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Member Since: 6/7/2004
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Traditional Celtic Music

Artist Song
Celtic Woman  The Ashoken Farewell / The Contradiction  
The Bothy Band  Pretty Peg / Craig's Pipes  
Celtic Fiddle Festival  Pigeon On the Gate / Lafferty's / Morning Dew  
Daith¡ Sproule  The Banks of Claudy  
Tud  Dans ar c hamm  
Solas  The Wind That Shakes the Barley  
Brendan Mulvihill & Donna Long  Shandon Bells / Boys of the Town / Rakes of Clonmel / Girls of the Town  
Danny Carnahan & Robin Petrie  Glenlogie  
Cherish the Ladies  Carolan's Favorite Jig / The Rakes of Cashel / Highland March In Oscar & Malvina  
Bedwyr Morgan, Dónal Lunny, Huw Smith, Keith Donald, Linda Healy, Tudur Huws Jones & Tudur Morgan  Damhsa Tara (Dawns Tara/Dance at Tara)  
Ewan MacColl  Glasgow Peggy  
Bonnie Rideout  Miss Gordon of Park / Craigellachie Lassies / The Honourable Mrs. Drummond of Perth's Delight  
Capercaille  Alasdair Mhic Cholla Ghasda  
Battlefield Band  The Lady Leroy  
Caledonix  The Queen of Argyll  
Claire Byrne  Jim Donoghue's / The Hills of Tipperary / The Connaught Heifers  
Patrick Street  Music for a Found Harmonium  
Darragh Murphy  Byrne's Hornpipe / The Good Natured Man  
Ffynnon  Le Petit Cordonier  
Tripswitch  Antón  
Áine Minogue & DruidStone  The Edge of the White Rock  
Kornog  Bonnie Jean Cameron  
Silly Wizard  Broom O' the Cowdenknowes  
Brass Monkey  Tip-Top Hornpipe / Primrose Polka  
De Dannan  Mulvihill's Reel, the Dawn  

Comment:

Sounding more like they rolled in from Butcher Holler than their native South Wales, Ffynnon brings a down-homey fiddle and banjo to "Le Petit Cordonier" that will strike a chord with hillbilly and bluegrass fans as well as Celtophiles. Kornog's [i]Music From Brittany[/i] is slightly misleading — the album was recorded in Minneapolis and the song we've taken from it is Scottish — but "Bonnie Jean Cameron" suits the burr of Glaswegian export (and Battlefield Band alum) Jamie McMenemy like the scent of heather on a Highland hillside. And in the Scots "daddy and daughter vs. disinclined darling" love song "Glenlogie," American Danny Carnahan wraps a lighter-than-air tenor around the lyric (not to mention his guitar and fiddle, as he morphs into a multi-tracked one-man band).
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