel
Music Road: Another Fine Winter's Night: Matt & Shannon Heaton
Music Road: artists of the decade

If you enjoy what you are reading here, check out my newsletter at Substack for more stories about music, the people who make it and the places which inspire it.

-->Music Road is reader supported . Your support for Music Road is welcome and needed. If you are able to chip in, here is a way to do that, through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this. Thank you.

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Friday, April 22, 2011

Lessons from an Old Lament

stone cross county louth ireland copyright kerry dexter
The story told in Lament Of The Three Marys is of Good Friday from a mother’s point of view: Mary seeks her son, asking her friends, have you seen him? have you seen my bright love? and finally she finds him, carrying his cross on the road to Golgotha. She says, son let me help you, son, I am your mother. Christ answers: we each must carry our own cross, mother.

I’ve always thought that was a more useful, and more Irish, idea than the commonly used statement about there’s always someone who is in a worse situation than you are, and the like. We each must carry our own cross, and we do not know the weight of each other’s burdens. What we may choose to do, though, is to share a word, a smile, a hand of friendship, a cup of water, and a song, along the way,

Hear Cathie Ryan sing Lament of the Three Marys in Irish

It is on her album The Music of What Happens.

you may also wish to see other music to go along with these ideas

Music Road: Songs for an Easter weekend
Music Road: Cathie Ryan: Songwriter
Music Road: Carrie Newcomer: Before & After
and Cathie's album called Through Wind and Rain

-->Your support for Music Road is welcome and needed. If you are able to chip in, here is a way to do that, through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this. Thank you.

Another way to support: you could Buy Me a Coffee at ko-fi.com

If you enjoy what you are reading here, check out my newsletter at Substack for more stories about music, the people who make it and the places which inspire it.

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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

holy week

candles carlingford 2 copyright kerry dexter
A time of contemplation, of consideration, of looking at new understandings of old stories, this season of Holy Week, Passover, and turn of season. three albums which make good companions along such journeys:


On The Blue Dress, Shannon Heaton creates a thoughtful and engaging tapestry of original and traditional tunes grounded in the music of Ireland

Hanneke Cassel and Christopher Lewis take a fresh look at hymns from several traditions on Calm the Raging Sea

Follow Duncan Chisholm to the Highlands of Scotland, always a place which invites contemplation, on Canaich

-->A way to support Music Road,
through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this.

Another way to support: you could Buy Me a Coffee at ko-fi.com

If you enjoy what you are reading here, come visit -- and perhaps, subscribe -- to my newsletter at Substack for more stories about music, the people who make it, and the places which inspire it.

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Thursday, April 14, 2011

Where do you find inspiration?

glasgow scotland woodside cresent  lighted window copyright kerry dexter
Where do you find inspriration for your creative ideas?

It might be in an angle of light, in the laughter of a friend, in a glance from a passing stranger, through a phrase in you read the morning paper, in watching your children at play, or in looking up and seeing a quiet lighted window while on a winter evening walk.

The one in this photograph is in Woodside Crescent near Kelvingrove Park in Glasgow, Scotland. Most of the buildings there have been casting light from their windows on passing travelers since the nineteenth century.

Music to go along with these ideas

Music Road: Carrie Newcomer: faith and laughter
Music Road: Matt & Shannon Heaton: Blue Skies Above


you may also wish to see
Delicious Baby's Photo Friday, where travelers offer new insights to the world each Friday.

-->Your support for Music Road is welcome and needed. If you are able to chip in, here is a way to do that, through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this. Thank you.

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posted by Kerry Dexter at 2 Comments

Scottish music a different way: The Unusual Suspects

The Old Fruitmarket in Glasgow offers both welcome and whimsy, and a sense of connection with history, as well. The arc of the Victorian ceiling and the ironmongery and grocer’s signs from the days when the building was the city’s produce market remain, in what is now a venue whose atmosphere is infused with music.

History, whimsy, and welcome were all fully present one January night during Celtic Connections as a packed out standing room only crowd joined the Unusual Suspects to mark the completion of their album Big Like This.

Pipes and more pipes, whistles, fiddles and more fiddles, accordion, trumpet, flugelhorn, drums, percussion, piano, bass, flute, trombone, guitar, saxophone, harp, and voice: these were the instruments the Suspects brought to make their sound that night, and what a sound it was indeed. Completely contemporary, completely traditional, altogether Scottish, and completely engaging, as many of the best musicians in Scotland joined up to show just why they are the best musicians in Scotland, each giving their unique gifts, and in complete service to the music.unusual suspects scottish band pipers copyright kerry dexter

That music included a high energy blast of a set which paired Gordon Duncan’s Pressed for Time with John Morris Rankin’s Hull’s Reel and from the tradition, Saint Kilda’s Wedding. Also from the tradition and fully respecting that, but very likely not sounding like any way you have heard it done before, was Fair Floo’ers, with Corrina Hewat taking lead vocal, backed with harmonies from Ewan Robertson and Calum MacCrimmon.

The heart of this band is collaboration among the gifted musicians, and the creative vision they all share with Corrina Hewat and Dave Milligan. Hewat and Milligan had the idea for a folk orchestra, folk big band, a dozen or so years ago. As the years unfolded they worked on the thought, and were offered a slot at the Celtic Connections Festival in 2003. A recording followed, but even with festival commissions and invitations from the likes of Celtic Colours on Cape Breton and L’Orient Celtique in France, it has proved challenging to work with a twenty two piece band, each of whose members has other commitments and careers and who live and travel to all sorts of different places.

They do it, though. “This is a passion David and I have, to work on this band,” Hewat says. The couple, who are married, each have their own full slate of musical commitments beyond the Suspects too, but it an idea and a passion they continue to build upon. That passion, from Milligan and Hewat and all the musicians on stage, was evident that evening at the Old Fruitmarket, and it radiated into joy shared with those who came to listen, who gave it back to the band in full measure. The music is rather complex stuff, actually, containing elements from jazz and folk, and varied Scottish traditions from alla cross the land. No worries, the audience was with the artists every step of the way, and wanting more, as they played a set of tunes comprising Grappa Groove from Eilidh Shaw, who was one of the fiddlers on the night, Not Only But Oslo by Milligan, and Elmo Lives Downstairs, which was written by Hewat.

unusual suspcet scottish namd glasgow copyright kerry dexterIn addition to Fair Floo’ers there were other songs on the program, including May Thy Morn from the pen of Scottish national bard Robert Burns and Both Sides of the Tweed, written by Dick Gaughan. There were tunes from fiddler Anna Massie, who was also in the band on the night, and Calum MacCrimmon, who was playing pipes and whistles with the band. Catriona Macdonald, Patsy Reid, Mairearad Green, Ewan Robertson, and Colin Steele were among the other players on stage to contribute to the powerful closing, a five set work composed by Hewatt and Milligan called the L'Orient Suite, which allowed every part of the Suspects full measure of participation.

One of the things the Unusual Suspects were doing that evening was celebrating the completion of their album called Big Like This. That album is out now, and one of the best ways to describe the music on it is through a remark Corrina Hewat made when speaking of her own composing style and understanding of music: “You know, I think jazz is really folk music too. I don’t see unusual suspects scottish folk band big like this album coverit as merging folk and jazz, I actually think it’s just one big music. I don’t distinguish between them,” she said. The musicians’ joy in exploring that idea nd meeting the challenges that go along with that comes across as clearly on the recording as it did on that Glasgow night. Take a listen -- take several. You will be well rewarded.

photographs were taken with permission of the artists and are copyrighted. thank you for respecting this

.
Quite a few of the musicians you’ve met here along the music road, in addition to those mentioned above, have taken part in the band over time
visit the Unusual Suspects web site to see a list


you may also wish to see
Bahrain and Scotland: a musical connection
Music Road: Scotland on the harp: Corrina Hewat
Music Road: Music for St Andrew's Day: music of Scotland

-->Your support for Music Road is welcome and needed. If you are able to chip in, here is a way to do that, through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this. Thank you.

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posted by Kerry Dexter at 10 Comments

Friday, April 08, 2011

Words, music, and national poetry month

robert burns statue glasgow scotland copyright kerry dexter

Music and poetry have much in common -- and many differences as well. As the United States is marking national poetry month in April, I invite you to reflect and consider what those connections and differences might be, as you also consider this statue of Robert Burns, taken on a foggy morning in Glasgow -- as he might be contemplating twenty first century Glasgow city center.

music to go along with these ideas
Music Road: Eddi Reader, Emily Smith, Robert Burns
Music Road: intersections: words, music, and Robert Burns


you may also wish to see
Songs Based on Literature

and
Delicious Baby's Photo Friday, where travelers offer new insights to the world each Friday.

-->Your support for Music Road is welcome and needed. If you are able to chip in, here is a way to do that, through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this. Thank you.

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posted by Kerry Dexter at 10 Comments

Thursday, April 07, 2011

Stan Rogers: songwriter of work, change, & sea

A journey across Canada by a modern day man in search of himself, a trip by an explorer centuries go seeking a northwest passage to the Orient, and a bringing together of the strands of hope, connection, and regret all that implies: those are things Stan Rogers gets at in his song Northwest Passage. It is not surprising then that though Canada has a very fine national anthem already, when the CBC asked a few years back what people would choose for an alternate. Northwest Passage was it. The fact that it has an anthemic chorus helps imagine in that way, as well.

see a video of Stan Rogers singing the chorus of Northwest passage

Rogers was a musician of the land, and of the working person. Though still in his early thirties when he died in an accident, he left a legacy of song which continue to touch people's hearts across the world.
Sixteen of these are gathered on The Very Best of Stan Rogers.

Rogers shows his lively, jaunty side in Fogarty’s Cove, and handles sadness, the bittersweet nature of aging, and the lasting power of love in the reflective song Lies. Free in the Harbour weaves in whaling and changes in the work of seafaring.  stan rogers coverWork and change, in the sea and on the farm, are frames for the stories Rogers tells in Make and Break Harbour and The Field Behind the Plow. His deep baritone adds color to the stories he tells, and the time he spent in Nova Scotia, summers a a child and returning as an adult is likely one reason you hear elements of Scotland and Cape Breton often in melody and instrumentation on these tracks.

The collection closes with the song The Mary Ellen Carter. The raising of a sunken ship and finding courage and hope to face obstacles all come into play in this well loved song, but not quite in the way you might think. That’s something Rogers left as a legacy, too: stories and melodies that work well in a straightforward way, yet often contain layers of meaning beyond what is at first apparent as well.


you may also wish to see
Music Road: celebrating canada: Gordon Lightfoot
Music Road: Garnet Rogers: All That Is

-->Your support for Music Road is welcome and needed. If you are able to chip in, here is a way to do that, through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this. Thank you.

If you enjoy what you’ve been reading here, another way to support more of it: Buy Me a Coffee at ko-fi.com

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posted by Kerry Dexter at 2 Comments

Friday, April 01, 2011

Scottish Musicians look at the Future of Our Past

In folk music of any country, there often arises the question of how do we pass this on? right alongside the question of how do we make this new? and how do we add our own stamp to it? how do we do that while respecting and sharing the best of what’s gone before? There are as many answers to these questions as there are musicians, of course. Listeners often weight in too, some wanting only exact replicas of what they’ve heard before, others wanting only fusion, and others willing to hear what the musicians my have in mind.

The students and tutors on the Scottish traditional music course at the Royal Scottish future of our past album cover scottish musicAcademy of Music and Drama in Glasgow (RSAMD for short) think about this sort thing quite often, and put their answers in to practice in the work they do. RSAMD is the only place in the world with an honours BA course in Scottish traditional music, and just to get in one has to meet a very high standard.

That standard is well shown in the nicely titled recording The Future of Our Past, as students on the BA and post graduate diploma courses in 2010 have a go at jigs and reels, pipe solos, puirt-a-beul, and ballads and songs in English and Scottish Gaelic. More than three dozen students took part in the project, which was produced by two artists you’ve met before along the music road, Phil Cunningham and Findlay Napier. The set of jigs and polkas which includes Muireann’s Jig, written by Irish composer Niall Vallely and the traditional Tom Barrett’s is very well done and makes a fine opener for the set. Paul McKenna takes lead vocals on The Banks of Newfoundland, while Katherine MacLeod is the singer on the Gaelic song Moladh Uibhist. There’s a song written by Richard Thompson and a tune by Fred Morrison, and many tunes and songs from the tradition, and otehr from contemprary composers who write in that vein as well. Hazne Metrao and Alasdair hendrson on Highland bagpipes and Kirstem MacLeod on accrodion are aomong the otehrs who have solo aprts .All in all, it is a well paced and well thought out project, lively and engaging, and well worth your listening.
atlantic breeze celtic connections copyright kerry dexter
Side note: Students from the RSAMD, the University of Strathclyde, and Berklee College in Boston, Massachusetts, all got together for an equally engaging program during Celtic Connection in January of this year. This was called Atlantic Breeze, and the music traced a bit of melody and song travels across the Atlantic and back again.

photograph made with permission of the artists, and is copyrighted. thank you for respecting this.


you may also wish to see
Music Road: Scott-Land at Celtic Connections
Music Road: from Donegal: T with the Maggies
Music Road: Celtic Connections 2011: images

-->If you'd like to support my creative work,
here is a way to do that, through PayPal. Note that you do not have to have a PayPal account to do this.Thank you.

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posted by Kerry Dexter at 0 Comments