Putumayo Presents: Women of the World

$ 4.00

Detailed item info

Condition: Very Good
Album Features
UPC: 790248012025
Artist: Various Artists
Format: CD
Release Year: 1995
Record Label: Putumayo
Genre: International, Irish

Track Listing
1. Against the Wind - Moya Brennan
2. Amhr n Pheadar Breathnach - Maighread N¡ Dhomhnaill/Maighread N¡ Dhomnaill
3. Treasure Island - Mary Black
4. Dark Alan - Karen Matheson (from "Rob Roy")
5. Waiting for the Wheel to Turn - Karen Matheson
6. The - M ire Breatnach Breatnaigh Ab£!
7. The - Moya Brennan Mighty One
8. Stories - Maura O'Connell
9. Cry Over You - Fiona Joyce
10. On We Go - Nancy McCallion
11. D£lam n - Mair‚ad N¡ Mhaonaigh
12. Song for Ireland - Mary Black

Details
Playing Time: 54 min.
Producer: Dan Storper (Compilation)
Distributor: E1 Distribution (USA)
Recording Type: Studio
Recording Mode: Stereo
SPAR Code: n/a

Album Notes
Includes liner notes by Dan Storper and Fiona Ritchie.This assortment of Irish and Scottish female artists mostly spotlights denizens of the Celtic twilight movement, which means airy, otherwordly Enya-esque sopranos who sing in either Irish Gaelic or English. The arrangements are similarly spaced-out, tending toward unsteady, woebegone tin flute riffs and nylon-stringed neo-Irish harps layered over pellucid but flagrantly unnatural currents of synthesizers at flood tide. The talent is first-rate, however, ranging from thoughtful singer/songwriters, to die-hard traditionalists, to crinkle-haired new age divas complete with hooded cloaks and elaborately manufactured mysteries. A Celtic music newbie would no doubt be enchanted by all this, but would glean relatively little about the incomparably rich cultural history behind these styles, despite admirably informative liner notes by Fiona Ritchie and Caitlin Ni Bheagain. Another sticking point is that compilations of music by women have become a tiresome concept, flagrant attempts to milk a marketing concept for all it's worth, whether or not they make any sense or even belittle the artists they are meant to promote. This set was one of the first such and the producers meant no harm, but these talented women can stand on their own very well, thank you! They had all, even back then, long since moved past the stage of needing to be pigeonholed strictly by nationality, gender, or any other convenient clich‚ in order to get over. ~ Christina Roden

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