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Side One Skye Boat Song—The McCalmans Street Songs—Hamish Imlach The Banks Of Claudy—Alex Campbell I Loved A Lass—Owen Hand Keach In The Creel—Ian & Lorna Campbell As I Roved Out—Isla Cameron The Fifie—Watt Nicoll Side Two Bogies Bonny Belle—Archie Fisher Highland Widows Lament—Ian Campbell Folk Group Teribus Farewell To Aberdeen—Dave Swarbrick Smuggler—The McCalmans Cod Liver Oil And Orange Juice—Hamish Imlach I Have Seen The Highlands—Matt McGinn |
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Best of Scottish Folk Volume 3 |
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Going to Scotland is the nearest you can get in the British Isles to going
abroad without crossing the sea. It really is a totally different country
with different scenery, architecture, attitudes and culture. The folk
music of Scotland is known throughout the world because the music of
Scotland says more about the country and itsinhabitants than anything
else. But this is not a boring cultural record. Scottish traditional music
it may be, and largely performed by Scots, but anyone with an artistic
soul will recognise that this is basically just sheer entertainment.
Scottish folk songs are like the evergreens of popular western music: they
have a quality that makes every new performance of them enjoyable and they
never seem to go stale.
Perhaps with the exception of "The Skye Boat Song" performed here by the
McCalmans, very few of the other titles on this album will be recognised
by any other than the folk aficionados. But the melodies are all instantly
recognisable, as are the artists.
Here we have Alex Campbell, for example, who was perhaps most important in
the van of recorded British folk music in the early sixties, just before
the great revival. The lan Campbell Group too did much to popularise
Scottish and Northern English folk music during the same period. Hamish
Imlach has been an influence on everyone in the folk world, whether they
know it or not, as has Archie Fisher.
And there are plenty of other names on this carefully compiled album, not
least of them Dave Swarbrick, who is not Scottish, but who cares.
This album presents the complete breadth of Scottish music from laments to
reels. A veritable treasure chest for the enthusiast and an extremely
entertaining forty-odd minutes for the casual listener.
Sleeve Notes by Rex Anderson Compilation by John Brilev
Collated by Sound Associates Studios.
London Series art direction by Colin Dresner
© 1978 Logo Records Also available on cassette