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Celtic Flute Christmas Celtic Flute Trilogy II Declan Waggett - Celtic Woodflute, Whistles
& Arrangements, |
ZZCD 9809 |
| 1. | We Wish You A Merry Christmas | Traditional | 1.49 |
| 2. | I Saw Three Ships | Traditional | 1.34 |
| 3. | Brightest And Best | Traditional | 3.47 |
| 4. | The Holly And The Ivy | Traditional | 2.48 |
| 5. | The Christmas Tree With The Candles Gleaming/Good King Wenceslas | Traditional | 1.35 |
| 6. | In The Bleak Mid Winter | Gustav Holst | 3.22 |
| 7. | The 12 Days Of Christmas | Traditional | 3.51 |
| 8. | Baloo Lammy | Traditional | 1.24 |
| 9. | Wassail Carol | Traditional | 1.49 |
| 10. | The Clock And The Hearth | Declan Waggett | 3.18 |
| 11. | God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen | Traditional | 3.34 |
| 12. | Il Est Ne, Le Divin Enfant | Traditional | 2.46 |
| 13. | Walking In The Air (The Snowman) | Howard Blake | 3.28 |
| 14. | The Little Drummer Boy | Davis/Onoriti/Simeone | 3.08 |
| 15. | The Blazing Fire/Whilst Shepherds Watched/We Three Kings/The Reel - Tim the Velvet | Declan Waggett/ Traditional | 3.33 |
| 16. | Silent Night/Breton Lullaby | Traditional | 3.46 |
| 17. | Gentle Jesus, Sweetly Sleep | Traditional | 2.53 |
| 18. | Christmas Medley - Good Christian Men Rejoice/Ding Dong Merrily On High | Traditional | 2.57 |
| 19. | The Coventry Carol | Traditional | 2.17 |
| 20. | The First Noel | Traditional | 3.42 |
| 21. | The Ending Of The Year | Traditional | 1.40 |
| 22. | Aulde Lang Syne/K-Lee | Traditional | 3.42 |
DDD Total Time = 63:44 - Recorded at Gantry Studios, London, 1998
There is no doubt that the Celtic flute has a haunting sound all of its own. To some it might conjure up windswept highlands where the rain flows as freely as the whiskey; to others it might bring to mind long-haired New Age would-be druids, congregating at ancient monuments before daybreak; others might perhaps think of Mel Gibson striding braveheartedly across the big screen, dressed in a skirt and speaking in a silly accent. The current passion for things Celtic covers a multitude of sins, to be sure. And yet the notion of recording well-known Christmas songs on the Celtic flute to the accompaniment of Irish bagpipes, Irish harp, guitar, accordion and drum might still to some seem rather beyond the pale. But Christmas is nothing if not a flexible feast. Its music calls for no fidelity to the text, for the Christmas musical tradition is one of arrangement and rearrangement. There are but few carols that we sing today exactly as their composer intended. Most have been translated, rescored, or adapted to the Victorian Christmas aesthetic that still largely prevails today or they have been subjected to a mixture of all three.
Many of the melodies arranged here will be familiar to all those who have experienced an Anglo-Saxon Christmas (or a Celtic one, for that matter). The oldest date back to the 1600s or earlier, though latter-day melodies are featured too. Walking in the air is a song from Raymond Briggs The Snowman, a childrens film released some twenty years ago. Both song and film achieved immediate and well-deserved fame. Waggetts The Clock and the Hearth was written especially for this album.
The instruments used here are perhaps older than the uninitiated might think. The youngest is in fact the accordion, which is barely two centuries old. The bagpipe on the other hand has been in existence for more than two thousand years, while the harp is documented as far back as 3000 BC. The first appearance in Europe of the latter instrument was appropriately for our purposes in Ireland, about a thousand years ago. The bodhran, a goat-skin drum, is however if only on grounds of its simplicity undoubtedly the oldest form of instrument in use here.
If the purist still doubts the validity of arrangement of Christmas carols for the present ensemble, then let us remind ourselves that the origins of Christmas lie as much in ancient heathen festivities as in Christian religious observance. Many of the carols we love the most employ legends and symbols that we associate with Christmas by virtue only of tradition, but are in fact in content hardly less pagan in origin than the Celtic harp itself. As much as we sing of Christs birth, we also sing of holly, ivy, wassailing, partridges in pear trees, and lots of figgy pudding. To pour old Christmas wine into new Celtic bottles, as on this CD, is thus well in keeping with the spirit of the festive season. It might even help us to appreciate better those many melodies that are so familiar that we have forgotten how well-crafted they are, and it can remind us of how fresh was once their inspiration.