Central Square Records

Various Artists - Patchwork Europe

Details

Format: CD
Catalog: 1626
Rel. Date: 04/11/2006
UPC: 4010228162622

Patchwork Europe
Artist: Various Artists
Format: CD
New: Available to Order - Not In Our Store $20.99
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Formats and Editions

DISC: 1

1. Bashful Bachelor / Sunshine Hornpipe, medley of traditional melo
2. Scottish (or "Foursome") Reel, traditional melody - Hannah Willi
3. Morpeth Rant / Steamboat, medley of traditional melodies: a. Mor
4. Polka piqu‚e, traditional melody - Jean Pradal/Martin Cayla
5. Fado da Minha Aldeia, traditional melody
6. Sevillanas: No. 2
7. Parado de Valldemosa, song for voice (Catalan)
8. Markensmandagen (Monday in the Meadow), traditional melody
9. Hattemageren (The Milliner), traditional melody - Folkedanseorke
10. Tegernseer L„ndler, traditional melody
11. Alpufzug, traditional melody
12. Innviertler L„ndler (Vierzeiler), traditional melody
13. Buon principio d'anno, traditional melody - Nullo Romani
14. Mediana for launeddas in D major (after a traditional Sardinian
15. Camporeale bello, traditional polka - Il Quattro Siciliani
16. Punaliivi (The Red Vest), folk song - Erik Kivi
17. Yiddisher Wulach (Jewish Dance), traditional Byelorussian melody
18. Staropolski kujawiak, traditional melody - Tadeusz Zadroga
19. Mindenf‚le Szerelemnek, traditional melody
20. B¡r¢ uram ‚s s rga cserebog r, traditional melody - Olah Lajos
21. Micika Polka, traditional melody - Verni's Troubadours Tamburica
22. €elni ju moj lule, ‡elni (Blossom, You Flowers, Blossom), folk s
23. Tha horepseis gero, traditional melody
24. Doina si Ardeleana de la Sibiu, traditional melody - Orhestras T
25. Zaporozec Polka, traditional melody - Ukrainska Orchestra Pawla
26. Kukushka, folk song - Sisters Fiodorov

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European folk music has not one sound but many. There are countless soundscapes between Sardinia and Norway, from the Atlantic coast to the Urals, each one distinct. All have their own character. Europe means polyphony, a thicket of diversity where for millennia cultures have been flowing together and drifting apart, creating a musical patchwork. Traditional music? The term suggests constancy and permanence: familiar tunes and homely songs. The melodies of the past seem to offer a stable foothold, in opposition to the ever faster innovations of the present. However this nostalgia is an illusion, a false idyll. Many of the musical styles we now perceive as traditional were originally radical and modern. They resulted from dramatic changes which shook the 19th century European world and turned it upside down. The industrial revolution triggered technical innovations and social change on a massive scale. New instruments were invented: the accordion, mouth organ, concertina, banjo and saxophone, plus brass instruments equipped with valves like the trumpet and tuba. Later, factory production turned these new musical instruments into relatively cheap mass produced items which many people could afford.
        
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