Seese in the Bog
The Jig of Slurs [Live]
Tranent Muir [Live]
Farewell to Fiunary
Heather Island [Live]
Log Splitter Set: Caradale Bay
The Log Splitter
Calibachan
Drochaid Lui
When the Kye Come Hame [Live]
Athol Gathering [Live]
Pipe Major George Allan Set: Mrs. Stewert of Grantully
Maggie's Pancake
Dark Eyed Molly
Dumbarton's Drums
Black Run Set: The Black Run
P.M. John Macdonald (Glasgow Police)
Lady
Soldier's Return
Grat for Gruel: The Ichindown Jig
The Grumbling Carle
Leaving Ireland Set
Cruel BritherAverage customer rating:
Blend the beauty of the traditional melodies with the power of modern rhythmsFor Scotland, the late 18th and early 19th century was a time of profound and uncomfortable changes. Economic and social structures were altered dramatically as the Industrial Revolution brought factories and mechanization to Scotland's rural world. At the same time, the Scottish Highlanders were being driven from their lands by the English conquerors, forced into the Lowlands, forbidden to practice their familiar customs. It was a difficult time, often a brutal time... and yet, this was a time of great poets, the likes of Robert Burns and Robert Tannahill. And it was a time of great music.
The Tannahill Weavers' diverse repertoire reflects the duality of Scotland's musical heritage. It embraces both the mystical quality of the Highlander's Celtic music, and the rollicking, sometimes even brawling qualities of the Lowlander's Anglo-Scots tunes. The Tannahill Weavers' arrangements blend the beauty of the traditional melodies with the power of modern rhythms. The penetrating sound of the Highland bagpipes is a thread of ancient memory running through it all.