Scottish Ballads & Folk Music

Ella Beck

Member
Ah, Taggart - I love that tragic ballad, and I love Karine Polwart's voice.

Here's another of hers, a Burns song, that certainly echoes my own sentiments.

 

Ella Beck

Member
What a great thread this is - thanks so much for starting it, elderpiano.

I love Dougie Maclean too - here's his version of a lively eighteenth-century song written by the displaced Episcopalian minister, John Skinner.

Tullochgorum! :)

 

elderpiano

Member


Sir Peter Maxwell Davis, Farewell to Stromness, a beautiful lilting ballad. I so wish I could play this.
I think this version is actually played by Peter Maxwell Davis himself. But there are other very nice versions out there.
 

John Watt

Member
It's almost horrible for me, not awefull, lamenting the decline of so many Scottish people,
and that's as they see it, a history, a castle, a lost tartan or brooch, and their spirit.
There are Sons and Daughters of the Gael who speak Gaelic. Bay-an-uck let, blessings on you.
Scottish people are those who came to our island to escape the Roman Empire and the Dark Ages.
When other people came to take what they had, they fought them off, uniting as Scots.
My paternal Watt clan and maternal Hay clan still stand.
Legally, within the Scottish clan system, I can wear any tartan.
I wear a MacGregor coat, hand-sewn by a well-known Scottish seamstress in Ontario, Canada.
There are no Mc or Mac Watt or Mc or Mac Hay. We survive amongst you still.
We stand behind you.
You should wonder, why, in the entire Holy Bible,
it doesn't tell you what happened when you looked into the eyes of Jesus of Nazareth.
Are your eyes the windows to your soul? Does their light glow in the dark?

This is a MacGregor lament by a wife about the death of her husband, a Clan Chieftan.

 
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