Celtic Myth Podshow
   
Current Status :   17th May 2012 - Real life has been keeping us away from the show recently, but catching up with things today ... All being well, shall start on the script for the 3rd Welsh Episode! Yay! :) ... Many blessings to you all! Gary and Ruth xxx

Jennifer Cutting

Celtic Music for Ancient Moderns

 

Website Ocean Orchestra   Genre Celtic Folk
Website Jennifer Cutting   YouTube YouTube
         

Contribution to the Show

We're proud to bring you Jennifer Cutting's Ocean Orchestra in our Holiday Special for Yule and New Year, 2012, SP27. Jennifer celebrates Christian and Pagan Solstice traditions. You can hear her rousing and evocative folk song, Song of Solstice [lyrics], from the album of the same name on this show. You can also hear a totally different folk style for the Ocean Orchestra with the track Summer Will Come Round Again in our Spring Holiday Show for 2012, SP28.

Biography

Folk-Rock pioneer Jennifer Cutting, mastermind of The New St. George and The OCEAN Orchestra, has returned with a unique collection of holiday music. Her new full-length CD, Song of Solstice, combines brand-new winter songs with old favorites, folky authenticity with cutting-edge electronics, and rousing bagpipes and drums with gentle recorders and harps. It even puts legendary chanteuse Annie Haslam, the voice of the British 70s prog-rock band Renaissance, on the same album with music from the real, historical Renaissance.

The Anglo-Irish Cutting lost her parents as a child; after her grandmother also passed away, she was raised by Indian swamis in a Hindu ashram in Florida. Partly due to this unusual childhood, she has long been a spiritual and musical seeker on many divergent paths. After living in London, Cutting moved to Takoma Park in 1984 and a few years later began working at the American Folklife Center Archive at the Library of Congress as an ethnomusicologist. Her special interest there is in leading other performers through the largest collection of folk songs in the world, helping them to find inspiration and relevancy in songs that are hundreds of years old.

Song of Solstice celebrates the things all spiritual traditions share in their observance of wintertime: the blessing of human companionship in the cold times of the year, the endless round of the seasons, the return of warmth and light, and even the wisdom and strength to be found in the darkness. Cutting's original songs draw inspiration from these ideas. The title cut, "Song of Solstice," is about giving thanks for both darkness and light, mixing contemplation with celebration. "Light the Winter's Dark" celebrates the sages and deities of several religions, including Moses, Jesus, Buddha, Mohammed, and the pagan Goddess. "Summer Will Come Round Again" evokes with lush imagery the Celtic "wheel of the year," while "Green Man" assures us of winter's greatest promise: "all that falls will rise again…all will be reborn."

The most challenging of the original songs is Cutting's setting of "Fall, Leaves, Fall," a poem by Emily Brontë (1818-1848). Bronte's piece, according to Cutting's liner notes, "celebrates the stark beauty found in the baring of the trees." In other words, it revels in the death and decay of autumn and winter with a truly gothic glee. Cutting's setting features a majestic melody and a powerful orchestral arrangement tinged with Celtic, early music, and art-rock influences. It obviously required a soaring voice to make it work, and Cutting knew just whom to ask: English vocalist Annie Haslam, known the world over for her work with the 1970s British art-rock ensemble Renaissance, as well as a subsequent globetrotting solo career. Haslam was one of the defining voices of the prog-folk and prog-rock genres. Haslam and Cutting first met in 1990, when Cutting's former band The New St. George opened for Renaissance at the now-defunct Washington, D.C., club The Bayou, and it had been their hope to work together ever since. "Fall, Leaves, Fall" brings that ambition to stunning fruition.

To these original songs, Cutting has added some little-known classics of Celtic and Christmas music: "Baloo, Lammy" and "Christmas Day in the Morning" from Scotland, "Voici la Noel" and "Quelle est cette odeur agréable" from France, and "Time to Remember the Poor" from the English folk tradition. Also from England come two more modern pieces, "In the Bleak Midwinter," a crystalline Christmas poem by Christina Rossetti set to a quietly regal tune by hymnodist Gustav Holst; and "People, Look East," a medieval French melody fitted with English words by twentieth-century songwriter Eleanor Farjeon, who is best known for the Cat Stevens hit "Morning has Broken."

Needless to say, Cutting's musical influences are just as eclectic as her spiritual ones. Best known for playing electrified English folk music in the mold of Fairport Convention and Steeleye Span, she continues this tradition on Song of Solstice, inviting guests such as virtuoso English folk singers John Roberts and Tony Barrand, and the stunning northern English harmony group Coope Boyes & Simpson. She has always been a fan of medieval and Renaissance music, and Song of Solstice includes appearances by two leading woodwind players, John Guillory, founder of Musica Antiqua, and the late, great Scott Reiss, founding member of the Folger Consort. Irish and Scottish repertoire and playing styles were part of The New St. George, and with the Ocean Orchestra Cutting shifted her focus toward this Celtic element. Song of Solstice follows through with widespread use of Highland bagpipes, as well as appearances by some of the leading names in East Coast folk and Celtic music: Lisa Moscatiello (vocals, whistle), Zan McLeod (bouzouki, guitar), Sue Richards (Celtic Harp), John Jennings (guitar), Myron Bretholz (bodhran), Cheryl Hurwitz (fiddle), and Al Petteway (guitar).

Based in Takoma Park MD, this award-winning composer, songwriter, bandleader and producer is best known for her work with The New St George and the OCEAN Orchestra. Her last album, OCEAN: Songs for the Night Sea Journey, won five Washington Area Music Awards, including Songwriter of the Year and Album of the Year.

Jennifer Cutting's OCEAN Orchestra "Song of Solstice" December 27th The Birchmere Alexandria, VA at 7:30pm. http://www.birchmere.com/

OCEAN ORCHESTRA: Jennifer Cutting – Music Director, songwriting & arranging, keyboards, accordions Lisa Moscatiello – lead vocals, acoustic guitar, penny whistles Zan McLeod – electric & acoustic guitars, bouzouki, mandolin Robert Spates – fiddle & violin Tim Carey – Highland bagpipes Steve Winick – Vocals, Spoken Word (Father Christmas in Mummers Play) Rico Petruccelli – electric bass Robbie Magruder – drum set

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SPECIAL GUESTS: Singers from the Washington Revels – with Music Director Elizabeth Miller Sue Richards – Celtic Harp John Guillory – recorders Scott Alarik – folk music journalist and author, who will read seasonal excerpts from his new book, Revival: A Folk Music Novel

For CDs, photos, interviews, and other press request, please contact Raised in Hindu Ashram, Jennifer Cutting Celebrates Christian and Pagan Solstice Traditions Maryland-based Composer and Musician includes Originals, Rare Celtic and Medieval Tunes; Special Guests include ANNIE HASLAM (Renaissance) and WASHINGTON REVELS CD release show with special guests TUESDAY DECEMBER 27 The Birchmere, Alexandria, VA

Albums

Jennifer has 2 albums available.

 

Song of Solstice

Song of Solstice

Buy at CD Baby

Ocean

OCEAN: Songs for the Night Sea Journey 

Buy at CD Baby

       

 

© All non-original items about Jennifer Cutting on this page are copyright Jennifer Cutting 2012

 Last Updated: April 20, 2012

  2009 Parsec Nominated

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