MP3 Holly Tannen - Between the Worlds
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Single items of this product are available separately.
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Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie
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The Unquiet Grave
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The Heretic Heart
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Through All The World Below
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Tam Lin
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The Nine Points of Roguery/The Merry Sisters
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Bird in the Bush
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Dark Island
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Malpas Wassail
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The Rainmaker (aka Medicine Hat)
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Gone Gonna Rise Again
Similar Videos: Holly Tannen
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"Holly Tannen mesmerizes with the sweet sound of the dulcimer and her strong folk voice. - Womanspirit Sourcebook "When she sings, the spirits of the past come alive." - LA Times
11 MP3 Songs in this album (41:11) !
Related styles: FOLK: British Folk, SPIRITUAL: Inspirational
People who are interested in June Tabor The Watersons Joan Baez should consider this download.
Details:
In European folklore, our human world remains close to the domain of the spirits of nature and the souls of the dead. The syncretization of Christian and pre-Christian beliefs has led to some inconsistencies, but when you listen to traditional ballads and tales, recurrent themes begin to emerge.
The wild ride of the fairy troop is found in Scottish and Irish lore. Margaret's rescue of Tam Lin takes place at Samhain, the end of harvest and beginning of winter, season of the dead. On this night the veil between our world and the world of the unseen is at its thinnest, and those with the Sight can pass between the worlds.
The belief that overlong mourning for the dead disturbs their rest is common throughout Europe. It is found in some of our most beautiful ballads, including this Kentucky version of âThe Unquiet Grave.â
I've learned many fine songs from Susan Rothbaum. âGone Gonna Rise Again,â by Appalachian labor organizer Si Kahn, expresses a closeness with the land and with our kin that many of us have never known. Our ancestors lie buried in Europe, Asia, Africa. I like to believe that we can reawaken them by keeping alive the songs they sang.
âThrough All the World Belowâ is a hymn that Susan turned into a her, with a bit of polishing by Catherine Madsen and myself. Catherine also kindly allowed me to rework several lines of her pagan anthem, âThe Heretic Heart,â based on the boasting songs of the Senegalese griots or praise poets. Sabina Magliocco and I deconstruct it in our article 'The Real Old Time Religion: Towards an Aesthetic of NeoPagan Song," in Ethnologies, Volume 20 #1-2,1999. Margot Adler has entitled her '60s autobiography Heretic's Heart after this song.
I first heard âBird in the Bushâ sung by A.L. Lloyd at a lecture on "The Erotic Element in English Folksong" at U.C. Berkeley in 1963. I learned it around 1974 from the singing of Frankie Armstrong.
âBury Me Not On the Lone Prairieâ comes from the singing of Carlo Calabi, âDark Islandâ from the playing of Andrew Cronshaw.
Wassail, from the Anglo-Saxon wes hael, (be of good health), has came to mean both house-to-house midwinter carolling and the potent drink offered to visitors. According to Alan Lomax and Peter Kennedy, "the midwinter luck-visit with its wassail songs occursâ¦all over Europe from Portugal to the Balkans, from Iceland to North Russia, in similar form, and with similar verses, to the English wassail." âMalpas Wassailâ hails from Cornwall, via the singing of the Watersons.
I learned âThe Nine Points of Rogueryâ from English fiddler Pete Cooper. He says they are like the Seven Deadly Sins, except that you get to choose your two favorites and do them again. I think I learned âThe Merry Sistersâ from the playing of Kevin Burke.
I always think of Ric Masten's song âMedicine Hatâ as âThe Rainmaker,â as it puts me in mind of one of the parallel lives at the end of Hermann Hesse's "Magister Ludi."
11 MP3 Songs in this album (41:11) !
Related styles: FOLK: British Folk, SPIRITUAL: Inspirational
People who are interested in June Tabor The Watersons Joan Baez should consider this download.
Details:
In European folklore, our human world remains close to the domain of the spirits of nature and the souls of the dead. The syncretization of Christian and pre-Christian beliefs has led to some inconsistencies, but when you listen to traditional ballads and tales, recurrent themes begin to emerge.
The wild ride of the fairy troop is found in Scottish and Irish lore. Margaret's rescue of Tam Lin takes place at Samhain, the end of harvest and beginning of winter, season of the dead. On this night the veil between our world and the world of the unseen is at its thinnest, and those with the Sight can pass between the worlds.
The belief that overlong mourning for the dead disturbs their rest is common throughout Europe. It is found in some of our most beautiful ballads, including this Kentucky version of âThe Unquiet Grave.â
I've learned many fine songs from Susan Rothbaum. âGone Gonna Rise Again,â by Appalachian labor organizer Si Kahn, expresses a closeness with the land and with our kin that many of us have never known. Our ancestors lie buried in Europe, Asia, Africa. I like to believe that we can reawaken them by keeping alive the songs they sang.
âThrough All the World Belowâ is a hymn that Susan turned into a her, with a bit of polishing by Catherine Madsen and myself. Catherine also kindly allowed me to rework several lines of her pagan anthem, âThe Heretic Heart,â based on the boasting songs of the Senegalese griots or praise poets. Sabina Magliocco and I deconstruct it in our article 'The Real Old Time Religion: Towards an Aesthetic of NeoPagan Song," in Ethnologies, Volume 20 #1-2,1999. Margot Adler has entitled her '60s autobiography Heretic's Heart after this song.
I first heard âBird in the Bushâ sung by A.L. Lloyd at a lecture on "The Erotic Element in English Folksong" at U.C. Berkeley in 1963. I learned it around 1974 from the singing of Frankie Armstrong.
âBury Me Not On the Lone Prairieâ comes from the singing of Carlo Calabi, âDark Islandâ from the playing of Andrew Cronshaw.
Wassail, from the Anglo-Saxon wes hael, (be of good health), has came to mean both house-to-house midwinter carolling and the potent drink offered to visitors. According to Alan Lomax and Peter Kennedy, "the midwinter luck-visit with its wassail songs occursâ¦all over Europe from Portugal to the Balkans, from Iceland to North Russia, in similar form, and with similar verses, to the English wassail." âMalpas Wassailâ hails from Cornwall, via the singing of the Watersons.
I learned âThe Nine Points of Rogueryâ from English fiddler Pete Cooper. He says they are like the Seven Deadly Sins, except that you get to choose your two favorites and do them again. I think I learned âThe Merry Sistersâ from the playing of Kevin Burke.
I always think of Ric Masten's song âMedicine Hatâ as âThe Rainmaker,â as it puts me in mind of one of the parallel lives at the end of Hermann Hesse's "Magister Ludi."
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