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    Land Of Heart's Desire - Lisa Milne, Sioned Williams (1997)

    Posted By: peotuvave
    Land Of Heart's Desire - Lisa Milne, Sioned Williams (1997)

    Land Of Heart's Desire - Lisa Milne, Sioned Williams (1997)
    EAC Rip | Flac (Image + cue + log) | 1 CD | Full Scans | 259 MB
    Genre: Classical | Label: Hyperion | Catalog Number: 66988

    34 songs from the famous Songs of the Hebrides collection by Marjory Kennedy-Fraser published in the early years of this century. There are some extraordinarily beautiful songs here (Ernest Newman wrote of them that Schubert and Hugo Wolf would have knelt and kissed the hands of their unknown composers). The most famous song in the collection is the Eriskay Love Lilt but several of the others will be familiar to anybody who has bought our Bantock recordings: Sea Longing was the inspiration for the slow movement of the Celtic Symphony, and Kishmul's Galley is the tune blazed out by the Royal Philharmonic horns at the end of the Hebridean Symphony.

    Composer: Traditional, Marjorie Kennedy-Fraser
    Performer: Lisa Milne, Sioned Williams

    Reviews: The north-west of Scotland is a wild and rocky region, buffeted by Atlantic winds and torn by ocean currents into ragged coastlines and myriad islands. These are the Hebrides, comprising the Inner Hebrides (principally Skye, Raasay, Rhum, Eigg, Muck, Mull, Jura and Islay) and, fifty miles further out into the ocean, across The Minch, the Outer Hebrides, known as the Western Isles – a hundred-mile-long archipelago from the large islands of Lewis and Harris in the north, the Uists and Benbecula in the middle to Barra in the south. It is a land under constant attack from wind and sea; treeless and desolate except for the gorse and heather which cling to the sparse and shallow soil. And yet, despite the inhospitable though beautiful terrain, these islands have been the home of a proud and hardy race since times of Celtic antiquity, still retaining Gaelic as an everyday tongue.

    It was to the Outer Hebrides that the Scottish musicologist and folksong researcher Marjory Kennedy-Fraser first went in 1905 in search of the rich and ancient traditions of music and legend, and found them among ‘the most natural, genuine and uncorrupted people I have ever met, the dwellers in the lonely islands of the Outer Hebrides’. Marjory Kennedy was born in Perth, Scotland, in October 1857, the daughter of singer David Kennedy with whom she toured the world as accompanist whilst still a child. Later she studied singing in Milan and became a pupil of Mathilde Marchesi in Paris. She taught singing for some years in Edinburgh after the death of her husband, the mathematician A J Fraser. She will be remembered, however, for the several volumes of Songs of the Hebrides published in 1909, 1913, 1917, 1921, 1925 (From the Hebrides) and 1927 (More Songs from the Hebrides), the fruits of a labour of love and scholarship which drew from Ernest Newman the following tribute: ‘Mrs Kennedy-Fraser holds the highest place among British folksong collectors. She has laboured hard in the collection and editing of Hebridean song. She has a poet’s love of the islands and the peculiar phase of civilization they represent, but she is also a very skilled musician, and the accompaniments she has arranged for these songs are equal to the best that has been done in any other field. The songs themselves have a strange beauty that grows on us the better we know them. They have a very definite physiognomy and a very definite soul, both of them the result of the constant pressure of a very definite environment upon a people virtually isolated from the general life of Europe. These islands seem to have produced some song-writers to whom it is not at all extravagant to attribute genius. There are melodies among these songs that are as purely perfect as any melody could be. Schubert and Hugo Wolf would have knelt and kissed the hands of the men who conceived them … for sheer beauty of invention, sheer loveliness in the mere fall of the notes, some of these melodies are without their superior, whether in folksong or art song.’

    There was much folksong-collecting activity in the British Isles and elsewhere during the early years of the twentieth century. The other collectors mentioned by Ernest Newman included such figures as Vaughan Williams (known to have recorded some eight hundred songs), Gustav Holst, Percy Grainger, and of course the indefatigable Cecil Sharp, and there is no doubt at all that without their enthusiastic labours we would today be without many treasurable melodies and works based upon them by the above-mentioned composers and others such as Delius, Butterworth and Bantock.

    The songs found by Mrs Kennedy-Fraser fall into many categories: love songs, cradle songs, work songs to accompany the varied tasks of the islanders – cloth-making, cattle tending, milking and churning, fishing and seafaring; songs about the legends and magic and history of the Celtic race; and what she called ‘sea-rapture’ songs in praise of the endlessly changing beauty of the Hebridean light, clouds and ocean. She was helped in her researches by a number of devoted colleagues. Principal among them was the Gaelic scholar and poet the Reverend Dr Kenneth Macleod (1871–1955) who, besides himself contributing many songs from his native island of Eigg and elsewhere, provided many of the texts and translations (Mrs Kennedy-Fraser knew very little Gaelic herself). Other airs came from the collection by the Reverend Patrick Macdonald, published in 1784, and from another much respected contemporary folksong-researcher, Frances Tolmie of Skye (1840–1926).

    Some of the songs in the second volume of 1913 were arranged not by Mrs Kennedy-Fraser but by Sir Granville Bantock (1868–1946) who used several of them in his orchestral music and also in his opera The Seal Woman (completed in 1924) for which Mrs Kennedy-Fraser wrote the libretto. The two songs on this disc arranged by Bantock are Sea-Longing (which he used to magical effect in his Celtic Symphony) and The Birlinn of the White Shoulders. These and other melodies inspired several of his works such as the Hebridean Symphony, Caristiona, The Seagull of the Land-under-Waves, The Sea Reivers, Two Heroic Ballads. (Several of these rich scores are recorded on Hyperion by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra under Vernon Handley.)

    Not all of the songs originate from the islands; many are thought to have come originally from the mainland, though in the manner of folksong there are many variants and it is difficult to put any time or place of origin to them. Most were, of course, unaccompanied, and it is for her skill and respect when providing accompaniments that we must be grateful to Mrs Kennedy-Fraser. In her preface to the second volume she says: ‘In setting the airs we have in no case altered the melodies. We have tried merely to set them in a harmonic and rhythmic framework of pianoforte wrought-metal, so to speak, as one would set a beautiful stone, a cairngorm or the like, and have tried by such setting to show the tune more clearly – have tried to bring out its peculiar character.’

    The collections had a considerable influence on British music and culture of the time and things Celtic became very much a vogue. Rutland Boughton met Mrs Kennedy-Fraser after her second visit to the islands in 1907/8 and was ‘ravingly enthusiastic’ about her work which undoubtedly inspired his opera The Immortal Hour which began its world-record-breaking run in 1923 at the Regent Theatre in London. And it was Boughton who introduced the songs to Bantock who, in his turn, became captivated by them.

    Although published with piano parts, the songs are equally effective when sung with harp as on this record. The harp was, after all, the instrument of the Gaelic bards and minstrels.

    Tracklisting:

    1. Land o' Heart's Desire by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Hebrides, Scotland

    2. An Eriskay Love Lilt by Marjorie Kennedy-Fraser
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Period: Romantic
    Written: Scotland

    3. Loch Broom Love Song by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    4. Loch Leven Love Lament by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    5. Caristona by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    6. An Eriskay Lullaby by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    7. Kirsteen by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    8. No more by green hillock "Love Lilt" by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    9. Benbecula Bridal Procession by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    10. Witchery Milking Croon by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    11. The Uncanny Mannikin of the Cattlefold by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    12. Skye Water-Kelpie's Lullaby by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    13. The Harper by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    14. The Cockle Gatherer by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    15. Birds at the Fairy Fulling by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    16. Uist Cattle Croon by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    17. The Crone's Creel by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    18. Islay Reaper's Song by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    19. A Spinning Song by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    20. The Ship at Sea by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    21. Sea Wandering by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    22. Sea-Longing by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    23. The Reiving Ship by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    24. The Birlinn of the White Shoulders by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    25. Heart of Fire-Love by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    26. The Coolin of Rhum by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    27. The Leaping Galley by Traditional
    Performer: Sioned Williams (Harp), Lisa Milne (Soprano)
    Written: Scotland

    28. Isle of my Heart by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    29. Kishmul's Galley by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    30. Sleeps the noon in the deep blue sky by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    31. The Wild Swan by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    32. The Black Loorgin by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    33. Dance to your shadow by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    34. Aignish on the Machair by Traditional
    Performer: Lisa Milne (Soprano), Sioned Williams (Harp)
    Written: Scotland

    Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 3 from 29. August 2011

    EAC extraction logfile from 19. May 2014, 2:00

    Lisa Milne, Sioned Williams / Land of Heart's Desire

    Used drive : HL-DT-STDVDRAM GSA-4083N Adapter: 1 ID: 0

    Read mode : Secure
    Utilize accurate stream : Yes
    Defeat audio cache : Yes
    Make use of C2 pointers : No

    Read offset correction : 667
    Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
    Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
    Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
    Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
    Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

    Used output format : User Defined Encoder
    Selected bitrate : 896 kBit/s
    Quality : High
    Add ID3 tag : No
    Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\Exact Audio Copy\Flac\flac.exe
    Additional command line options : -V -8 %source%


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    34 | 69:37.07 | 2:37.70 | 313282 | 325126


    Range status and errors

    Selected range

    Filename J:\New Music\CDH55204 - Land of Heart's Desire\Land of Heart's Desire.wav

    Peak level 82.2 %
    Extraction speed 2.7 X
    Range quality 100.0 %
    Test CRC 75ABC4B9
    Copy CRC 75ABC4B9
    Copy OK

    No errors occurred


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    ==== Log checksum C9D355A48D6421D8BD1531163DE46A356217162CDF56605AB84BF20716A0093F ====



    Thanks to the original releaser