NEW  ZEALAND
FOLK * MUSIC

NZ Celtic Albums, Songs
and Clubs
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There has been an increased interest in Celtic music in NZ Folk Clubs in recent years, helped by some very talented immigrants from Scotland, Ireland and Canada. And some very good Celtic albums have been recorded, with some traditional tracks, and some composed by the musicians themselves.

Some of the compositions are quite distinguishable as being of New Zealand origin, like Rua's Commonwealth Suite, Bob Bickerton's Bonny Harvest Moon, Tony Clark's Irish Music, and Vic McDonald's outstanding In Memorium.

Others, like Bob McNeill's Covenant series, could only have been written in NZ beause the composer could live here in a Celtic community that had freed itself from the constraints of the old lands.


Albums

2006

Westumbria - Stepping stones

Westumbria is a West Auckland quartet with a set of Northumbrian pipes in their lineup.

Members are: Sieff LaTrobe (vocal, guitar, mandolin, dulcimer); Sylvia LaTrobe (vocal, fiddle, viola); Ian Bartlett (vocal, Northumbrian smallpipes, whistle, harmonica, percussion); Jo Hill (bass guitar). On this recording they have the assistance of accordionist Shanta Foster.

In Stepping Stones, the group's first CD, the emphasis is on traditional Irish music, although there is also a little English, American and New Zealand material. The group clearly enjoys playing with the arrangements of some of the tunes, for example the 5-minute version of "The foggy dew" in Spanish disguise.

The LaTrobe composition "Farewell to Tahora" has the sort of chorus that will get audiences singing along in tribute to that back-country folk-festival's thirty-year tradition.

The track notes, although brief, are pretty much to the point and there are authorship credits, a list of who does what and notes of what was recorded away from the main studio. The only really useful information missing is the track timings.
Review by Mitch Park

2002

Twisty Willow - Maybe Someday

Since 1990, Aucklanders Barb and Wes Bycroft have formed the nucleus of the Irish pub band Twisty Willow and have produced several CDs. In 2001 they were joined by Belfast-born London rock guitarist, Duane Thompson, recently arrived in Auckland.

Duane Thompson has always had a love of traditional and contemporary Irish music, and Twisty Willow's latest album, Maybe Someday, has ten of Duane's new songs, all with a celtic rhythm, and some with an antipodean theme.

The title track is autobiograpical, recounting how he has spent his life singing down by harbours, from Northen Ireland, where an SLR was "...poked through a window at me," to Auckland, the more peaceful "... city of sails at the end of the earth." Maybe Someday MP3

With Barb and Wes Bycroft's wonderfully full backing, this track, like the others on the CD, is as rich, smooth and satisfying as a jar of Guinness. See the Twisty Willow website for further information and more MP3s.

Montgomery and Considine - Mountain Air

"Mountain Air is unquestionably buoyed by Brendyn's feeling for wide open spaces and a healthy respect for silence."
The Irish Times
Mountain Air is an album of traditional Irish tunes by Brendyn Montgomery of Castle Hill, Nth Canterbury (wooden flute/tin whistle) and Mike Considine of Christchurch (bouzouki/guitar). Four of the tunes were composed by Brendyn himself.

In Jan 2003 Brendyn was completing an M.A. in Traditional Irish music performance at the University of Limerick.

More information at the Brendyn Montgomery website

 

 

2001

Bob McNeill - Covenant

Winner of the "Best New Zealand Folk Album of 2001" Tui award.
Congratulations, Bob.

Music from Scotland, Ireland, England, Brittany and New Zealand is played on Irish bouzouki, shuttle pipes, fiddle and flute. Covenant features original music by Bob ( now living in Dunedin) who was inspired by the story of Margaret Wilson, a Covenanter executed in 1685 at Wigtown in the south west of Scotland. Aged only 18, she was drowned at the stake in the Solway Firth after refusing to take the Oath of Abjuration.

More information at the Covenant webpage.





Bob Bickerton - Island Mist CD


The Bob Bickerton Big Band
Celtic tunes and songs, some traditional and some composed by Bob (from Nelson.) It has this New Zealand content:-
Bonny Harvest Moon,
words by Otago poet John Barr (1860), tune by Bob Bickerton,
The Close Shave,
about a gold miner waylaid by a beautiful young woman (tune, trad),
Marcelle's March,
a harp tune Bob composed to play at Marcelle and Linus Turner's wedding.

Helen Webby and Davy Stewart - The Peacock's Dance

Helen is the harpist for the Christchurch Symphony, and Davy is a historian, luthier, and one of New Zealand's top Celtic guitarists. They play tunes from Scotland and Ireland, and one of Davy's own tunes, The Peacock's Dance

Davy also was a member of Jimmy Stewart's band Rua.


2000

Marannan - Marannan, the CD

The CD features traditional songs and tunes from Scotland and Ireland. Mary Hamilton (song) O'ot est da Vong/Jack Broke the Prison Door/Paddy's Trip to Scotland/The New-rigged Ship (reels) Auchindoon (song) Blackwaterside (song) etc

Lothlorien - Greenwood Side CD

This album would appeal to fans of Clannad and Loreena McKennitt.

It has 3 originals and 8 traditional tracks, 4 instrumentals and 7 songs.

Instruments featured are high and low tin whistles, fiddle, bouzouki, mandolin, mandola, guitars and brief appearances by Celtic harp and hurdy-gurdy.

Obtain it here.

Peter Mack and Noel Rutherford - Uncertain Futures CD

Palmerston North folk club stalwarts Peter Mack (uilleann pipes) and Noel Rutherford (celtic harp) both have terminal cancer, hence the album's title. But this CD of theirs is a celebration of life. It has these original compositions:-
Tune for Emma-Lee,
written by Peter for his daughter, is a delight,
Waitohi
by Neil, invokes the unending sound of the river of his childhood, affirms his belief in the continuity of life.

There are also 16 traditional celtic tunes and a jazz piece.

Available from Noel Rutherford

Shiner - Kiss The Kilkenny CD

Shiner (Kevin McLoughlin, Steve Barkman, Vic MacDonald and Adrian Higgins) is a Dunedin celtic/country band named after "Shiner" Slattery, a well known identity around North Otago and South Canterbury late last century. It has this New Zealand content:
The Stable Lad,
Hooray for the Swag and the Shiner,
and two songs written and sung by Vic:-
Otago is My Home
praising Otago's Scottish pioneers.
In Memorium,
But they'll not be forgotten / for the price they had to pay.
for their children's children's children / will still march on Anzac Day

Available from Kevin McLoughlin, NZ$25

1999

Celia Briar & Mary Hubble - An Phis Fluicht. (The Garden of Daisies) CD

Celtic music from a highly talented pair of local folkies. Celia is a harpist from Palmerston Nth, and Mary is a flautist from Wellington.

Available from Celia Briar.

1998

Owen Hugh - Exits and Entrances CD

A compilation of the best of Owen's songs from six earlier albums. Owen is an itinerant Scot who turns up at NZ folk festivals singing quiet evocative songs and playing his guitar accompaniment in that exquisitely gentle "James Taylor" style.

Our favourite of Owen's is 'The World Keeps On Turning,' about the old bothy ploughmen James knew. It is so evocative of that old man near Levin we used to watch ploughing with his Clydesdale horses. Alas, it is not on this CD.(JA)

1996

Bob Bickerton - Music in the Glen CD

Includes Bob's arrangements of songs and tunes collected from old South Island pipers who migrated from Scotland. Finalist in the 1997 New Zealand Music Awards.

1989

Rua - The Commonwealth Suite CD

Scotsman Jimmy Young settled in New Zealand some years ago and with his band Rua notched up a quite remarkable achievement with "The Commonwealth Suite" which Jimmy was specially commissioned to write in celebration of New Zealand's 150th Anniversary. It included a unique celtic pipe version of Pokarekare Ana.

When recorded it went on to be voted the "Best Folk Album of the Year" (1990-91) at the New Zealand Music Industry Awards.

Available from Ode


Songs

This is only a brief beginning:

 

Celtic Kiwi kids songs

Bob Bickerton has written a very useful music/social studies resource kit for teaching children about those New Zealanders of Celtic ancestory. The kit's webpage contains the lyrics of several songs with a great variety of moods and origins, like:-

 
Irish Music by Tony Clark
.... Di di diddle I diddle I di, di di diddle I diddle I di,
Di di diddle I diddle I di, di di diddle I di.
I love to live in Aotearoa / I love to have my friends at home,
But I'm saving up to go to Cork / To kiss the old Blarney Stone...

Jimmy of the Hielands by Bob Bickerton
v4. I did a bungie jump its true / The rope it broke and down I flew,
But I used my kilt as a parachute / I'm Jimmy of the Hielands.

Mammy
v4. Mammy, Oh Mammy, give me food or I will die / Oh my dear, Oh my dear,
The pratties they are rotting / Oh my dear.

Celtic Music Clubs etc

Tir Na N'Og Folk Music Club
Meets 4th Saturday each month, 8pm, Irish Society, 29 Great North Rd., Newton, Auckland

NZ Uilleann Pipers Association

Events and Sessions are listed at celticmusic.co.nz

Song List - Home

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