Radio Show – Episode 13 – Time of Fulfillment – September 18, 2016

In the Celtic Wheel, the Autumn Equinox is the time when we let go of striving, and enjoy instead the full and abundant harvest of all that we have experienced and worked toward in the year and in our lives. In this episode we gather in a joyful harvest of music plus a couple of early Irish poems related to the “time of fulfillment.”

Listen to the latest episode of Forest Halls Celtic on demand

02:15 Davy Spillane – Equinox
07:00 Relativity – Siún Ní Dhuibhir
11:05 Altan – The Rosses Highlands
15:46 Mary Dillon – The Banks of Claudy
20:04 Cara Dillon – Hill of Thieves
25:18 Clannad – Coinleach Glas An Fhomhair
31:11 Flora MacNeil – Craobh Nan Ubhal (Apple Tree)
33:52 Alasdair Fraser and Paul Machlis – Nighean Donn A’ Chuailein Riomhaich
36:31 Molly’s Revenge – Bart’s Rant
42:58 Sileas – Buain A’Choirce
44:40 Verlene Schermer – Bridget Cruise
48:34 Verlene Schermer – Persephone’s Art
52:59 Gaia Consort – The Scythe
55:47 Steeleye Span – Marigold/Harvest Home

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We begin our adventure with a couple of early Irish poems.

Poem – Irish, ninth century

Bees of small strength carry the flower-harvest with their feet;
the cattle bring to the mountain a rich-pouring abundance


Poem – Irish, eleventh century

This one begins:

A good reason for staying is autumn,
there is work then for everyone before the very short days …

“Equinox” – Davy Spillane (Shadow Hunter)
An Irish musician, songwriter and a player of uilleann pipes and low whistle, who first came to my attention by way of his solo playing in Riverdance.

“Siún Ní Dhuibhir” – Relativity (Celtic Odyssey)
Relativity was a Scots-Irish quartet formed in 1985 consisting of two Scottish brothers and an Irish brother and sister. The four members of the band were brothers Johnny Cunningham (fiddle) and Phil Cunningham (accordion, keyboard, whistle, bodhran) of the Scottish band Silly Wizard, and Irish sister and brother Tríona Ní Dhomhnaill (vocals, clavinet) and Mícheál Ó Domhnaill (vocals, guitar, keyboard) of the Bothy Band.

A lad pines over a lass, and in the song, it sounds like she’s rejected him and his heart is broken, however, she says …

Tell him from me
For certain I won’t marry him
For I heard that he wanted
Me with a dowry
Since I don’t have wealth
Or much of a fortune
Let him have whoever he wishes
And I’ll be about my own business


“The Rosses Highlands”” – Altan (Harvest Storm)

A lively song for autumn from this beloved Irish traditional band.

“The Banks Of Claudy” – Mary Dillon (North)
From her website:
“Formerly the lead singer in well-known 90s folk band Déanta, Mary has had a long absence from the music scene, but returns with a renewed energy after 15 years to release an acoustic album of Irish folk songs old and new.
Mary shares the pure and haunting vocal tone associated with her younger sister Cara Dillon, one of the biggest names on the UK and international folk scene. North will showcase the unique quality and maturity of Mary’s voice through a diverse collection of folk songs from the Ulster singing tradition.”

“Hill of Thieves” – Cara Dillon (Hill of Thieves)

From Wikipedia:
The song “Hill of Thieves” was voted by BBC listeners as one of the “Top 10” original songs to come out of Northern Ireland. She is the sister of Mary Dillon, formerly of Déanta. Dillon continues in 2012 to work with her husband Sam Lakeman who backs her on piano and guitar.

“Coinleach Glas an Fhomhair” – Clannad (Magical Ring)
(The Green Stubble-Field of Autumn)
Another “pining” song.

On the green stubble-fields of autumn
I saw you, my sweetheart
Nice were your feet in shoes
And wonderful your nimble gait
Your hair the color of roses
And your ringlets tightly plaited ….

Alas that we’re not married
Or on board ship sailing away
What I heard on Sunday
As conversation among the women
That she was going to be married
To a young man from the place.
Sweetheart take my advice
And this Autumn stay as you are
And don’t tell anyone, my love,
That you are my love.


“Apple Tree” – Flora MacNeil (Craobh Nan Ubhal)

A lovely blessing song for Apple!
Oh apple tree
Apple tree, branch of the apple tree
Oh apple tree
Know the tree that is mine
The tallest with the sweetest apples
Its trunk strikes downwards, its top is bending
Apple tree, may God be with you
May the east and the west be with you
May every sun and moon be with you
May every element be with you

From Wikipedia:
MacNeil was born in 1928 on the island of Barra, one of Gaelic song’s most important strongholds. There were singers on either side of her family, but this was a time when the menfolk were often away at sea for long periods, leaving the women to raise the children and tend the croft – singing all the while, to assuage their labours – and most of MacNeil’s repertoire was passed on from her mother, Ann Gillies.

A quote:
“Traditional songs tended to run in families and I was fortunate that my mother and her family had a great love for the poetry and the music of the old songs. It was natural for them to sing, whatever they were doing at the time or whatever mood they were in. My aunt Mary, in particular, was always ready, at any time I called on her, to drop whatever she was doing, to discuss a song with me, and perhaps, in this way, long forgotten verses would be recollected. So I learned a great many songs at an early age without any conscious effort. As is to be expected on a small island, so many songs deal with the sea, but, of course, many of them may not originally be Barra songs. Nevertheless the old songs were preserved more in the southernmost islands of Barra and South Uist possibly because the Reformed Church tended to discourage music elsewhere.”

“Nighean Donn A’ Chuailein Riomhaich” – Alasdair Fraser & Paul Machlis (Skyedance) [Brown Haired Girl With Lovely Tresses]
From the Patrick McDonald’s A Collection of Highland Vocal Airs, 1784 arranged and performed on fiddle and keyboard.

Molly’s Revenge- Bart’s Rant (Aged 10 Years)

Molly’s Revenge is a dynamic, acoustic west coast Celtic band of bagpipes, whistle, and fiddle. Great fun! They are performing a house concert in Gig Harbor. Here’s the info:

*WHEN:* Sunday, October 23rd at 7:00 pm in Gig Harbor
Contact: HarborHouseConcerts  *at* gmail.com

Bring your instrument(s), voice, and/or dancing feet and join us in an informal post-concert Scottish/Irish session.

“Buain A’Choirce” – Sileas (Playing on Light)

Patsy Seddon on lead vocals, and electro harp. Mary MacMaster on wire-strung harp. Another song of longing:

One day I was reaping oats
I made a cut which was not easy
I sat at the top of the field
Trying to see someone like you
Trying to see someone like you
A brown-haired man with a fair face ….

Oh little seagull who swims the straights
Take my greeting to my love

“Bridget Cruise” – Verlene Schermer (Wishing You Well)
A Turlough O’Carolan tune played on a double strung harp!

Verlene Schermer is a hospital musician at Stanford University and El Camino Hospitals in California’s San Francisco Bay Area. This piece is a part of her vast repertoire of soothing melodies that she plays on her double-strung Celtic harp for patients, family, and staff. …  In addition to her hospital music, she performs in concert on electric harp and cross-strung chromatic harp, accompanying her versatile, expressive voice either solo or with her band.

“Persephone’s Art” – Verlene Schermer (Persephone’s Art)
A song composed by Verlene that expresses in a contemporary voice and style the potent ancient Greek myth of Demeter and Persephone, and the turning of the seasons.

“The Scythe Artist” – Gaia Consort (Evolve)
A quintessential harvest song by a Seattle-based pagan band spear-headed by Christopher Bingham and Sue Tinney. Their musical project has transformed and they now perform as the Bone Poets Orchestra.

“Marigold / Harvest Home” – Steeleye Span (Sails of Silver)
A wonderful piece of music honoring the harvest and English country life.

Radio Show – Episode 12 – Last Rose of Summer – Sept. 4, 2016

The days are shifting into the long golden light of autumn, and a crispness has entered the air. Here on Vashon, the school year is about to begin, signaling the beginning of the full blown harvest that is the creative energy of fall. In today’s show we musically enjoy the “last rose of summer.”

Listen to the latest episode of Forest Halls Celtic on demand

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Format: Track Title – artist (CD Title)

“The Briar and the Rose” – Niamh Parsons and The Loose Connections (Loosen Up) 
Niamh Parsons (born in Dublin, Ireland) is a singer of contemporary and traditional Irish music.Niamh Parsons started her professional career in 1990, in Belfast. Having been singing at sessions around Dublin, Niamh first joined the band Killera from 1984-89. Joining her husband Dee with his band the Loose Connections in 1990, Parsons released two CDs with this band.

“One Summer’s Morning” – Dougie MacLean (Fiddle)
Beloved Scottish songwriter and composer. Here is one of his instrumental compositions.

“Waltz of the White Lilies” -Déanta (Whisper of a Secret)
Déanta is an Irish traditional music band from Northern Ireland. The name of the band is the Irish word for done or made. The band, formed in the late 1980s in County Antrim, played together until 1997 and regrouped in 2008

This beautiful tune was written by Kate O’Brien, fiddler of Deanta.

Let’s enjoy a few harp tunes …

“Sir John Fenwick is the Flower of Them All” – Cynthia Cathcart (Alchemy of a Rose)
Cynthia Cathcart is an expert on the Clàrsach, the wire strung harp of Scotland and Ireland, based near Washington, DC,  We also thank her for serving as the columnist on the wire-strung harp, “Ringing Strings,” for many years for the ISFHC’s Folk Harp Journal.

“Captain O’Kane” – Aryeh Frankfurter (The Music of O’Carolan: O’Carolan’s Dream)
From Wikipedia: “Turlough O’Carolan (1670-1738) was a blind Gaelic harper, composer, and singer whose great fame is due to his gift for melodic composition. He was the last great Irish harper-composer and is considered by many to be Ireland’s most celebrated composer.  “Captain O’Kane” is said to be composed in honour of a member of “a distinguished Antrim family, a sporting Irishman, well known in his day by the name of ‘Slasher O’Kane’” [O’Sullivan]. Tune used by Robert Burns for “The Chevalier’s Lament.”

About Aryeh: Since 1994, Aryeh has been delighting audiences around the globe with his passionate, enduring and evocative music. Aryeh’s uncommon approach to the Celtic harp and folk harp repertoire, command of the unusual Swedish nyckelharpa (or keyed fiddle) and other stringed instruments. He’s based in the San Francisco Bay Area.

“A Place Among the Stones” – Maire Brennan (Misty-Eyed Adventures)
Here Maire performs with three of her sisters and uilleann pipes player Davy Spillane, who I believe served as a producer for this track.

“Soundscape of Relaxing Nature Sounds – Summer in an English Meadow” –Past Tense (youtube)
Lovely nature sounds.

“Blooming Heather“ – Kate Rusby (Awkward Annie)
Kate is an English folk singer and songwriter from Penistone, Barnsley. The more I hear her, the more I love her style of singing! There’s a lovely video of Kate performing this song at the Cambridge Folk Festival that is quite moving. In it, the audience stands, holding each other, swaying, singing softly this familiar and beloved song. And Kate in the video directs the orchestra (String quartet and brass ensemble) with gentle gestures – which as a music director myself I so appreciate. After all, directing is a kind of dance of the hands!

“Inis sui” – Maire Breatnach (Voyage of Bran)
On a quest to the Otherworld, Bran pauses on his travel over the sea at the Isle of Joy ….

Máire Breatnach is one of the most prominent fiddle players in Ireland.

“ The Gold Claddagh Ring” – Andy M. Stewart, Phil Cunningham, Manus Lunny (Fire in the Glen)

From Andy M. Stewart’s website:
(Words and Music: Andy M. Stewart)
“The Claddagh ring originated in an area known as The Claddagh near Galway City in the West of Ireland. The ring has a unique design, that of a heart being encircled by a pair of delicate hands. In this song, the young man’s heart is well and truly in the hands of the girl he admires from afar. On getting to know her better, he falls falls victim to a clever  ploy.”

“Fonn” – Salsa Celtica (The Tall Islands)
Salsa Celtica are a Scottish group that plays a fusion of salsa music with traditional Scottish instruments, including elements of folk and jazz. A surprising mix!

“River of Sky” – Jami Sieber (Timeless)
From her promo:
“Electric cellist and vocalist Jami Sieber reaches inside the soul with compositions that are contemporary, timeless, lush, and powerfully evocative. An innovative musician, Jami’s music moves beyond the surface, seeking and re-seeking her truth by creating musical bridges and connections. Her life-long commitment to the environment, social justice, and the healing arts is at the heart of her music, reflecting a deep dedication to the arts as a medium of exploration and awareness of the interconnectedness of all beings.

Jami has always done something unique – employing electronics and looping techniques to create sounds never before associated with the cello she transforms her solo instrument into an orchestra of sound that opens the heart, defies the mind, and at times, sets the body dancing.”

Jami is performing on Vashon, and I’m looking forward to the concert! See and hear her:

Friday, Oct 14, 7:30 PM
Vashon High School Theater

Tickets at Vashon Intuitive Arts, Vashon Bookshop; online at Brown Paper Tickets
Sponsored by Women’s Way Red Lodge. More info: at Jami’s website.

“The Last Rose of Summer“ – Celtic Woman (Celtic Woman: A New Journey)

From Wikipedia:
“The Last Rose of Summer is a poem by the Irish poet Thomas Moore, who was a friend of Byron and Shelley. He wrote it in 1805, while staying at Jenkinstown Park in County Kilkenny, Ireland, where he was said to have been inspired by a specimen of Rosa ‘Old Blush’. The poem is set to a traditional tune called “Aislean an Oigfear”, or “The Young Man’s Dream”,which was transcribed by Edward Bunting in 1792, based on a performance by harper Denis Hempson (Donnchadh Ó hÁmsaigh) at the Belfast Harp Festival.”

Méav Ní Mhaolchatha and Hayley Westenra of the group Celtic Woman sing this version.

Radio Show – Episodes 9, 10, 11 – Mid-July through August, 2016

Wow, something mysterious happened, and my posts regarding these three episodes have vanished from WordPress. Here are the play lists, but, alas, I don’t think I can recreate the program notes.

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July 17th, 2016 – Episode 9 – Island Life

12:00: Harper Tasche – Nostalgia
12:04: Solas – Crested Hens
12:09: Forest Halls Celtic – Live
12:10: Lunasa – Morning Nightcap
12:15: Silly Wizard – Isla Waters
12:19: Forest Halls Celtic – Live
12:22: Seumus Gagne – O Is Toil Agus Gu Ro Thoil Leam
12:25: The Owner’s Daughter – Blow the Candle Out
12:29: Forest Halls Celtic – Live
12:31: Afro Celt Sound System – Eireann
12:36: Maire Brennan – Against the Wind
12:41: Enya – Athair Ar Neamh
12:45: Forest Halls Celtic – Live
12:46: Sakaue Masume – Rosemary
12:52: Mary Jane Lamond & Wendy MacIsaac  – If You were Mine
12:55: Spookytree (Deb Knodel & Jane Valencia) – Lochaber No More
12:56: Cossu, Scott – Vashon Poem

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August 7th, 2016 – Episode 10 – First Harvest

In the Celtic Wheel of the Year, this is time of the First Harvest – the beginning of the harvest season, and of the gathering of community in various ways: through festivals, markets, and so on. In this episode we’ll be enjoying a kind of musical gathering, in which various musical styles, from traditional to modern, intermingle. So, I invite you to listen today for elements of jazz, rock, folk, and ballad, and more in our wanders through the forest. We’ll also stepping outside the Celtic realm of the forest into a neighboring area of myth and magic, with that of a pair of folk-indie-pop songs from Iceland.

12:01: Catriona McKay & Chris Stout – Smugglers Set
12:08: Andy M. Stewart, Phil Cunningham, Manus Lunny – Nil Si I nGra
12:12: Tristan Le Govic – Jag tanker sa titt
12:14: Johnnie Lawson – Excerpt 5
12:18: Live – Forest Halls Celtic
12:18: Plethyn – Breuddwyd Glyndwr
12:21: Golden Bough – Song of the Wandering Aengus
12:25: Listenbee – Nottamun Town
12:28: Johnnie Lawson – Excerpt 6
12:31: Jochen Vogel – Give me Your Hand (Tabhair dom do Lamh)
12:34: Capercaillie – Nil Si I nGra
12:39: Gaelic Storm – Scalliwag
12:42: Live – Forest Halls Celtic
12:45: Seabear – I-ll Build you a Fire
12:45: Seabear – I’ll Build You A Fire
12:48: Of Monsters And Men – Mountain Sound
12:52: Spookytree (Deb Knodel & Jane Valencia) – Lochaber No More
12:52: John Renbourn – The Mist Covered Mountains of Home-The Orphan -Tarboulton
12:59: Live – Forest Halls Celtic

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August 21st, 2016 –Episode 11 – Selkie

The legends of the Selkie – remarkable people who are seals in the sea and humans on land – are haunting, often sad, and strangely compelling. Today we take a deep dive into the music and magic of the Selkie with tales and songs arising from the coasts and islands of Scotland and Ireland, and the Orkney and Shetland Islands, as well as some contemporary expressions.

12:00: Spookytree – Lochaber No More
12:02: Carolyn Allan, Jenny Keldie, Phil Cunningham – The Great Selkie of Sule Skerry
12:05: Kim Robertson – The Selkie
12:08: Heather Dale – The Maiden and the Selkie
12:16: Jean Redpath – The Song Of The Seals
12:20: Patrick Ball – The Seal
12:23: Mason Daring and the Secret of Roan Inish – The Roan Inish Theme
12:25: Mason Daring and the Secret of Roan Inish – Fiona Explores
12:30: Seamus Byrne – Ocean Surf
12:37: Anne Roos – The Mermaid’s Tears
12:43: Mary McLaughlin – Sealwoman-Yundah
12:47: Knodel and Valencia – The Fisherman’s Song for Attracting Seals
12:55: Tori Amos – Selkie