It’s full-on spring! Today we take flight amidst the breezes, showers, and sunshine to enjoy birdsong and butterflies, and other music on the wing.
12:02: Solasta – The Cecil Sharp Set
12:08: Culanns Hounds – The Maids of Mitchelstown
12:11: The Sea Stallions – The Eagle’s Whistle
12:18: Connie Dover – Ubi Caritas
12:22: Ember – Storm
12:28: Phil Cunningham – Ciara McCarthy_s Lullaby
12:33: Robin Huw Bowen – Clychau Aberdyfi (The Bells of Aberdyfi)
12:37: Siobhan Owen – A Ei Di’r Deryn Du
12:44: Kate Rusby – Who Knows Where The Time Goes
12:49: Anuna – The Wild Song
12:52: Rajaton – Butterfly
12:56: Patrick Ball – The Butterfly
Forest Halls Celtic is one year old! In celebration we wander a musical garden, pausing to listen to some tunes that Jane is inspired to include in her Celtic harp repertoire, hear some of her favorite discoveries from the first year of the show, and savor some music and folklore that springs from the earth. Please join us!
12:01: Lilt – The Long Journey / The Mouse in the Meadow / The Maid in the Cherry Tree
12:05: Enya – Siuil A Run
12:09: Solas – Crested Hens
12:20: The Green Fields of America – The Islander’s Lament
12:24: Athena Tergis – The Porthole of the Kelp / Terralsole
12:27: Ashley Horn and Daniel Horn – Port na bPucai
12:33: Goitse – Serendipity
12:37: Kim Robertson – Ferry Me Across The Water
12:41: Paul Machlis – In The Mist
12:46: Paul Machlis – Nightblossom
12:49: Caoimhin Vallely – The Strayaway Child
12:52: Cara Dillon – Hill of Thieves
Last Saturday, I had the great pleasure of being one of 16 storytellers from the Seattle Storytellers Guild who performed the epic Finnish myth, the Kalevala, at the Nordic Heritage Museum in Ballard. What a fun and amazing experience!
The whole Kalevala took six hours to tell, with two intermissions. Listeners — including myself — truly entered a magical world — one of wonder, humor, adventure, and human foibles — presented against a backdrop of times past or perhaps never were. I personally felt something wake up: my human nature that knows and expects to have an immersive storytelling experience that resounds with layers of myth. For an afternoon the Finnish mythic roots became my own — or perhaps stirred recognition of a similar fabric in my own ancestral and soul psyche. I loved the sense of “passing the story” — one teller to the next — with each teller bring their own “color” and sensibilities to the tale, while also tending the weave of the whole.
One of the tellers, Jill Johnson, well captures the scope and spirit of the event. Read her blog post, An Epic Revisited.
Tellers from British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, and California, all came together to perform this wondrous event. The show is over, but I believe it will air on the radio. I’ll let you know details about that airing when I get them! Also, consider joining the Seattle Storytellers Guild next year, when our 2018 epic storytelling features tales from The Thousand and One Nights!