Gordon Menzies—vocals, guitar, mandoline
Robin Watson—vocals, guitar, dulcimer
Iain Mackintosh—concertina, bass concertina
John Martin—fiddle
Bill Craib—double bass
Engineer: Neil Ross
Recorded At: REL Studios, Edinburgh
Graphics: Dave Watson, Gordon Rennie
Produced by Robin Watson
We start off with Mormond Braes, a North East song of a jilted
lassie who is still optimistic about her future prospects. Kishorn
Commandos was written after a 9 am session of singing with the men
working at the Howard Dorris construction camp on Loch Kishorn.
They are a very special breed, and we are proud that they have adopted
this song as something of an anthem. Back O' Beyond is dedicated to
the real travellers. We like and respect them for having the courage of
their convictions, and for the times they have been kind enough to give us
a lift. Morris's March was written for Morris Newton of
Dingwall, who appreciates our music. In the early 19th century, industrial
disturbances were cloaked in secrecy. The government kept a shield of
silence on the Scottish weavers' uprising of 1820, which they pre-empted
by infiltrating the ranks and causing a revolt before the weavers were
prepared. Three men were hanged in Glasgow, and are remembered by a
monument in Sighthill Cemetery. Many were transported to penal colonies.
Robin wrote this song about them: The Weavers. Another
aspect of the North East is expressed in Sleepy Toon, from the time
when labourers "feed" or contracted themselves to farmers for six months
at a time. Despite the hardships they endured, their indomitable spirit
and humour comes across in all the bothy ballads. An American patriot,
Woody Guthrie wrote This Land Is Your Land for his own country.
This is a Scottish version. Once we were asked to
illustrate the similarities between Scots and Irish music. Rather than
indulge in academic verbosity we arranged these two songs: The Muckin'
O' Geordie's Byre/What Would You Do? Tarry Arry Arry is an old
Scottish nonsense song Gordon's mother used to know. This version was
arrived at between ourselves and Nell Purdie from Milnathort. Our
last song is, we are told, one of our most powerful. The Lion On The
Gold will always be symbolically Scottish. Finally, we would like to
thank most sincerely those who have assisted us.
We have chosen the songs on this album to try to combine the more obscure traditional songs
re-arranged for modern ears, with new songs we have written and a couple of our favourite
songs from contemporary composers. Wind and water, time and tide, these are the common
enemy of the farmer, the seaman and the men working around Scotland's coast on the rigs.
They have all left their mark on our temperament, and our music.