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Harvest Storm
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Harvest Storm in Franklin, TN
Current price: $17.99

Barnes and Noble
Harvest Storm in Franklin, TN
Current price: $17.99
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Size: OS
Altan
has long been one of the most consistently thrilling of the current crop of
traditional Irish
groups, and it's difficult to pick a single highlight from their catalog. But if pressed, many fans and critics would pick either
Harvest Storm
or the equally fine
Red Crow
. Although the program is a fairly typical collection of traditional reel sets, jigs, Gaelic songs, and slow airs, every track feels as if it were chosen for a unique sort of loveliness -- the soaring beauty of the
"Rosses Highlands"
set, the curiously eerie hush of the traditional wedding song
"Donal Agus Morag,"
the chugging energy of
"Drowsy Maggie."
The singing of fiddler
Maighread Ni Mhaonaigh
is particularly noteworthy on
"Donal Agus Morag"
and
"'Si Do Mhaimeo I"
(the latter of which offers the unusual opportunity to hear a didgeridoo part on an Irish album). This is one of the last albums the group made with flutist
Frankie Kennedy
, who died of cancer after making one more album with them, the excellent
Island Angel
. ~ Rick Anderson
has long been one of the most consistently thrilling of the current crop of
traditional Irish
groups, and it's difficult to pick a single highlight from their catalog. But if pressed, many fans and critics would pick either
Harvest Storm
or the equally fine
Red Crow
. Although the program is a fairly typical collection of traditional reel sets, jigs, Gaelic songs, and slow airs, every track feels as if it were chosen for a unique sort of loveliness -- the soaring beauty of the
"Rosses Highlands"
set, the curiously eerie hush of the traditional wedding song
"Donal Agus Morag,"
the chugging energy of
"Drowsy Maggie."
The singing of fiddler
Maighread Ni Mhaonaigh
is particularly noteworthy on
"Donal Agus Morag"
and
"'Si Do Mhaimeo I"
(the latter of which offers the unusual opportunity to hear a didgeridoo part on an Irish album). This is one of the last albums the group made with flutist
Frankie Kennedy
, who died of cancer after making one more album with them, the excellent
Island Angel
. ~ Rick Anderson
Altan
has long been one of the most consistently thrilling of the current crop of
traditional Irish
groups, and it's difficult to pick a single highlight from their catalog. But if pressed, many fans and critics would pick either
Harvest Storm
or the equally fine
Red Crow
. Although the program is a fairly typical collection of traditional reel sets, jigs, Gaelic songs, and slow airs, every track feels as if it were chosen for a unique sort of loveliness -- the soaring beauty of the
"Rosses Highlands"
set, the curiously eerie hush of the traditional wedding song
"Donal Agus Morag,"
the chugging energy of
"Drowsy Maggie."
The singing of fiddler
Maighread Ni Mhaonaigh
is particularly noteworthy on
"Donal Agus Morag"
and
"'Si Do Mhaimeo I"
(the latter of which offers the unusual opportunity to hear a didgeridoo part on an Irish album). This is one of the last albums the group made with flutist
Frankie Kennedy
, who died of cancer after making one more album with them, the excellent
Island Angel
. ~ Rick Anderson
has long been one of the most consistently thrilling of the current crop of
traditional Irish
groups, and it's difficult to pick a single highlight from their catalog. But if pressed, many fans and critics would pick either
Harvest Storm
or the equally fine
Red Crow
. Although the program is a fairly typical collection of traditional reel sets, jigs, Gaelic songs, and slow airs, every track feels as if it were chosen for a unique sort of loveliness -- the soaring beauty of the
"Rosses Highlands"
set, the curiously eerie hush of the traditional wedding song
"Donal Agus Morag,"
the chugging energy of
"Drowsy Maggie."
The singing of fiddler
Maighread Ni Mhaonaigh
is particularly noteworthy on
"Donal Agus Morag"
and
"'Si Do Mhaimeo I"
(the latter of which offers the unusual opportunity to hear a didgeridoo part on an Irish album). This is one of the last albums the group made with flutist
Frankie Kennedy
, who died of cancer after making one more album with them, the excellent
Island Angel
. ~ Rick Anderson