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The Fairy Queen: A Collection of Traditional Irish Melodies for Fiddle and Fingerstyle Guitar

by Kieran Fahy and Duck Baker

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about

Original liner notes:

Duck Baker, the fingerstyle guitarist from Richmond, Virginia, and Kieran Fahy, the Tuam, County Galway fiddler, met in Brussels in 1985. They have played together ever since whenever Duck’s travels brought him to Belgium. In 1998 they decided to tour together in America when Kieran could get time away from his duties in the excellent traditional group, Shantalla, and applied themselves to developing a repertoire that highlights the more strongly melodic aspect of Irish music, especially the slow airs and Carolan tunes.

‘The Fairy Queen’ is one of the more striking compositions by the great composer Carolan, but it is seldom heard, perhaps because of it’s unusually large range (two and a half octaves). The story has it that the bard slept a night near a fairy rath, and the Fairy Queen appeared to him in a dream, inspiring this melody. There are similarities between the B part of this tune and the A of ‘Sheebeg and Sheemor’, interesting as that piece was also inspired by doings of the ‘good people’.

Duck has learned many tunes over the years from the San Francisco-based multi- instrumentalist, Hal Hughes. Like many composers, Hal has a particularly good ear for a good tune. ‘Paddy Now Won’t You Be Easy’ is a charming slip jig which can he found in O’Neill’s. Kieran got 'The Exile’ from a tin whistle tutor published hy the Armagh Pipers’ Club, and thought the two tunes would make a nice pairing. (guitar: DADGBE)

‘The Fairy Lament’ has gained currency in recent times, but this version is largely inspired by that of Tommy Peoples, who performed it on two of his early records. It is said to have been learned by sailors who were blown near an island normally avoided by mortals. They came close enough to hear this air being sung by the fairies who inhabited the place, before the wind let them escape. (guitar: DADGBE)
Also from Peoples’ repertoire is ‘The Drunken Sailor’, a five-part hornpipe which is also favored by squeeze-box players. (guitar: DGDGBD)

Duck learned ‘Come Under My Dimity’ from the American book called ‘Cole’s 1001 Fiddle Tunes’ where, obviously in error, it is given as a 6/8 jig with six bar sections. A “Dimity’ would he the curtain on an old four-poster bed. Thus it could fit thematically, as well as musically with 'The Humors of Whisky’, a better known piece that was learned from another book. (guitar: DADGBE)

‘Child of My Heart’ is another tune that Hal Hughes taught to Duck. The unusual treatment of this jig owes to the lucky fact that Duck’s guitar was in G tuning at the time. (guitar: DGDGBD). Duck and Dave Evans go back to 1976, when they toured together on one of Stefan Grossman’s Kicking Mule tours. It was a few years later that Dave applied his brilliantly original guitar style to Irish music, and probably just a matter of time before this exceptional composer came up with tunes in the idiom. ‘Ramble Over Stennis’ is a souvenir of a trip Dave made to the Orkneys a few years ago. Since the late '70’s Evans has lived in Belgium, and for the last several years he and Kieran have been near-neighbors. ‘Galway Bay’ is from the playing of another frequent collaborator with Kieran, accordionist Serge Desaunay. (guitar: DADGBE)

Duck learned ‘Miss Forbes’ Farewell’ from Norman and Nancy Blake. Norman found this fine piece in O’Neill’s “Waifs and Strays of Gaelic Melody”. O’Neill notes the Scottish nature of this melody and the possibility that it came from Scotland originally. The unusual version of ‘Poll Ha'penny’ comes from a recording by the great Clare fiddler Bobby Casey, by way of Hal Hughes. (guitar: DGDGBD) Duck’s versions of the well-known jigs ‘The Joy of My Life’ and ‘The Banks of Lough Gowna’ were learned from an old Folkways record called “Irish Dance Music”. The setting of the latter, with its modulations from A to C, seems quite unusual.

While the majority of Carolan’s tunes were named for people he knew (mostly patrons), only one inspired four distinct melodies, and that was an unrequited love of his youth named Bridget Cruise. The tune heard here is the third of the four airs that bear her name. ‘Planxty Sweeny’ is a seldom performed bit of Carolania learned from Donal O’Sullivan’s definitive collection. Like many of his lesser- known works, it is a straightforward jig. ‘The Blarney Pilgrim’ and ‘The Market Girls’ are also jigs, the first well-known and the second obscure. Duck learned his version of the first from the Matthews Brothers, Larry and Terry. Hal Hughes was the source for the second, which would seem to be an American tune.
(guitar: DADGBE)

Kieran and Duck were inspired independently to learn ‘The Wexford Carol’ from the same recording, by Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin. Christmas carols are rare in Ireland, apart from an area in the county that gives this beautiful song its name. Owing to the fact that it appears in the ‘Oxford Book of Carols’, ‘The Wexford Carol’ will pop up in unexpected contexts, but few versions compare to Ó Súilleabháin's for bringing out the unusual harmonies. (guitar: DADGBE)

- Michael Crane

credits

released June 1, 1999

Recorded December 14-16, 1998, Mix-O-Lydian Studios, Lafayatte NJ, Don Sternecker, engineer
produced by Duck Baker

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Duck Baker Reading, UK

Duck Baker is one of the most highly regarded fingerstyle guitarists of his generation. His repertoire ranges from traditional Irish music through blues, gospel, and ragtime to swing and modern jazz, and free improvisation. Best known in the guitar world, Baker has made a reputation in many musical camps, from Celtic to the avant-garde. His vast discography includes 30 records under his own name. ... more

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