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Soul of a Harper "Celtic 101" Review
Saw Memories of Middle Earth and Soul of a Harper were briefly reviewed in the Austin Chronicle today. Slight mis-quote which adds humor to the past two days blog. "We're not really 'Celtic,'" explains Marc Gunn of the local Brobdingnagian Bards, and he's right; the duo is more lo-fi English folk with a distinct Gaelic twist. Yet their simple autoharp-and-recorder music is remarkably diverse ("Hobbit's Dance," "The Psychopathic, Chronic, Schizophrenic Gollum Blues"), as Memories of Middle Earth (Mage Records) displays. Gunn's own debut, Soul of a Harper, is only available on the Internet, the place where rebel Celtic music thrives – the Bards' MP3 hit, "Tolkien," racked up well over a million downloads in cyberspace. Harper is a delightfully homespun collection of instrumentals and songs about dwarves and elves, rebels and Ireland, and trad a capella such as "My Love Is Like a Red, Red Rose." (Gunn also oversaw the Celtic MP3 collection Coventina's Well, featuring Ed Miller.) More than anything I was saying, Memories of Middle Earth was not quite 'Celtic'. Ah well. It's good publicity.
Read the whole Celtic 101 review at the Austin Chronicle website.
Posted by Marc Gunn on Thursday, January 29, 2004 |
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