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| Aly Bain and Ale Moller are playing the music of two traditions, Scottish and Nordic. Bain a famous Shetland fiddler, Moller, Sweden's acclaimed fretted-string master. | |
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| Aly Bain's highly expressive melody playing, impeccable phrasing, acute rhythmic sense and his signature nuances of bowing and accenting all combine in peerless fashion, and Möller is an ideal partner in their jointly-arranged explorations of the selected tunes. | |
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| Shooglenifty boys Angus Grant and Luke Plumb team up with Jamie Jauncey and Peter Daffy for a fine musical pot pourri. | |
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| This recording of a solo Bert Jansch concert, from the City Hall in Glasgow, 18th November 1974 | |
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| Mesmerising, beautifully articulated pearls from a complete musician | |
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| This third CD from Scots mandolinist Kevin MacLeod features a lively collection of Scottish and Irish traditional music, and also some new melodies from several contemporary composers including himself. | |
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| You go home from a Dick Gaughan session feeling exhilarated, not just at the wonderful skills of the most potent singer ever to emerge from the Scottish folk-music revival, but by the sense of the stark exposition of wrong and the tremendously argued legitimacy of right. | |
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| Debut CD from BBC Radio Scotland Young Traditional Musician 2003. Virtuoso fiddler and guitar player Anna is joined on accordion by Mairearad Green and Jenn Butterworth on guitar and vocals. | |
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| This eminently appealing collection of tunes and songs showcases the gifts of each of these talented Celtic musicians. | |
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| Mackenzie is a guitarist of impeccable jazz credentials who also plays Scottish traditional music. Vital Signs is the band in which he unites the two | |
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