Fraser Fifield - Piobaireachd/Pipe Music (2021)
BAND/ARTIST: Fraser Fifield
- Title: Piobaireachd/Pipe Music
- Year Of Release: 2021
- Label: Fraser Fifield
- Genre: Folk, Jazz, Celtic
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
- Total Time: 49:10
- Total Size: 307 MB | 113 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
------------
01. Fraser Fifield - In Regards That Matter
02. Fraser Fifield - Being In Time
03. Fraser Fifield - Breizh/A Flame of Wrath
04. Fraser Fifield - Improvisation on Whistle
05. Fraser Fifield - Lament for Red Hector of the Battles
06. Fraser Fifield - Where Rivers Meet
07. Fraser Fifield - Lament for the Old Sword
08. Fraser Fifield - The Piper's Premonition
09. Fraser Fifield - The MacDougall's Gathering
10. Fraser Fifield - Improvisation on Bagpipes
11. Fraser Fifield - Praise of Longer Days
------------
01. Fraser Fifield - In Regards That Matter
02. Fraser Fifield - Being In Time
03. Fraser Fifield - Breizh/A Flame of Wrath
04. Fraser Fifield - Improvisation on Whistle
05. Fraser Fifield - Lament for Red Hector of the Battles
06. Fraser Fifield - Where Rivers Meet
07. Fraser Fifield - Lament for the Old Sword
08. Fraser Fifield - The Piper's Premonition
09. Fraser Fifield - The MacDougall's Gathering
10. Fraser Fifield - Improvisation on Bagpipes
11. Fraser Fifield - Praise of Longer Days
Piobaireachd / Pipe Music is a startling new recording by piper and multi-instrumentalist Fraser Fifield. It features a collection of tracks recorded following Fifield’s deep re-examination, during lockdown, of what he calls “that ancient, slightly mysterious music associated with the Scottish bagpipe.”
A musician whose work over the past twenty years has found him collaborating with Indian, Bulgarian and Argentinian colleagues, as well as appearing with Scottish Gaelic-world music band Capercaillie, jazz guitarist Graeme Stephen, chamber music adventurists Mr Falls Chamber, the Afro Celt Sound System and the mammoth Grit Orchestra, Fifield began his musical life playing the Highland pipes in his adopted Aberdeenshire.
Taking lessons with his local GP in Aboyne, Dr Jack Taylor, himself a gold-medal-winning exponent of piobaireachd and for many years the chairman of the Piobaireachd Society, Fifield became – and has remained - fascinated with piobaireachd from the age of eleven.
While adding whistle, saxophone, clarinet and kaval (the Balkan end-blown flute) to his repertoire over the years, Fifield has often applied the phrasing and techniques associated with piobaireachd, sometimes known as “the classical music of the Highland bagpipe,” to his own compositions and improvisations.
In lockdown, Fifield explored and re-imagined ancient tunes, including The Flame of Wrath for Squinting Patrick, from the 17th century and attributed to Donald Mòr MacCrimmon, and The Lament for the Old Sword. The former, which commemorates an act of terrible retribution, features soprano saxophone, clarinet and whistle embellishing the bagpipe melody and the latter finds whistle and soprano saxophones vividly reinterpreting traditional piobaireachd variations.
Piobaireachd/Pipe Music also features Fifield's own compositions, including Being in Time, a Border pipes, saxophones, whistles and kaval multi-tracked odyssey in dedication to his late friend, the pipe maker Nigel Richard, and In Regard to That Matter, which was commissioned from the RareTunes Scottish music archive and composed in the spirit of the album.
Improvisation on Whistle acknowledges both the alap of north Indian ragas and the urlar, or ground, of a piobaireachd. This reflects Fifield’s experience of playing with Indian masters including Zakir Hussain and his conviction that Scottish piping once involved much more improvisation than it does today.
“I have a theory that improvisation is simply inherent to the human musical experience and I would posit an improvisatory route to the music we now call piobaireachd,“ he says. “I suppose it might be impossible to prove but it makes sense to me and I’m happiest when creating afresh – that interesting mix of performer and composer at the same time.”
A musician whose work over the past twenty years has found him collaborating with Indian, Bulgarian and Argentinian colleagues, as well as appearing with Scottish Gaelic-world music band Capercaillie, jazz guitarist Graeme Stephen, chamber music adventurists Mr Falls Chamber, the Afro Celt Sound System and the mammoth Grit Orchestra, Fifield began his musical life playing the Highland pipes in his adopted Aberdeenshire.
Taking lessons with his local GP in Aboyne, Dr Jack Taylor, himself a gold-medal-winning exponent of piobaireachd and for many years the chairman of the Piobaireachd Society, Fifield became – and has remained - fascinated with piobaireachd from the age of eleven.
While adding whistle, saxophone, clarinet and kaval (the Balkan end-blown flute) to his repertoire over the years, Fifield has often applied the phrasing and techniques associated with piobaireachd, sometimes known as “the classical music of the Highland bagpipe,” to his own compositions and improvisations.
In lockdown, Fifield explored and re-imagined ancient tunes, including The Flame of Wrath for Squinting Patrick, from the 17th century and attributed to Donald Mòr MacCrimmon, and The Lament for the Old Sword. The former, which commemorates an act of terrible retribution, features soprano saxophone, clarinet and whistle embellishing the bagpipe melody and the latter finds whistle and soprano saxophones vividly reinterpreting traditional piobaireachd variations.
Piobaireachd/Pipe Music also features Fifield's own compositions, including Being in Time, a Border pipes, saxophones, whistles and kaval multi-tracked odyssey in dedication to his late friend, the pipe maker Nigel Richard, and In Regard to That Matter, which was commissioned from the RareTunes Scottish music archive and composed in the spirit of the album.
Improvisation on Whistle acknowledges both the alap of north Indian ragas and the urlar, or ground, of a piobaireachd. This reflects Fifield’s experience of playing with Indian masters including Zakir Hussain and his conviction that Scottish piping once involved much more improvisation than it does today.
“I have a theory that improvisation is simply inherent to the human musical experience and I would posit an improvisatory route to the music we now call piobaireachd,“ he says. “I suppose it might be impossible to prove but it makes sense to me and I’m happiest when creating afresh – that interesting mix of performer and composer at the same time.”
FLAC
IsraCloud : Download
Mp3
IsraCloud : Download
Year 2021 | Jazz | Celtic | Folk | FLAC / APE | Mp3
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads