Swan-Upmanship | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Old Swan Band |
Cover: | Swan-Upmanship.jpg |
Genre: | English folk |
Prev Title: | Still Swanning... After All These Years |
Prev Year: | 1995 |
Next Title: | Swan For The Money |
Next Year: | 2011 |
Swan-Upmanship is an album by the Old Swan Band.
Although these (mostly) obscure tunes come from England, Ireland, Scotland, France and Sweden, the band puts a distinctively English stamp on all of them. Firstly they are taken at a steady, unhurried pace. This is a dance, not a race. Secondly, the style of the decoration is unfussy. Celtic bands often insert a "triplet" when there is a slight gap in the melody, creating a kind of "fill". English traditional country dance bands tend to leave the gap there. This gives the tunes an "open" confident feel to them. Instead, the most frequent decoration these tunes are given is something that only fiddles can do - they do a "swoop" into the opening note of the melody. Finally there is the percussion. Celtic bands tend to have a bodhran, a snare drum (particularly Scottish bands) or else there is no percussion. Here Martin Brinsford uses a huge variety of blocks, tambourines and shakers to give a certain swing to the quartet of fiddles. Sometimes there is a cheeky little syncopation. Irish music also uses syncopation, but only in short doses. Running time 59 minutes 56 seconds. Released 2004.
A tune collected in Orkney by Peter Kennedy, and one from England
The second tune is from the 1840s or 50s
The "Gloucester Hornpipe" is a different tune from the one the band recorded in 1981
Written by Paul as he lay on a hospital bed
The first is a morris dance tune, the second has 5 beats within a four-bar phrase,
and the third was recorded by Stanley Holloway in 1959
"Redwing" is frequently credited as "Trad" but was written in 1907.
Three widely popular tunes. Two of them from the 18th century.
A different tune from the standard "College Hornpipe"
The first title is based on a Basque tune, the second is from about 1840
The first tune comes from Leo Rowsome
From Gloucestershire