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Flight of the Green Linnet

Flight of the Green Linnet

Flight of the Green Linnet Tracks
1. An Seanduine Doite - Relativity
2. Kitty In The Lane/Captain Kelly/The Green Mountain - Matt Malloy/Sean Keane/Artie McGlynn
3. Lucy Cassidy/The Bletherskate/The Smith Of Chilliechassie - The Tannahill Weavers
4. The Parish Of Dunkeld/The Curlew - Andy Stewart/Phil Cunningham
5. Three Polkas - Kevin Burke
6. The Holly Ground - Andy Irvine/Patrick Street
7. My Maryann/The Corner House - The Irish Tradition
8. Jack Haggerty - Touchstone
9. Planxty Loftus Jones - Mick Moloney
10. Inisheer - Buttons & Bows
11. Citi No GCummann - Mairead Ni Mhaonaigh/Frankie Kennedy
12. Helen Of Kirkconnel - Jamie McMenemy/Kornog
13. The Secret Portrait/Wha'll Be King But Cherlie - Silly Wizard
14. Berton Gavottes - Kevin Burke/Mcheal O Domhnaill
15. Puirt A Beul - Capercaillie
16. Colonel Fraser - Jerry O' Sullivan
17. Fair Warning - John Cunningham
Flight of the Green Linnet - Flight of the Green Linnet


Users's Reviews
Feel free to add your comments about Flight of the Green Linnet
An excellent introduction to modern-sounding Celtic music
5
When I first tried this collection in 1989 it was a vigorous introduction to contemporary Celtic music. Relativity lead the set with a joyous song that has it all: harmony in Gaelic, a fast tempo, synthesizers, and none of the old folks' stuff. Then there is some more traditional stuff which I came to like in time, but Andy Stewart's Parish of Dunkeld, if you can make out any of the words, is an immediately funny, irreverent ballad that shows off his singing range. The Tannahill Weavers, on this album, put on one of their infectious lively renditions of too often boring pipes-and-accordion dance music. This stuff is for making converts. No Celtic set would be complete without some weepy tragedy, and that's here too: Kornog, on Helen of Kirkconnell, do a slow sing-song tale I still can't piece together. Jack Haggerty (Touchstone) is another tragedy about a longshoreman who loves a black-haired, black-hearted woman and bleeds for it, in a more accessible upbeat musical style. And that underscores what the compilers were doing, putting together their music that mostly appeals to ears tuned to 80s pop, yet packing a lot of tradition. In contrast, "Green Linnet's 20th Anniversary" package (1996) digs back into stuffier styles and doesn't hit this target. "Flight of the Green Linnet" is both a crowd-pleaser and a mind-opener.
Posted by Anonymous, on 1998-09-20

Flight of the Green Linnet