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Click on Album Sleeve above to listen
to some audio clips for this album.
For more details see our help page.
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| (1) |
Inishlacken
The Currach
The Island Terns
Evening Céilí
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| (2) |
Errisbeg |
| (3) |
Carna
Dawn
Macdaras
An Chistin
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Get Bill Whelan recordings online
Sleeve Notes
The Connemara Suite began some years ago
when I was first asked to write for the Irish Chamber Orchestra.
INISHLACKEN came first, that then led to CARNA and finally ERRISBEG.
The virtuosity of these fine musicians and their enthusiasm for
music making has been a very rewarding experience for me as a composer.
It has also allowed me to write for traditional musicians within
the framework of a chamber orchestra and the ICO who have always
had a sense of adventure in their approach to their repertoire
Bill Whelan
Performed by the Irish Chamber Orchestra
Conducted by David Jones
Soloists include: Zoë Conway (Solo Fiddle)
Morgan Crowley (Vocal and Lilting )
Colin Dunne (Dance Percussion)
Fionnuala Hunt (Solo Violin)
Michelle Mulcahy (Harp)
Bill Whelan (Lilting)
Recorded at University Concert Hall, University of Limerick
and The Fort, Roundstone by Philip Begley.
Mixed at The Fort, Roundstone by Philip Begley.
Produced by Bill Whelan.
Composed by Bill Whelan and published by Cloonisle Music.
Transcription and orchestration of Inishlacken by David Downes.
Photography: Amelia Stein, Michael Kopa, Maurice Gunning,
Bill Whelan, Mella Travers, Steve Ullathorne, John McIntye
Design: Philip Melly - Design Warehouse
Cover image Inishlacken by Gerard Dillon, used
by kind permission of the Dillon estate
Track Notes
Dear Bill
I listened to your Connemara Suite under ideal circumstances, standing
at our window overlooking Roundstone Bay. It was a still Autumn
afternoon; a slight haze reduced the background of mountains to
a grey-blue silhouette. With the end of the season the last of the
summer fleet of white sails had already flitted, leaving just one
black-hulled traditional workboat at anchor. And as the music streamed
and bubbled, her rust-red sails were hoisted and she began slowly
to tack out of the bay. The tall mast moved like a pointer against
the graph-like rises and falls of the skyline, as if it were mysteriously
directing the music that filled the room. Sailing must sometimes
be like this, more a state of mind than a progress; the music too
was dwelling in a long moment rather than pursuing an argument,
and was full of reminiscences of other Irish music with the same
quality, from Carolan to jigs and reels and indeed to Riverdance.
By the time the boat had disappeared past Inis Leacan to leave the
sheltering hill of Iorras Beag and face into the Atlantic, the music
was celebrating Carna, the peninsula whose long spine of hills forms
our eastern horizon beyond the Bay. And since Carna is such a talkative
place, still having two languages to talk in, it was right that
the human voice should suddenly break into the instrumental flow
with a lovely slow air and then a rattle of portaireacht béal,
mouth-music.
Thank you for a quintessentially Connemaran experience.
Tim Robinson
October 2007
Tim Robinson is the author of Stones of Aran and of
Connemara: Listening to the Wind. He lives in Roundstone,
where Folding Landscapes publishes his maps of the Aran Islands,
the Burren and Connemara.
1) Inishlacken
Performed by the Irish Chamber Orchestra
Conducted by David Jones
Zoë Conway Solo Fiddle
Fionnuala Hunt Solo Violin
A concerto for two violins one in the classical style and one traditional,
Inishlacken (Inis Leacain) was named after an island off the Galway
coast and has been inspired by living in Connemara and by many visits
to the island. The first movement imagines a trip in a currach out
to Inishlacken. The vigorous rowing is given a break in the middle
of the movement, as we look back at the Twelve Pins and the beautiful
Connemara landscape prior to taking to the oars again. The second
movement imagines the flight of the many terns that inhabit the
island, as they speed around in pairs, skimming the surface of the
sea. In the last movement, I tried to evoke the evening on Inishlacken
as the quiet sunset is replaced by the music and dance of a community
now sadly all departed.
3) Errisbeg
Performed by the Irish Chamber Orchestra
Conducted by David Jones
Zoë Conway Solo Fiddle
Michelle Mulcahy Harp
In the area where I live in Connemara, the local landscape is dominated
by the imposing presence of Errisbeg (Iorras Beag). From the land
it offers many routes for walking and presents extraordinary views
of the surrounding countryside and of course of the sea - including
Inishlacken and Carna. I have walked parts of Errisbeg on many occasions
and this composition represents for me the different moods that
this mountain can evoke in the walker.
3) Carna
Performed by the Irish Chamber Orchestra
Conducted by David Jones
Zoë Conway Solo Fiddle
Morgan Crowley Song
Morgan Crowley and Bill Whelan Lilting
Colin Dunne Dance Percussion
Irish lyrics by Theo Dorgan
Carna is in three movements, the first "Dawn" imagines
the early hours of the day, when that extraordinary Connemara light
pushes back the dark and the early stirrings are heard through the
stillness. Finally the sun bursts through, and the Connemara landscape
is revealed with its rugged beauty set against the powerful ever-present
Atlantic.
The second movement, "Macdara's" evokes the sea journey
that takes place every year from the Connemara coast, out to MacDara's
Island, named after the sixth century saint who lived and built
a small one-roomed church on the island. On July 16th every year,
all the boats set out from Carna, laden with pilgrims, to attend
mass on the island and to spend the day picknicking and having the
craic on this otherwise deserted and wild Atlantic outpost.
The final movement, "An Cistin" imagines the end of MacDara's
day, when the currachs and sailing boats (hookers) have returned
to Carna, and a proper seisiún begins in earnest. In the
past, musicians were not always available, and the music for dance
was often supplied by a "lilter" who sang the melodies
of the jigs and reels, wordlessly but with much decoration and technical
expertise. Here, I have taken the rhythms of the dance and used
them in a playful interaction between fiddle, feet and orchestra.
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