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| A Summer in Skye is as much a delight as it is unprecedented. Compositions in both the ancient and contemporary idioms of gaelic culture are represented, as are ones which echo some of the world's other traditions. | |
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| Wild crossover music played on fiddle (Angus Grant), banjo (Garry Finlayson), mandolin (Iain MacLeod), guitar (Malcolm Crosbie), bass (Conrad Ivitsky) drums and percussion (James Mackintosh). | |
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| Alyth has a sweet yet vulnerable voice which is a perfect vehicle for this gorgeous selection of songs from the Gaelic tradition and, in particular, her beloved Isle of Lewis. | |
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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 album features pianist Andy playing mainly his own compositions - and very good they are too! | |
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| The latest release from Blair again shows his influences from all around the world. | |
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| Fiddle, whistles and accordian combine with guitar, bass, drums, effects and samples to create an exhilarating high energy mix of traditional music, dance and funk grooves. | |
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| The hypnotic harp of Corrina Hewat gently draws you into this album, and all of a sudden you find yourself in the midst of "Morrison's jig". The surprises don't end there. | |
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| A six-piece contemporary band with a repertoire forged from their Hebridean Gaelic roots. | |
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| Billy Connolly is back with the fourth in his massively popular World Tour series. This time Billy journey’s to the other side of the globe to New Zealand, a country he has been visiting since the 1970’s and of which he is immensely fond. Composed with John McCusker. | |
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