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ARTIST: DAVID
BREWER AND REBECCA LOMNICKY
TITLE: INSPIRED
LABEL: DAVID BREWER/MOLRI MUSIC
RELEASE DATE: JUNE 2010
By Roland Sturm
Inspired is a CD of elegant Scottish music by David Brewer,
the piper and whistle player in the Celtic band Molly's Revenge, and Rebecca
Lomnicky, a young fiddler from Oregon. "Elegant" or perhaps "stately" seem to
be the best words to capture the atmosphere, in particular the fiddle style. It
is slower and more refined than old-time or Irish fiddling, but it is not classical
music either. If you are not familiar with this genre, this CD is a good
introduction. If you are already a fan Alasdair Fraser and Natalie Haas, Inspired will be an enjoyable addition
to your CD collection. An important difference to Alasdair Fraser's recordings,
however, is the timbre added by David Brewer's bagpipes and whistles.
About half of the tunes are new compositions by Lomnicky and
Brewer, the rest are mainly older tunes, with a few other compositions by
modern composers. The most prominent instrument on the CD is fiddle, David
keeps himself busy on a variety of other instruments: Highland pipes,
smallpipes, guitar, whistles, bodhran, mandolin. There is plenty of bagpipe
playing here, but if you are looking for a CD focused on bagpipes, I highly
recommend David's previous solo CD (you can find a review on FolkWorks as
well). Guest musicians Natalie Haas (cello) and Jeffrey Spero (piano) add other
textures to the sound.
Many people associate Scottish folk music exclusively with
the Highland Bagpipe, but there has been a long tradition of fiddle music going
back to the 1700s. It was not pure "folk" music, because the best known
fiddlers were well educated professional musicians, often enjoying the
patronage of aristocrats, but it was not classical music either. Scottish
fiddle music had a tremendous influence on American folk music and many
American old-time tunes (including Soldier's
Joy and Devil's Dream) can be
immediately traced back to old Scottish publications, sometimes even to a specific
composer (Old Molly Hare is a
variation of Nathaniel Gow's Fairy Dance).
There are a few tunes on this CD from that period, including a set of tunes by
Robert Mackintosh probably composed around 1790 (track 3, Lady Elizabeth Cole).
The appearance of the cello seems surprising because of the
exclusive association of cello with classical music. But the cello actually had
a life outside classical music and Natalie Haas revives a centuries-old
tradition in Scottish dance music. Niel Gow, a contemporary of Mackintosh, for
example, performed regularly at dances in a small band that included his
brother Donald on cello. They would walk miles to play a dance, drink a great
deal, then stagger home.
I like Inspired a
lot and have listened to it many times already. My only criticism is one track
and that is Amazing Grace. It is a
lovely version (I did listen to it twice), but this tune is just too overplayed
for my taste and I deleted it from my playlist. I can see their rationale for
including it: The bread and butter of a professional bagpiper is playing Amazing Grace at funerals and weddings
and adding this track probably sells more CDs than anything else they could
have done. I like all the other tracks on the CD and among my favorites are the
gentle strathspey of the title track (pretty mandolin introduction and then
mainly fiddle/cello), the Mackintosh reels (fiddle, cello, guitar, with a bit
of whistle at the end), the wilder bagpipe on The Panda, or the haunting Highland pipe and violin duet on Mrs. Forsyth's Pibroch (Manse Of Abernethy).
Maybe I should pick the last track as my favorite because the pipe/violin duet
is the most unique.
This CD was not available when David played with Molly's
Revenge at the 50th Topanga Banjo Fiddle Festival last month. But he will be
back in the Los Angeles area this month, with Molly's Revenge (June 25 at
CTMS). Since this is a brand new CD, David has a lot of copies of that CD at
home. He probably doesn't need all of them or you can purchase them at CDBaby.
Roland Sturm is Professor of Policy Analysis at the RAND
Graduate School and usually writes on health policy, not music. He is the
talent coordinator of the Topanga Banjo Fiddle Contest and leads the monthly
Celtic sessions at CTMS. These days he mainly plays upright bass and mandolin
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