Support Record store day 18th April - wonderful one off specials and vinyls and more! Seasick Steve at Love Music record store Glasgow.
http://recordstoreday.co.uk
SCOTTISH ARTS & MUSIC since 2007. Imagining SCOTIA! Photographer & Blogger - Musicnotes, Poetrynotes, Histories, Celtic Connections, Edinburgh festivals.
Friday, 17 April 2015
Record Store Day
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Wednesday, 15 April 2015
The Shires Oran Mor
The Shires entertained us with big-hearted memorable songs and warm smiles!
I first
noticed The Shires single on radio Scotland a few months ago, for its strong
melody and vocals and upbeat vibes.
After only a few shows things
have taken off for the pair and they were signed to Decca Records in 2014 and to Universal Music Nashville, The Shires are singer-songwriters Ben Earle and Crissie Rhodes.
The audience were all ages here tonight in the busy hot venue. They started their set tonight with the energetic fun of their debut single 'Nashville Grey Skies'. They followed their upbeat opening tunes - Ben took the tempo down on piano with some touching country ballads - 'Think I'm Falling in love with you', 'Statements' (their next single), 'Let Me Be The One' and Made in England.’.
After which
they took the energy up with several country rock pleasers and their single
'Friday Night' had the packed audience singing along. For their last song 'Tonight' – ‘Your mine I'm Yours’, they
divided us into two sections to sing the two parts and they were thrilled
on their return on stage for their encore to be greeted with the audience
singing the song back for them!
For the
encore they sang 'When It's Real Love'
the first song Ben played for Crissie and a popular cover of the Bee Gees love
song 'Islands in the Stream'.
Crissie
looked the part with her golden locks and she sang with pure country tones and
strong harmonies that added that extra sparkle. Ben is a touching, smooth
musician and songwriter who made it all feel effortless. This duo has songs
people remember. The Shires are the first ever UK country act to
be signed to a major Nashville label. Their debut album Brave in
2015 made the UK top ten.
*This was a two for the price of one event and the show was started by another fun country duo on guitars - two entertaining Americans John and Jacob, who had the crowd cheering and dancing along. They played with pumping guitars, some well chosen covers and their own songs. They are hit-making Nashvillle songwriters and their new singles have attracted Radio 2 airplay. Worth watching out for these guys too! http://johnandjacob.com
There
appears to be a resurgence in interest in country music today. It has shaken
off its over-produced days and gone back to basics with more authentic, striped
back arrangements. My favourite country musician is Jerry Douglas, who is such
an expressive and dynamic player of the resonator guitar and he plays at Celtic
Connections here every January.
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Tuesday, 14 April 2015
The Ladies of Laurel Canyon
There was a new freedom for women, the women were being reborn in the 60s and 70s. (In the UK education for women began in the late 19th century and from 1892 Scottish universities admitted women students when St Andrews pioneered with an arts degree. ) Then came the introduction of the The Pill - first approved in 1960 in the US - brought tremendous gains for women’s freedoms and led them to feel they could achieve outside the home.
In an
excellent Vanity Fear article in March 2015 with quotes from many of the
players of Laurel Canyon, it was interesting to read that the women were the
heart of this new movement in music in California. The core players were Joni
Mitchell and Mama Cass Elliott, when musicians descended on their homes. Joni
lived at first in a street called Lookout Mountain.
Other women
of the new movement were - Bonnie
Raitt, Linda Ronstadt, Michelle Phillips, Maria Maldaur, Carole King, Emmylou
Harris. According to Michelle Phillips said that ‘The women actually
held that whole scene up there together. ‘ The
Troubadour venue was also a main place to hang out.
The most
talented musician of them all was Joni Mitchell. David Crosby discovered
her singing in Florida and brought her back to California – he writes that she
was not only the best songwriter of them all, but also
the best musician.
At this time
the draft for the Vietnam war sent many Americans up to Canada and brought the
Canadians down to the US – such as Neil Young and Joni.
![]() |
The Mamas and the Papas |
The big guns
were the two talent scouts from New York – David Geffen and Robert Elliot who were
also young and hungry for the new scene here. Within a few years they started
Geffen-Roberts management and made 3m a year. Geffen began his record label
Asylum Records. Robert managed Neil, CSN, Joni.
‘We
watched what they did right and what they did wrong.’ The Eagles were also about both the
music and the business.
In the end
movements shine only for a short time and the magic of the hillside canyon was
changed eventually.
First of all
by drugs – while pot and psychedelia had fuelled creativity but when they turned
to cocaine and heroin, everything changed.
According to
Phillips the summers of free love came to an sudden end with the Manson murders
in '69 – and after that everything changed. ‘The nail in the coffin of the
freewheelin, let’s get high, everybody's welcome – I never invited anybody over
to my house again after that.’
![]() |
Carole King |
New artists
today influenced by and following on from these sounds – singer songwriter
Laura Marling, LA band Haim, Dawes, Wilco, Mumford, the Avett Brothers and others.
![]() |
Judy Collins and Joni Mitchell |
Thursday, 9 April 2015
Pipers
![]() |
Finlay MacDonald |
Recently Scottish musician and composer Phil Cunningham presented a fascinating 2 part TV program on the Pipes called 'Pipe Dreams'. He travelled to hear pipes and pipers play worldwide - from Ireland to India. – to inspire his new composition for the pipes.
In January I
attended the brilliant opening concert of Celtic Connections 2015 - the
orchestral debut of Scottish piper Martyn Bennett’s last album GRIT. The range
of dynamics , tones, energy, emotions, fun – play the tune on the chanter!
I wrote in my review of the
music - This album offers a musical journey - producing pounding bass rhythms,
hesitant strings, gradual and also unexpected crescendos, brass epic grandeur,
haunting Gaelic voices, thematic stirring pipes and also humour. The Grit album
is about pushing the boundaries and limitations.
Liam O’Flynn
of the Irish folk band Planxty, who plays the uilleann pipes, spoke of the importance of valuing
traditions, ‘ To find a secure place to
be part of a tradition. Hard won thing to be part of a tradition and its
important to be aware of that.’
The uilleann
pipes, have a lovely colour and emotion
In the 50s
there were only abut 100 players and today there are over 6,000 players of the uilleann pipes worldwide.
At a
Canadian pipe school the children were told, ‘We hope you have fun and work
hard – fun and work - .work WINS, fun never wins! Excellent instruction!
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