
:
Bottled at source
Rudsambee's own compositions
and settings: original music, poetry and traditional songs from many countries.
Rudsambee's third collection
is even more our own work than our previous CDs. All the songs are written or
arranged by ourselves (with the exception of I knew, which we include
in memory of Fedora Turnbull). The words of some are also original; most of
the others are settings of favourite poems. We recorded the CD locally and designed
and produced it ourselves. It is in every way fresh from the original source.
We hope it reaches you in the same condition that it left us.
Wind, water and landscape,
dreams, loneliness and love are recurring themes. Some you may recognise - Ae
fond kiss, Fhir a' bhata and Amazing Grace are familiar traditional
Scottish tunes. Others will be completely new to you - The optimist's song
and To music. The midgies descending was written in anticipation
(amply fulfilled) of our 1999 tour of the West Highlands and our persecution
by the local wildlife.
When our founder Sheena
Phillips moved to America at the beginning of 2000, she began a career as a
full-time composer by setting words by the American poet Emily Dickinson and
we include two of those. We would like to dedicate this CD to Sheena, whose
music remains an essential part of our repertoire.
Track list
- Vårvindar Friska
[1m49s] Trad Swedish, arr: Sheena Phillips
- Hungry Waters
[0m37s] Words: Hugh McDiarmid (1892-1978), Music: Frances Cockburn
- He Wishes for the
Cloths of Heaven [2m35s] Words: W B Yeats (1865-1939), Music: Frances
Cockburn
- Amazing Grace
[2m38s] Words: John Newton (1725-1807), Music: Sheena Phillips
- I Knew … [1m10s]
F Turnbull (c. 1895-1985)
- The Lyke Wake Dirge
[3m19s] Trad. Yorkshire, arr. Peter Hill
- Wild Nights [1m3s]
Words: Emily Dickinson (1830-1886), Music: Sheena Phillips
- Ae Fond Kiss [2m57s]
Robert Burns (1759-1796), Tune: trad. arr Frances Cockburn
- To My Mountain
[1m29s] Words: Kathleen Raine (b.1908), Music Michael Buck
- The Midgies Descending
[1m17s] Hums and Music: Sheena Phillips
- The Optimists' Song
[1m57s] Words: Peter Hill, Music: Sheena Phillips
- Regina Coeli [1m48s]
Music: Michael Buck
- All Things Pass
[2m8s] 6th century Chinese poem, trans. T Leary (1920-1996), Music: Sheena
Phillips
- Holy Thursday
[2m30s] Words: William Blake (1757-1827), Music Sheena Phillips
- Both Sides the Tweed
[2m31s] Dick Gaughan, arr. Frances Cockburn
- A song (And would
ye tak love) [1m0s] Words: William Soutar (1898-1943), Music: Michael
Buck
- The Wee Sma' Glen
[1m38s] Words: Marion Angus (1864-1944), Music: Frances Cockburn
- Love [1m6s] Words:
Jalaluddin Rumi (1207-1273), translated by Patrick Heavey, Music Michael Buck
- Fhir a' Bhàta
[4m5s] Trad. Gaelic, arr: Sheena Phillips
- Everyone Sang
[1m27s] Words: Siegfried Sassoon (1886-1967), Music: Frances Cockburn
- Be Like A Bird
[1m3s] Anon. arr. Sheena Phillips
- To Music [1m7s]
Words and Music: Sheena Phillips
- Winter Afternoons
[1m53s] Words: Emily Dickinson (1830-1886), Music: Sheena Phillips
- Day Is Düne [2m30s]
Words: William Soutar (1898-1943), Music: Sheena Phillips
- Puirt a Beul (Bodachan
a-ri-a-ro, Nam biodh trì sgillinn agam, Hé Mandu) [3m47s]
Trad. Gaelic, arr Sheena Phillips, Sheena Phillips, Peter Hill resp.
Playing time c 49 minutes
The singers
Roddy Braggins, Kaye Brewster,
Christina Brown, Michael Buck, Caroline Burdon-Cooper, Frances Cockburn, Jenny
Fardell, Anne Grindley, Peter Hawkins, Peter Hill, Sari Kontkanen, Anna Partridge,
Kay Russell, Sasa Salinasova, Douglas Shaw, Frank Tollick, Suzanna Tybulewicz,
John Wexler, Susan Wexler
Directed by Frances
Cockburn
Recorded in Dunbar
Parish Church, October 2000