The Occasionals are widely regarded as one of the foremost ceilidh dance bands. They have a huge reputation around the Scottish dance scene, and have been playing for dancing the length and breadth of Europe since 1986.
Great dancing nights are still to be found in halls around Scotland, where enthusiastic dancers birl and swing through lively sets. Here The Occasionals steer the dancers' feet around the dance floor with a new selection of Scottish dances.
Accordionist Freeland Barbour initially joined forces with fellow ex-Wallochmor Ceilidh Band drummer Gus Miller, to 'occasionally' play for dances at festivals, and when Freeland invited banjo/mandolin player Kevin MacLeod to join that year, the basis of the current band line-up was secured.
However, since then, many fine musicians such as fiddlers Rebecca Hunter and Mairi Campbell, pianists Neil MacMillan and Gill Simpson, Runrig guitarist Malcolm Jones and drummer Ally MacIntyre have 'occasionally' performed with the band.
The line-up on Down To The Hall comprises Freeland (accordion, midi-bass, piano, whistle, clavinet, harpsichord), Ian Hardie (fiddle, Scottish smallpipes), Kevin MacLeod (electric tenor banjo, resonator, tenor guitars, bouzouki, mandolins) and Gus Miller (drums).
Over the past sixteen years the band has performed at many large and prestigious events, including Cambridge Folk Festival, Celtic Connections, BBC TV’s Talla a Bhaile, Tonder Festival in Denmark, Jakarta Highland Society, RSNO Viennese Balls, The National Mod and a thousand other public and private functions all over Scotland and beyond.
Media Reviews
a winning combination of instrumental virtuosity, ensemble precision and sheer exuberance.
GREENTRAX is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year. While it has supported its fair share of new directions in Scottish folk, it has always built its catalogue on a firm bedrock of solid tradition. The Occasionals are one of Scotland's leading ceilidh bands, featuring Freeland Barbour (accordion), Ian Hardie (fiddle and small pipes), Kevin MacLeod (banjo and guitar) and Gus Miller (drums). They play the kind of strict-time dance music beloved of Robbie Sheppard fans and ceilidh dancers everywhere, and do so with a winning combination of instrumental virtuosity, ensemble precision and sheer exuberance. KENNY MATHIESON
..will keep the peats smouldering for years
This is a fine album of the type of accordion-led Scottish dance music that used to be heard in town and village halls all over the country, but, as fashions change, is becoming a specialised niche in the new roots/folk/tradition. Home-made, in the best professional sense (frets player Kevin Macleod did the cover art work and accordion/keys player Freeland Barbour runs the recording studio) the 21 tracks cover the widest spectrum of old-style dances, from the bouncy off-beat Highland Scottische to the mysterious Viennese Swing. It might not set the heather ablaze, but this CD by one of our most celebrated dance bands will keep the peats smouldering for years. NORMAN CHALMERS