| | Bonnie Rideout Scottish Reflections CD Bonnie Rideout Discography of CDs
Scottish Reflections (MM225) by BONNIE RIDEOUT, Scottish fiddle & viola is all Scottish instrumental music featuring Bonnie Rideout & Maggie's Music artists. One of the finest Scottish fiddlers of our time, Bonnie Rideout brings her passion and joyous energy to every track, from over 10 years of musical collaboration with other top artists on the Maggie's Music record label. Bonnie's unique style of fiddling has charmed audiences with a vast array of dance tunes, bagpipe marches and ancient Gaelic melodies on stages from Scotland's Edinburgh International Festival to America's Kennedy Center.This CD represents musicians sharing their talents within a close Celtic community that is as small as your living room and as large as the world. Bonnie Rideout's other CDs on the Maggie's Music label are: Soft May Morn, Celtic Circles, Kindred Spirits, Gi'Me Elbow Room, Scottish Fire, Scottish Rant, and A Scottish Christmas.Bonnie also can be seen and heard on the live concert DVD and video; A Scottish Christmas featuring Bonnie Rideout(BMG)."Rideout's tone is pristine," THE NEW YORK TIMES. Total Time: 57:18 minutes.MUSICIANS are: Bonnie Rideout, fiddle & viola with Sue Richards, Celtic harp;Hesperus: Scott Reiss, pennywhistle; Tina Chancey, viola da gamba & Grant Herreid, lute;Karen Ashbrook, wooden flute & Paul Oorts, musette accordeon;Maggie Sansone, hammered dulcimer;Paula Glendinning, Highland bagpipe;William Taylor, Wire harp (Clarech) & Gothic "bray" harp;Carolyn Surrick, viola da gamba. NOTES ON THE MUSIC:[Track 1] features Bonnie Rideout and the early music ensemble, Hesperus, presenting music from some of the earliest sources of Scottish, English, and Irish traditional folk music. For centuries the fiddle and the pipes have shared repertoire, complementing each other with similar ornamentation and the use of drone notes, as in these three tunes. MacDonald of the Isles is a pipe march, followed by a strathspey, which is the dance form most identified with Scottish traditional music. The Source of the Spey and The Periwig are reels first published in the Captain Simon Fraser Collection (1815). [Track 2] Bonnie joins four-time National Scottish Harp Champion, Sue Richards, on Seal Songs. These haunting melodies are from the Patrick MacDonald Collection (1784). In the Scottish hierarchy of nature, seals are almost equal in rank to humans. The Silkie myths tell of seals taking human form for short visits on land. [Track 3] The Thistle is a brilliant example of 18th century Scottish parlor music written by James Oswald, who was considered a fine composer of traditional Scottish fiddle tunes and also an example of what, in the 21st century, is referred to as "chamber folk music." [Track 4] Charlie Glendinning wrote Dunblane after 16 children and their teacher were slain by a gunman on March 13, 1996, in Dunblane, Scotland. Reflecting on his composition, Mr. Glendinning said, "The tragedy was like an icy blast of winter returning to kill every flowering bud of spring...." In Bonnie's arrangement, the fiddle and viola are joined by the piper, Paula Glendinning, with their instruments giving voice to those who were lost and the many who were left behind to remember forever. [Track 6] Lamentation of the Fallen Heroes of Waterloo, from the Nick Gow & Sons Collection, exquisitely renders a haunting retrospective of that famous battle of 1815. [Track 11] Sue Richards presents Lament for Limerick, Lochaber No More, and Irish Lamentation, a set of tunes from Ireland, Scotland and England, respectively. The Lament and Lochaber commemorate the mournful losses of war, while Irish Lamentation transforms these tunes into a lovely waltz, elegantly displaying the harmonic interplay of the Celtic harp, fiddle, and viola da gamba. [Track 12] Gloomy Winter evokes a reflective mood. Bonnie learned this tune from her teacher in a one-room schoolhouse she attended as a child in Maine. She was attracted to this beautiful melancholy Scottish air Scottish Reflections Music Bonnie Rideout Scottish Reflections Songs Scottish Reflections Review
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$12.29 Most performers get their start listening to records and catching bands at the local bar or stadium. Others, like the sons and daughters of performers, come by their musical heritage more naturally. One can't be terribly surprised when Aoife Clancy, the daughter of Bobby Clancy, joins Cherish the Ladies or releases a Celtic-influenced album like Silvery Moon. The album has a nice, crisp production, with acoustic guitars and pianos backing fiddles, mandolins, and Clancy's dynamic voice. The sound is carefully mixed, allowing the instruments to intermingle while still retaining the "plink" of each piano key on "Silvery Moon" and the deep bass of the cello on "Banks of the Sweet Primroses." Likewise, Clancy's vocals are always out front. There's a lovely a cappella take on "Across the Blue Mountains," with Julee Glaub and Aoife O'Donovan joining Clancy. The trio's version is one of those rare occasions when a timeworn piece receives a fresh treatment, leading the listener to hear the song with new ears. The last song is a surprise, with Bobby Clancy joining his daughter for "Kisses Sweeter Than Wine." This nod to the past on an album that mixes both tradition and contemporary sources ends Silvery Moon on the right note. ~ Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr.
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