Originally posted by Lateralthinking1
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MAK's most recent show
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Oilrig
Beyond excited .....
Sometimes, it's good to be paid to talk about other folks making music.
THE VOICE SQUAD
Thoroughly decent chaps and stunning musicians - and all on a Sunday morning!!
They have been - for many, many years - the Christmas heralds in this house - so wonderful to be not dissappointed in real life!!!
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Originally posted by Oilrig View PostSometimes, it's good to be paid to talk about other folks making music.
THE VOICE SQUAD
Thoroughly decent chaps and stunning musicians - and all on a Sunday morning!!
They have been - for many, many years - the Christmas heralds in this house - so wonderful to be not dissappointed in real life!!!
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Originally posted by Paul Sherratt View Post
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Oilrig
Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostThem Voice Squad were terrific and I'm sure I haven't heard a finer version of the Parting Glass.
The only disappointment in this session was my spelling in writing about it above - apologies! The Parting Glass was a total indulgence of me on their part (for which massive thanks!) - but the finest thing they've possibly ever done was on John Renbourn's Traveler's Prayer album, with John's own reworking of the Wexford Carol sung as a quartet with Mairead Ni Dhomhnaill. Stunning, stunning, stunning - go listen and do not return if you have not wept.
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Originally posted by Oilrig View PostThe only disappointment in this session was my spelling in writing about it above - apologies! The Parting Glass was a total indulgence of me on their part (for which massive thanks!) - but the finest thing they've possibly ever done was on John Renbourn's Traveler's Prayer album, with John's own reworking of the Wexford Carol sung as a quartet with Mairead Ni Dhomhnaill. Stunning, stunning, stunning - go listen and do not return if you have not wept.
Hmm, may have to give this one a 9 out of 10. And that's exceeding rare, Oilrig, exceeding rare.
A couple of items:
Dominic Behan singing of the Brown & Yellow Ale
That throw-away comment from the VS about James Joyce liking the song led me to...
We know some of James Joyce's favourites. His favourite operatic composer was Verdi. His favourite liturgical composer was Palestrina. When young his favourite song was "Silent, O Moyle." In later life, "The Brown Ale and the Yellow Ale." Or was it "Finnegans Wake?" He confessed (unexpectedly) a great admiration for Schoenberg. Not so the works of another contemporary, Igor Stravinsky, that Joyce said "not even a canary could sing." Joyce knew Busoni in Zurich, but called his work Orchesterbetriebe ("orchestral goings-on").
Jog jig jogged stopped. Dandy tan show of dandy Boylan socks skyblue clocks came light to earth.
O, look we are so! Chamber music. Could make a kind of pun on that. It is a kind of music I often thought when she. Acoustics that is. Tinkling. Empty vessels make most noise. Because the acoustics, the resonance changes according to the weight of the water is equal to the law of falling water. Like those rhapsodies of Liszt's, Hungarian, gipsyeyed. Pearls. Drops. Rain. Diddle iddle addle aadle oodle oodle. Hiss. Now. Maybe now. Before.
(Ulysses, p. 364)
A history of The Parting Glass & the amazing number of different versions here...there are some who'll maybe recall Bobby Z nicking the idea & the tune http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHGlu2LOWr8 - but as this tune has been on the planet since the 1770s' it seems you just have to say "trad. arr."
but let's not go into ethnomusicology mode, just the lyrics themselves are worth a post in their own right:
Of all the money e'er I had,
I spent it in good company.
And all the harm e'er I've done,
Alas! it was to none but me.
And all I've done for want of wit
To mem'ry now I can't recall
So fill to me the parting glass
Good night and joy be with you all.
So fill to me the parting glass
And drink a health whate'er befalls
Then gently rise and softly call
"Good night and joy be to you all"
Oh, all the comrades e'er I had,
They're sorry for my going away,
And all the sweethearts e'er I had,
They'd wish me one more day to stay,
But since it falls unto my lot,
That I should rise and you should not,
I gently rise and softly call,
Good night and joy be with you all.
If I had money enough to spend,
And leisure time to sit awhile,
There is a fair maid in this town,
That sorely has my heart beguiled.
Her rosy cheeks and ruby lips,
I own she has my heart in thrall,
Then fill to me the parting glass,
Good night and joy be with you all.Last edited by Globaltruth; 10-07-12, 12:52. Reason: well, I'm glad to be back and obviously wish joy be with you all
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Originally posted by Globaltruth View PostA history of The Parting Glass & the amazing number of different versions here...there are some who'll maybe recall Bobby Z nicking the idea & the tune http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHGlu2LOWr8 - but as this tune has been on the planet since the 1770s' it seems you just have to say "trad. arr."
but let's not go into ethnomusicology mode, just the lyrics themselves are worth a post in their own right:
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Oilrig's back from Womad and she's got Bela Fleck and Oumou Sangaré on as guests this evening on a short shift - only 75 mins - she's also got something from the upcoming Karine Polwart release. This one's going to be on it - here it is from the Darwin Song Project last year. I could imagine Dick Gaughan having a good go at this one.
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Paul Sherratt
Pup Roxy got me up in the middle of the night, Wednesday ( He'd earlier broken in to a sack of the older dog's food ) That Fleck was on the World Service.
Sounded quite amusing - Global will know how to find the LA version, I'm sure )
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Originally posted by Paul Sherratt View PostPup Roxy got me up in the middle of the night, Wednesday ( He'd earlier broken in to a sack of the older dog's food ) That Fleck was on the World Service.
Sounded quite amusing - Global will know how to find the LA version, I'm sure )
there's this:
Santa Monica Freeway
or, more likely...
The Conga Room
One of these should stop the little feller from scavenging...
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Globaltruth View PostThe Los Angeles version? now there's a challenge....
there's this:
Santa Monica Freeway
or, more likely...
The Conga Room
One of these should stop the little feller from scavenging...
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostGreat to hear selections from the Rough Guide to Highlife, Terakaft and Manuel Galban. Some strong performers in the Sangare/Fleck set, not least the ubiquitous Alioune Wade, but I didn't take to it hugely until 'Kounadia' which I very much liked. The Karine Polwart and Sheena Wellington tracks were also well worth including. Shame that we only had one and a quarter hours this week but good that there was so much to it.
In the past I've had mixed reactions to Bela Fleck's previous work , no doubting his virtuosity, but, for reasons I'm not going to analyse, I found this session worked wonderfully well, very refreshing after other distractions.
High Life !! clip's truncated - sorry
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Oilrig
Following on from the Karine track - I played the whole in the car on the way down from Harris yesterday (glorious gig with the family!) - and it is IMVHO one of the finest things to come out this year. Words, voice, production, the whole thing - it is exquisite.
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