What’s New for 7 of December: books by Alan Garner, and holiday music new and old, Celtic, Americana, jazz and more

She wants to be flowers, but you make her owls. You must not complain, then, if she goes hunting. — Alan Garner’s The Owl Service


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We’ve got our first snow here at the Kinrowan Estate — not that much but enough to turn everything properly white. It was interesting to watch our dogs, Irish wolfhounds all, play in the snow as they’re wont to do. There were several attempts to make snow beings of various sorts but the snow wasn’t quite right for that. As for myself, I was content to watch from the Pub here while enjoying an Irish coffee while reading the screenplay for War for the Oaks.

Oh if you’ve not seen it, there is a short trailer that Emma and company made for the novel. It’s quite charming and here it is. The music is by Boiled in Lead. Our review of it is here and well worth reading for all the details about it.

Yes we put together an edition of our book and music reviews  with reading and listening we hope will be to your liking. Of course there’s a live music selection for you to listen to.

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We’re looking at the works of Alan Garner this time, the noted British fantasy writer we just celebrated his 90th birthday.

Cat has an unusual offering from him: ‘Let’s start off with what Boneland isn’t: despite sharing a primary character with The Weirdstone of Brisingamen and The Moon of Gomrath, beloved children’s novels known as The Alderley Tales that were published in 1957 and 1964, this is very much an adult novel not intended for the pleasure of children whatsoever. Indeed its tone is more akin to what the late Robert Holdstock did in his Ryhope Wood series than anything else Alan Garner has done excepting Thursbitch and Strandloper.’y

He reviewed the audiobook edition of The Owl Service when it came out a decade back: ‘Listening to The Owl Service as told by Wayne Forester, who handles both the narration and voicing of each character amazingly well, one is impressed by his ability to handle both Welsh accents and the Welsh language, given the difficultly of that tongue, which make Gaelic look easy as peas to pronounce by comparison.’

We’ve a second look at The Owl Service as Kim reviewed the novel: ‘This is a magical book, and the finest of Alan Garner’s young adult novels. Now, a lot of people associate magic with ethereal forces, great quests and spells and all that, and indeed spells can be found in several of Garner’s other books. The Owl Service reveals a different kind of magic, the kind that arises from the interaction of people with patterns, of desires that unwittingly mesh with the larger forces around us, harsh magic that people employ without knowing it.’

Stephen says this work is definitely aimed at adults: ‘These are only the questions which I find myself considering today. When I read Thursbitch again (and I will), they may be different, as they may be for you, when you read this book. The reasons for this are that Thursbitch is a book that casts the reader as an enthralled participant, rather than a passive recipient. It is, to repeat, a mystery. It may unsettle you (if not actually give you nightmares), but you’ll love it unequivocally nonetheless.
oak_leaf_fallen_colored2Gary here with music. Daryana wrote up the results of this year’s Russian World Music Chart: ‘Topping the list is Nostalgia by Oduchu, a duo from the Siberian Tuva Republic, released by the China-based label Stallion Era,’ she says. ‘A total of 52 releases from 23 labels participated in the chart across the genres of world, ethnic, and folk music. The list includes albums released in 2025 and three releases from late 2024.’

I belatedly got around to reviewing Brìghde Chaimbeul’s second solo album of Scottish smallpipe music, Sunwise. ‘But it doesn’t have the stark feel of a solo album … partly because she sings on some tracks, as does her brother Eòsaph on the final track “The Rain is Wine & The Stones Are Cheese,” a traditional song used to mark the longest and darkest night of the year. It clocks in at exactly one minute, with the two voices seemingly modified by the deep buzzing drone she pulls out of her pipes as the siblings sing in the canntaireachd style that is used to vocalize bagpipe music.’

I thoroughly enjoyed a new Christmas album of Americana music from Melissa Carper. ‘A Very Carper Christmas is brimming with Carper’s sly wit, country tinged sentiment and occasional winking irreverence. It’s a tour of all the different kinds of country songs you can think of, from kids’ songs about puppies and missing front teeth to lusty country soul, Western swing, folk a hip-swiveling Cajun waltz and even a bit of a Latin vibe, all on the holiday theme.’

I’ll also tell you about a unique album of klezmer style Hanukkah songs written by none other than Woody Guthrie! ‘ …If your idea of “the holidays” isn’t Santa or Baby Jesus, or you’re not ready to hear the one millionth version of “Sleigh Ride” again just yet, or if you just fancy something quite different — a unique blend of American folk song and zippy klezmer music — you might enjoy Woody Guthrie’s Happy Joyous Hanukkah from The Klezmatics.

Speaking of that song … From the Archives, I reviewed Big Band Christmas II by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra. ‘Now, if I never hear another rendition of Percy Faith’s ubiquitous “Sleigh Bells” it’ll be too soon. So it was with trepidation that I approached what is here billed as “Brazilian Sleigh Bells,” but I was pleasantly surprised. Bassist Carlos Henriquez has created a swinging and fun arrangement that’s barely recognizable as that old chestnut, with help from soloists Sherman Irby on alto sax, and bandleader Wynton Marsalis and Bruce Harris on trumpets.’

John reviewed a couple of holiday albums as part of a Celtic music omnibus, including one various artists’ live album. ‘Cold Blow These Winter Winds is a Christmas album with a difference – featuring a collection of Scottish musicians, singers and English guests like Eliza Carthy. It sets out to achieve and to demand playing at times beyond the Yuletide season. Using a stripped down approach for the song arrangements and instrumental backings, it achieves a sense of quietude where one can tune in to the emotions and feelings captured in the song choice.’

Kim did a thorough review of some very disparate winter holiday albums: Ensemble Galilei’s A Winter’s Night: Christmas in the Great Hall; St. Agnes Fountain’s Acoustic Carols for Christmas, and Comfort & Joy;
and various artists’ Oh Christmas Tree: A Bluegrass Collection for the Holidays. ‘My personal holiday tastes run to the traditional and instumental, and I prefer those that refer to the religious or seasonal aspects of the seasons; I loathe those lounge singer holiday albums that go on about Santa bringing diamonds, or snowmen officiating weddings. Give me a holiday album that doesn’t pander to the frenzy, something soothing and instrumental, I say.’

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Shall we see what the Infinite Jukebox has for us? One moment… So let’s give a listen to ‘Red Rocking Chair’ performed by Yonder Mountain String Band at Cicero’s in St Louis, Missouri  on the 12h of  April fifteen years ago.  ‘Red Rocking Chair’ is a popular old time tune often performed as a vocal number as it is done here.

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A Kinrowan Estate story: Several Annies, Part Two

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For the first part of this tale, head this way.

As we all know, time flows differently on the other side of the Border, and it was three weeks before Liath was back to Kinrowan Hall. She returned on a Saturday, so it was a full four weeks before she graced Chix with Stix again. All the usuals were there early, plus a few who don’t know one end of a knitting needle from the other. As so often happens, someone suddenly noticed that Liath was on.

We turned toward her as one. Liath looked up. ‘Was there something? You know I can’t talk about my missions for the Queen.’ The sight of our disappointed faces must have been too much for her, and we were graced with one of her rare smiles.

‘Ah yes, I remember. Now where was I?’ We all settled back comfortably and she began to tell the tale of a departed Fey Librarian and why it happened.

‘The next day, we set the plan into action. The girls were models of obedience. No matter what Rónán wanted, he got it. Only, they suddenly seemed to need a lot of supervision. “Rónán, is this right?” “Rónán, could you explain what you want again, please?” “Rónán, where do you want the papyri?” Rónán indeed! For about a day and a half he was in fine fettle. Felt vindicated — obviously these little chits couldn’t do anything without him. Then it started to wear on him. He’d gotten used to having intelligent help, you see, though darn the fear of him ever admitting it. By the time the moon was almost full he was in a frenzy of impatience.

‘A storm blew in on the day of the full moon, and by evening there were neither stars nor moon to be seen. Every cat in the Building, and not a few two-legged creatures, stalked around with hair on end. This room had been assigned as the Annies’ workroom from their arrival. I knew the trap was being sprung, and I was in here alone, pacing much like you were, Young Annie. Then I heard a blast, the kind that only comes from a great and angry Magic.

‘I hurried into the main Library. It was empty of living creatures, but most of the volumes that should have been on the shelves were in heaps on the floor. The air was thick with smoke, but fortunately I couldn’t find any flames. This had gone further than any of us had expected. What had that mad cousin of mine done with the Annies? A few of my colleagues crowded, terrified, at the door. I held up a hand to still their chatter. Then I closed my eyes and Saw where they had gone.

‘Rónán has taken the Annies to Alexandria,’ I said. ‘I must go after them.’

‘But how did he take them?’ asked another of the Annies, the one with the beauty spot on her left cheekbone.

‘The same way I brought them here, and the same way I followed them. By the time I got there, the Annies were dodging from pillar to pillar, trying to get away from the gouts of fire shooting from Rónán’s hair. The place was on fire. ‘Rónán!’ I cried. No response from him. Then I whispered his name, and he turned toward me. ‘Liath! It’s all your doing! Bringing these little fools into my Library. I’ll destroy them, and this bad joke of a human Library with them. What right have these mortals to dare to pretend to any knowledge?’ Flames shot out toward me, and I moved to put wards around myself. Rónán was foaming at the mouth, cursing the four of us. ‘By the Queen’s milk, I’ll kill you all,’ he gibbered. That was his last mistake.

‘The Queen doesn’t like her name being used to curse, of course, and the King is none too fond of any insult to his Liege Lady. Once Rónán uttered his nonsensical curse, there were both of Their Majesties in an instant. One look from the Queen froze Rónán where he stood. One gesture from the King put out the fires.’

‘Did they kill him?’ breathed the third Annie.

‘No, of course not. We of the Fey seldom resort to such punishment. Let’s just say that he has had some time to contemplate his crimes in tranquility, and that I hope someday, for my aunt’s sake, to hear that he has been rehabilitated. I brought the Annies back here and set them to cleaning up the Library. Soon enough, I was called to Court, and every other creature of the Fey associated with the Building along with me.

‘Never again shall one of you take the position of Librarian for Kinrowan Estate,’ said His Majesty gravely. ‘You have too much power. Rónán could have destroyed the greatest of the mortals’ stores of knowledge, as well as one that may someday rival it. Liath, you can remain as Archivist. Be the Building’s memory, and help in finding a succession of mortals to run its Library.’

Liath bit off the silken yarn with those sharp little teeth of hers and held up another of her lovely amulet bags. The crystals refracted the firelight, sending multicoloured flames dancing around the room.

‘And so it has been ever since. I persuaded one of the under-librarians from the Great Library to come and work here for a while. ‘Tis thanks to him that we have the collections in the room with the pillars. Annie, Ana and Hannah served out their time and a day and then moved on. When new apprentices came, we kept calling them all Annie, but in remembrance, not scorn. All three of the original Annies came back for a time as Librarian, too.’

Liath gave us her second smile of the evening. ‘I never could get Hannah to tell me what was the last thing she said to Rónán that set him off.’

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What’s New for 23 November

Weather like this makes me want to write ‘Death’ on all the leaves. — Marianne C. Porter

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I can smell garlic, cumin, nutmeg, cardamom, and even a hint of ginger on the whole baby lamb being slowly cooked as I approach our Kitchen… All welcome smells, especially on this raw, slefty afternoon on this Scottish estate where the temperature will be hard pressed to reach freezing on this November day. Yes, everything is getting a thin coating of ice too. Nasty indeed.

It’ll be a day of naps, reading and noshing for most of the Estate staff who can avoid going out into the treacherous weather. Rebekah, our newish Kitchen staffer who’s from Haifa, uses a day like this to do a stunning array of Jewish sweets, to wit: date-filled hamantash, krembo (a chocolate-coated marshmallow treat), rugelakh, some filled with raspberry jam and some filled with chocolate, and even ma’amoul, small shortbread pastries filled with dates, pistachios or walnuts.

And that yeasty smell that is ever appreciated is freshly baked whole wheat sourdough rolls more than warm enough still as they are covered with a soft cloth to keep them warm to warrant butter and the jam of your choice on them.Me, I go for the strawberry jam or raspberry jam…  Join me in the Kitchen after you peruse this Edition of our book and music reviews.in

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Christopher was pleased with Garrett Oliver’s The Brewmaster’s Table: Discovering the Pleasures of Real Beer with Real Food, a book from the early years of the microbrew movement. ‘I greatly enjoyed the introduction with its overview of beer; what beer is, the basics of brewing, a view of beer and brewing through the ages and the setting forth of Oliver’s basic premise, namely that for any meal one can find appropriate beer(s) to accompany the food. I also particularly enjoyed a number of chapters in the second section dealing with specific brewing traditions (e.g., Lambic, Wheat, British). The book is well written, informative and engaging.’

Alan Light’s The Holy or the Broken: Leonard Cohen, Jeff Buckley & the Unlikely Ascent of ‘Hallelujah’  is one of Gary’s favorite music lore books of the past 20 years. As he said in his review, Light ‘ … deftly tracks down the genealogy of this odd song that is now a staple of film and television, “reality TV” singing contests, funerals, weddings and Olympic opening ceremonies. How did this song full of biblical and sexual imagery, dark irony and wry humor come to mean all things to all people?’

Jayme reviewed a minor classic Walter Wangerin, Jr. ‘While time has somewhat dulled the revelatory impact of The Book of the Dun Cow — in some ways it feels very much a product of the 1970s and can almost be viewed as quaint by cynical contemporary readers — it is still a powerful story.’

Joseph found food metaphors handy in his review of Andersen Gabrych and Brad Rader’s graphic novel Fogtown, which he said “… has more holes than a Swiss cheese pincushion. It runs the gamut from dope dealing femme fatales and corrupt clergymen to transgender prostitution and interracial homoeroticism. It’s quite a feat for a mere 176 pages. Small pages.’

Michael enthusiastically reviewed a bit of updated fairy tale fantasy (and two of its three sequels): ‘In The Stepsister Scheme, Jim C. Hines brilliantly remixes and reimagines three of the most popular fairy tale heroines of all time, recasting them as action heroines and secret agents in a world of magic, treachery, intrigue and adventure. These aren’t damsels in distress by any means, but strong-willed, competent, self-sufficient women capable of overcoming all sorts of problems.

 

 

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Gary here. In new music, I’ve been enjoying John Scofield & Dave Holland’s Memories of Home, which continues the jazz guitarist and bassist’s longtime series of collaborations. ‘The album is something of a tour through some of the icons, heroes and mentors who influenced both of these musicians, (Miles) Davis chief among them — Holland played with Davis from 1968 to 1970, Scofield in the early to mid 1980s. But the nods to jazz greats and greatness don’t end there.’

I also review an album led by another guitarist, Pierre Dørge’s Songs For Mbizo: Johnny Lives Forever, featuring the Danish avant garde guitarist and American cornetist Kirk Knuffke. ‘It’s an extraordinary record, matching Dørge’s wide ranging melodicism and powerful tonal moods with Knuffke’s equally clarion tonalities and inventiveness, and propelled by a sharp, sympathetic rhythm section.’

From the Archives, Brendan reviewed Jay Ungar and Molly Mason’s Harvest Home: Music For All Seasons. ‘The highlight of this CD is, of course, Ungar’s and Mason’s foray into orchestration with their amazing five-part composition, “The Harvest Home Suite.” With help from composer Connie Ellisor, this piece was imagined as a musical representation of the year-long cycle of farm work from harvest to harvest.’

And Cat admits he’s biased when it comes to the music of Jay and Molly, in his review of their emotional album The Quiet Room. ‘I like everything that they’ve done. They’ve been married since 1991 and there’s a joy in hearing them perform together with a competence that’s too rare in these days when even traditional music gets too often embellished when it need not be.’

David, a big Arlo Guthrie fan, reviewed a double CD of his, Arlo Guthrie’s Live in Sydney. ‘Telling tales is one of the things Arlo does best, and this new double CD set features many of his stories. Whether talking about his dad, or Cisco Houston, or singing the same songs after 40 years. His voice is sounding older, but he’s still an engaging speaker, funny and charming.’

While he was at it, David also reviewed Arthur Penn’s Alice’s Restaurant, the movie treatment of the lengthy shaggy dog tale that provided the title of Arlo’s first LP. ‘Arthur Penn took the bare bones of Arlo’s story and fleshed it out: he added characters, and motivations, and events that were far from Guthrie’s original, but he came out of it with a full bodied, honest portrayal of life in the ’60s.’

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Let me set aside the ever so cute Mouse in the Pumpkin Folkmanis puppet I’ve admiring that was sitting on a shelf in my office that someone apparently left there recently. We review them and they end up in mostly appropriate places in this building — in the Kitchen in a teacup for a wee mouse, a hedgehog left near a pIke of the in-house newsletters, The Sleeping Hedgehog, and now this. So admire the creature while I select some music to end this edition…

 

 

 

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A Kinrowan Estate story: Several Annies

oak_leaf_fallen_colored1It was a dark and stormy night. More precisely, it was a dark and stormy Wednesday night and I’d escaped to the weekly Chix with Stix gathering in the room behind the Library. Most of the time it’s the domain of the Several Annies who spend a year and a day here, assisting our Librarian, Iain Nicholas Mackenzie, and our Archivist, Liath ó Laighin, when she isn’t off on one of her voyages. On Wednesday nights, however, it welcomes anyone who wants to come and knit.

On this particular night one of the newer Annies, the one with the blue hair extensions, couldn’t seem to sit to her knitting. Finally she threw down her needles and got up to pace. (Well, she tried to pace. It’s hard to pace when you’re in stocking feet and you know there’s an invisible hedgehog around.)

‘Will you please sit down, Young Annie!’ snapped Iain Nicholas. ‘You’re making me drop stitches!’

‘Let her be, Iain,’ said Liath softly from her stool to the left of the hearth. ‘She’s reminding me of another night like this, long ago.’

Everyone’s heads swiveled to look at Liath. She seldom speaks at these gatherings, just knits away on those impossibly tiny needles, but when she does speak her stories are always worth listening to.

‘Yes, indeed,’ she said, as if to herself. We all strained to hear her, even the brownies stringing crystal beads on silk for her in the far corner. ‘It was a dark and stormy night like this one. The Building was much younger then, and even more on my side of the Border than on yours, if you get my drift.’ Indeed, no one who has ever dared look into Liath’s eyes can ever forget she is one of the Fey.

‘I had only recently taken up the position of Archivist here. The Librarian, Rónán Mac Airt, was by way of being a cousin of mine on my mother’s side. I had just returned from a voyage to Alexandria to visit the Great Library there, and I brought back with me three apprentices. ‘Interns’ you call yourselves now, but back then any trade worth having was learned through apprenticeships. At any rate, Annipe, Ana and Hannah all agreed to come for a year and a day to work with me and Rónán and learn what they could about libraries, and about our Library.’

Liath paused to check the tension on her work. ‘That cousin of mine wasn’t at all pleased that I brought them back, you know. He didn’t think he needed the help, for one thing. As if a few hundred thousand scrolls were a mere trifle for one man, human or Fey. For another, he wasn’t fond of humans. They were fewer in the Building then, and he avoided them as much as he could. And Annipe, Ana and Hannah were young, young in a way he’d never been or never could be. They laughed, you see, and they scattered hairpins all over the place, and some evenings they stayed too late listening to the Neverending Session and were hard to awaken the next day.’

The Annie with the extensions said, ‘But the Great Library of Alexandria has been destroyed for nearly two thousand years.’

‘And your point is?’ Iain Nicholas said frostily. She subsided back to the hearthrug where she’d been sitting since Liath began her tale.

‘Shortly after I brought Annipe, Ana and Hannah here, I was summoned on business by the King and Queen. When I returned a month or so later, I was shocked by the changes. No more laughter. No more scattered hairpins. No more time to listen to music. Rónán was working those three to death.’ She sighed angrily.

‘Every day, another impossible task. ”Catalogue all the hieroglyphic documents in alphabetical order.” ”Dust down the Akkadian tablets with a damp rag.” Such foolishness! And he’d taken away their individual identities, too, or tried to. He pretended he couldn’t tell them apart — even though Ana was a blonde Greek, Annipe a Nubian and Hannah a raven-haired Alexandrian Jew with the biggest brown eyes I’ve ever seen on a mortal — or pronounce any of their names. Just called them all ”Annie”. I was horrified. I also knew that if I said anything right away the situation would only get worse. I needed a plan.

‘Two evenings after my return, the girls furtively entered the Pub. We didn’t call it a pub back then, of course, but it was located where the Green Man Pub is now. At any rate, they knew they’d find me there, listening to the Session’s panpipes. I beckoned them to a table in the corner. When they joined me they all started talking at once. I signaled for some honey beer and let them rave.

‘When they wore down, two rounds later, I told them what we were going to do.’

Liath paused to do something complicated with the needles. Before she had finished, the brass carriage clock on the left of the mantle chimed. She looked up.

‘Sweet Mab, is it that late? I’m sorry, I’ll have to go. Did I not mention, Iain Nicholas, that I would be leaving early? A summons to Court.’ She gracefully swept her knitting into another of her tiny bags (and how it all fit in I have no idea) and was gone.

Late on Friday Maggie Pye, the resident corvid, did something odd — she brought a shiny bauble to the Library instead of appropriating one. Iain Nicholas accepted it from her calmly, turned it thrice widdershins and said, ‘Ah, a message from Liath. She has been detained on the Queen’s business, and will return when she can.’

To be continued. . . .

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What’s New for the 9th of November: rhymers and ravens, folk songs and folk tales, jazz guitar and dark forests and constellations put to music, Hungarian tunes and knights and rakes and tinkers and fools, and more

The fiddle playing that tune had a mute on its bridge, substantially reducing the volume of the music, but it was still loud enough for the woman to lift her head and smile when she heard it. She knew that tune, if not the fiddler, and yet she had a sense of the fiddler as well. There was something — an echo of familiarity — that let her guess who it was, because she knew from whom he’d learned to play. — Charles de Lint’s Drink Down the Moon

 

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Well, this is Gary, the music editor … I wandered into the Editor’s office and found it empty and quiet, so somehow the job of putting a bow on this edition fell to me! It’s one of the busiest times of year here at the Estate. The harvest — or rather multiple harvests — are wrapping up in the fields, forests and orchards, while others in the pantries and the winery and the brewery and of course the Kitchen itself are busy processing all that fine produce for the Winter whose breath has begun to tickle the fine hair on our necks. And to be quite honest, some are still recovering from Samhain. So this time I’ve a potpourri of book and music reviews from the Archives, as well as a few new music reviews for your perusal.

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From the archives, April reviewed Jodie Forrest’s The Rhymer and the Ravens: The Book of Fate, the first of a four book series. ‘Although Forrest’s prose drags a bit in places, on the whole, The Rhymer and the Ravens is an enjoyable, easy read. There is good attention paid to historical accuracy and to the blending of divergent mythologies (Celtic and Norse, in particular).’

I reviewed some noted books about the collectors of American folk songs that are back in print: John A. Lomax and Alan Lomax’s American Ballads and Folk Songs, and Our Singing Country: Folk Songs and Ballads; and John W. Work’s American Negro Songs. To have them back in print, I noted, ‘… is an occasion for celebration. One has but to thumb through any one of these tree volumes to find the roots, trunks and branches of all manner of American music that’s still being made today.’

Grey wrote an omnibus review on a big stack of books about folk tales and fables from cultures as different as Mexico, Mongolia, and Vietnam. ‘The six collections described in this review were assembled by markedly different authors and published at unrelated times, by unrelated publishers. Yet the similarities between some of the stories in them are striking.’

Jayme could put down The Wicked Day, book four of Mary Stewart’s Arthurian saga, which deals with Mordred’s rise and fall. ‘Mordred, to my great shock, was not portrayed as the black-hearted villain legend remembers him as. Indeed, as he grows, he becomes Arthur’s most trusted knight, and staunchest supporter. Stewart approaches the story demanding logic and consistency in her characters’ actions and motivations.’

Rebecca had slightly mixed feelings about Tony Kushner and Maurice Sendak’s Brundibar. ‘Reading the book, and especially looking at Sendak’s wonderful drawings, it’s easy to see that this was originally an opera. The story is much concerned with singing, and all of the characters seem to dance on the page. Each vendor in the square has his or her song, and there’s Brundibar’s, and the children get two.’

oak_leaf_fallen_colored2In new music reviews, I was intrigued by a “jazz guitar” album that defies easy categorization. ‘New Age, trance, World, ambient, tone poems … Steve Tibbetts’ Close slips and slides around and through any attempt at categorization or description or genre.’

Next I listened to a bigger ensemble on the Chris Byars Sextet’s The Dark Forest. ‘Chris Byars’ sextet combines the best of two jazz worlds, the sophisticated sonic palette of the big band and the nimble nature of the smaller bop combo that leaves more room for soloists to shine. Leader and composer Byars, who here plays tenor sax, clarinet and flute, is perhaps strongest as an arranger, giving each of these tunes its own character and drawing on the many colorations possible from a mid-sized ensemble.’

Then there is an album of through composed music for a jazz quintet plus a string quartet plus a DJ and electronic music artist, built around a formula that involves the circle of fifths and constellations in our night sky. ‘The origin story, many of the technical details and some of the music on this album flummox me. But that doesn’t stop me from recognizing Patricia Brennan’s Of The Near And Far as an astonishing work of art, and indeed some of this music is among my favorite of 2025.’

In archival reviews, I noted that The Decemberists drew heavily on their love for and knowledge of progressive English folk rock in their 2016 album The Hazards of Love, which I reviewed that year. ‘This album tells, in its own winding way, the story of Margaret and her doomed love affair with a shape-shifting lover, William, whose mother is the forest queen. There’s also a subplot involving a character known only as The Rake, who does away with his children after their mother dies in childbirth.’

The songs and the musicians are all superb on one of my favorites, I note in my archival review of Bert Jansch’s Moonshine. ‘Another key factor that elevates this record to classic status is Jansch himself. He has a vocal style that is distinctive, heavily accented and very nasal. And of course his percussive guitar playing is even more distinctive and was highly influential on artists from Nick Drake to Jimmy Page to Neil Young.’

I was intrigued by Makam’s Almanach, an album of Hungarian music that also shows influences from U.K. and U.S. folk and rock. ‘This music is as different as can be from the more traditional Hungarian folk music that other groups have popularized in Western Europe and the U.S., but it springs from the same earthy roots.’

Kim reviewed the scene, the food, and especially the music at Toronto’s famous Nora Keogh Irish Pub. ‘Dora’s is usually packed on session nights, and the Sunday session (from 6:30 p.m. – my observation) often includes younger players — sometimes as young as early teens out with their parents. The Thursday session begins around 9:30 p.m., and goes to whenever the musicians get tired.’

Mike Stiles was ensorcelled by Herne’s Apprentice, an album from the Welsh musician who performs as Damh the Bard. ‘I could write pages about this album but I’ll keep things in as much focus as I can. Damh draws deeply from Cymric myth and legend as found in primary sources like the Mabinogion. This is not just a tribute to that material, it rebirths it and creates a wonderful gateway for those who should explore it.’

‘These two CDs benchmark the glorious growth of the guitar in Celtic music,’ he said of Steve Reel’s Celtic Knights and The Unfortunate Rakes’ Rakes Alive! Of the former, he notes, ‘Steve’s guitar playing draws from many sources, but to give you a rough idea, its foundation rests on the flat-picking styles pioneered in the Bluegrass tradition by Doc Watson and cohorts. You will also hear more than a passing strain of Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull.’

Mike Wilson liked Darren Black’s  Thinkers & Fools from some English folk heavyweights. ‘Everything about Thinkers & Fools is likeable. Black’s lyrics are thought provoking and reflective; the instrumental arrangements are accomplished but never intrusive.’

Naomi reviewed a nifty record of Cape Breton Island fiddling,  The Lighthouse by fiddler and lighthouse keeper Paul Cranford & Friends. ‘Should you like good Cape Breton fiddling and original compositions, then this is the disc for you. Paul Cranford is a talented fiddler with sensitive fingers and impassioned playing.’

oak_leaf_fallen_colored2Fortunately, for our Coda, Iain left the following note:

I’ve been reading Charles de Lint‘s ‘The Moon is Drowning While I Sleep’ story, which is collected in Dreams Underfoot which has the following lovely passage about old hag tunes: ‘She looks like the wizened old crone in that painting Jilly did for Geordie when he got into this kick of learning fiddle tunes with the word ‘hag’ in the title: ‘the Hag in the Kiln,’  ‘Old Hag You Have Killed Me,’ ‘The Hag With the Money,’ and god knows how many more. Just like in the painting, she’s wizened and small and bent over and … dry. Like kindling, like the pages of an old book. Like she’s almost all used up. Hair thin, body thinner. but then you look into her eyes and they’re so alive it makes you feel a little dizzy.’

Okay, let’s see if there’s any Old Hag tunes on the Infinite Jukebox, our digital media server. I’ve got one by the Bothy Band whose Old Hag You Have Killed Me is one of best Irish trad albums ever done, and we’ve audio of them performing ‘Old Hag You Have Killed Me’ which we’ll share with you as it’s very splendid.

No idea when it was done, though about fifty years ago is the most common guess among those who speculate about such things, or where it was recorded for that matter. But here it is for your listening pleasure.

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A Kinrowan Estate story: Kedgeree

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I had an exemplary kedgeree for my breakfast this morning along with a lovely lapsang souchong tea. Now if you’re reading this in the States, you might be puzzled as to what I ate. And when you hear what it is, you might well say that kedgeree doesn’t sound like a breakfast dish ‘tall!

Kedgeree, as prepared by Mrs. Ware and her kitchen staff here at Kinrowan, is a dish comprised of curried rice, smoked salmon and chopped eggs with a splash of cream as well.  On a cold, blustery morning such as we’re having here in the middle of November, since I promised Gus that I’d be part of the crew cleaning up the nearby grounds, it is bloody fine comfort food.

It’s considered a traditional British breakfast dish but its roots are in East Indian, cooking having started its life as khichari, a simple dish of rice and lentils. Due to the British Raj and the colonization of the sub-continent the, dish was adapted and turned into something more suited to those Brits serving in India, and it returned to Britain with them during the Victorian era.

Notice that I said we make it here using smoked salmon, specifically applewood smoked salmon. The salmon comes from the river that runs through our Estate and it works just fine. I Should note that our Kitchen doesn’t use sultanas, though some cooks do. Ours is also quite a bit more spicy than the somewhat milder version most Brits prefer.

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Whats New for the 26th of October: some Patricia McKillip books and an interview, ’70s jazz reissues, Nordic Americana and American Americana, and some Samhain seasonal albums

She was tall for her age, and lean, a great tree-climber and a magnificent storyteller — Patricia McKillip’s Winter Rose

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Here in this quite remote Scottish Estate where the nearest town’s a good thirty-five miles away, the group of less than thirty souls here year round forms a community that’s at its most cohesive when the weather turns decidedly cold and oftimes unfavourable to travel. This ‘hunkering down’ is a gradual process that starts in early Autumn and doesn’t really end ’til after lamb season in April as it’s hard to be a good host when you’re covered with blood, shit and other stuff that’s unpleasant in general.

Pumpkins are versatile food here, so you can help us harvest them now that our first light frost has passed; likewise apples and potatoes need harvesting and proper processing for the uses they’ll be put to. Gus, our Head Gardener, uses for staff anyone physically healthy and able to be properly picky at what they’ll be doing.

However there’s the of some creatures to deal with. We’ve a trio of Folkmanis Puppets of an Autumnal Nature such as a Worm in an Apple.Intriguing? if so, go read the review here.

All work and no play makes Gutmansdottir an unhappy girl indeed, so there’re contadances pretty much weekly here. Tonight a visiting band, The Black Eyed Susans, are playing. But first, let’s see what’s in this edition

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Wandering around the Archives, I chanced upon the Patricia McKillip reviews and a story. There are two novels by her, one called Winter Rose and one called Solstice Wood, the latter are supposedly a sequel to the first. How the latter is a sequel to the first is something that escaped me though I suppose there is now even she admits that you can read the sequel without having read the first one which begs the question, is it really a sequel?

Here are those  reviews along with an interview with her and a short story collection she did.

Reviewing Winter Rose, Robert said, ‘The story is told in McKillip’s characteristically elliptical style, kicked up an order of magnitude. Sometimes, in fact, it is almost too poetic, the narrative turning crystalline then shattering under the weight of visions, images, things left unsaid as Rois and Corbet are drawn into another world, or come and go, perhaps, at will or maybe at the behest of a mysterious woman of immense power who seems to have no fixed identity but who is, at the same time, all that is coldest and most pitiless of winter.’

He also looks at that might be sequel Solstice Wood: ‘McKillip has always been a writer whose books can themselves be called “magical,” and it’s even more interesting to realize that she seldom uses magic as a thing of incantations and dire workings, or as anything special in itself. It just is, a context rather than an event, and perhaps that’s the way it should be.’

I feel that many writers are best when running short fiction and she’s no exception to that, so I was pleased Richard reviewed McKillip’s final story collection: ‘With Dreams of Distant Shores, Patricia A. McKillip delivers something that is not quite your typical short story collection. While the point of entry is a series of shorter pieces, the collection builds to and is anchored by the lengthy novella “Something Rich and Strange”, with an essay on writing high fantasy orthogonal to the usual tropes. The book then ends with appreciation of McKillip’s work (and the stories in the collection) by Peter S. Beagle, an elegant coda to a warm, thought-provoking collection.’

Deborah J. conducted an interview with Patricia A. McKillip for us in 2008, in which she generously discussed the purpose of fairytales, her writing process, and much more.

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Gary here with music. In new reviews, Deborah tells us about a new single by an old friend, “Ol’ Coquille” by Lauren Murphy, inspired by her Louisiana hometown. ‘The town of Madisonville itself provides some of the soundtrack: rain, the local birdsong, traffic on the bridge, church bells. Lauren’s vocals are as deep and smoky as they’ve ever been; time and the exigencies of life these past years have brought layers and undertones to an already astonishing set of pipes.’

I review Minnesota, the latest from Norwegian guitarist and composer Trond Kallevåg. ‘This time out, Trond draws inspiration from an artist residency he spent on the remote northern Norwegian island of Træna, weaving his instrumental story songs from the emigration stories and old photos he found there into his signature “Nordic Americana” tapestry lovingly shaped from traditional music with elements of jazz and ambient folk.’

I got pretty excited about Roy Brooks’s The Free Slave, a vinyl reissue of a live album by the New York based, Detroit raised drummer. ‘Masterpiece is in no way an overstatement regarding this album. It’s a master class in hard bop by some of the best musicians of their generation, working to bring jazz back to the people and communities where it came from, at quality venues like this one in Baltimore.’

I’m really enjoying another jazz reissue, Kenny Barron’s Sunset To Dawn. ‘The program combines solid acoustic jazz with lots of funky electronic grooves that testify to just how interesting the jazz scene was in the 1970s. It opens on some of the latter, the deliciously funky “Sunset” with Barron’s Fender Rhodes set to max reverb on a long ostinato intro, that eventually opens out into a jaw dropping solo of chorus after chorus, each more intense than the last.’

‘Cindy Walker is one of the most underappreciated American country music songwriters among the listening public, but she’s a legend among her fellow musicians of several generations,” as I note in my review of a various artists’ compilation called It’s All Her Fault: A Tribute To Cindy Walker. ‘When Americana singer songwriter Grey DeLisle — who counts Walker as among her chief influences — learned that Walker’s childhood home in Mexia, Texas, had fallen into disrepair, she gathered some friends to record some of Cindy’s hits.’

From the Archives this Halloween edition, I covered The Torture Never Stops, a DVD release of a Frank Zappa band concert filmed live at the Palladium in New York on Halloween in 1981. ‘The program includes 24 songs and lasts about two hours, starting with “Black Napkins” and ending with an encore performance of “The Illinois Enema Bandit.” In between, he challenges pretty much every aspect of Western culture, music, religion, sexual mores and more with songs that include “Montana” (about a dental floss ranch), “Harder Than Your Husband,” “Broken Hearts Are For Assholes,” “The Meek Shall Inherit Nothing,” “Heavenly Bank Account” and “Suicide Chump”.

I reviewed an album of “dark polar ambient” music by Ugansie, the performance name of Russian musician Pavel Malyshkin. ‘If you like drone or ambient or dark experimental music, Border of Worlds is for you. If you just want something spooky to play in your haunted house at Halloween, ditto.’

Not exactly “music” but Faith reviewed a record by Minneapolis storyteller Steven Posch, Radio Paganistan: Folktales of the Urban Witches. ‘ “The Bride of the Forest” sounds much more European, a tale of a bad bargain that turns out to everyone’s satisfaction after all. To me, “If the People Keep Samhain, Samhain Will Keep the People” sounds like a First Nation’s tale set in Europe. “Witch’s Work is Turning the Wheel” is a short poem about the structure of the universe, where “the only constant is constant change.” As for the witch, she “is the agent of change,” keeping the whole thing wobbling along.’

Judith rhapsodizes about Robin Laing’s The Water Of Life, which includes the song “The Ghost Wi’ the Squeaky Wheel.” ‘Here is a fine tune for Halloween about the ghost of Old Bob Laing. Bob was doomed to push around a barrel with a sqeaky wheel for eternity. Lucky he met up with Willie, who poured some good malt out over the wheel, and the screeching stopped.’

Michael, our resident authority on all things Steeleye Span, gave a positive review of Folk Rock Pioneers In Concert, taken from a 2004 world tour. ‘Rick Kemp’s bass work is alternately tasteful and funky when required, and he also provides lead vocals on a few songs including his own “Samhain” – which also happens to show off Liam Genockey’s rock drumming credentials!

Michael also sings the praises of a trio of albums by one of his musical idols, Heather Alexander: Wanderlust, Midsummer, and Life’s Flame, which contains this particular song: ‘ “Samhain” tears away the veils between one world and the next on the most mystical day of the year, when ghosts and things best left unspoken come closest to the world of the living. Spectral, haunting, and chilling in turn, it’s another example of Heather’s amazing versatility.’

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I’ve got some music for you that I think befits the Autumn season. It’s Michele Walther and Irina Behrendt playing Aaron Copland’s ‘Hoe Down’  from his Rodeo album. I sourced it off a Smithsonian music archive which has no details where or when it was recorded which surprised me given how good they usually are at such things.

Oh and Gary did a review of Howard Pollack’s Aaron Copland: The Life and Work of an Uncommon Man which you can read here.

 

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A Kinrowan Estate story: Charles and Alice Pay a Visit (A Letter to Owyn)

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I found this charming letter in a bundle of archival material that we were cataloging for the Library this past week. L.L. Littlesworth, Esq., was the Estate Librarian for most of the late Victorian era.

From the letters of L.L. Littlesworth, Esq.

East Wing Library Belfry Tower,
Kinrowan Estate,
August 11th, 1865

Dear Owyn,

This afternoon, my good friend Charles Dodgson and his charming companion Alice came for tea. The Cheshire Cat I see often, as he regularly makes his rounds from the conservatory to the kitchens to the library here at the estates. But the library belfry, where I keep my personal effects and from where I write this account, is blessedly Cheshire-free, most days. And it is peaceful — no bells here since who-knows-when. These estates have been here what seems like forever, though every few generations someone feels compelled to expand upon what lay here before him. The entire library wing of this rambling place looks positively Medieval, though I suppose such is the fashion again, what with the Gothic modes and the emergence of the New Romanticism.

So — no bells in this belfry, just books, books, books. And scrolls and codices, more than one illuminated manuscript. Several inscribed stone tablets lean in corners which come and go as stealthily as the Cheshire Cat. Never before I came to work here did I see a place with so many corners, nor such a propensity for those corners to disappear when the fancy took them. Rumor has it some long-ago librarian here used the library’s extensive collected works on the Grey Arts to imbue the walls with a sort of ethereal elasticity. It enables us to continually acquire as many new books as we need, you see, without ever having to let any go.

The estate managed by the School of the Imagination is an easy walk from here; quite close, though closest on third Mondays and full moons. The other side of Oberon’s wood is sometimes quite close indeed, depending upon the circumstances of the hour and His Fey Majesty’s pleasure.

When Dodgson and his charge arrived I took them straightaway to the library for tea. Miss Alice is most enamored of the belfry. ‘Why, it’s rather like a rabbit hole, is it not, Mr. Littlesworth?’ she said. ‘Only it goes up, up, up rather than down, down, down; and it is lined with books rather than roots.’

Upon which my friend Dodgson mumbled, in an off-hand way, one of his famous doublets — ‘Books — boots — roots.’ He’s always thinking, is my friend Dodgson. His mind never rests. And Miss Alice! So fetching a child, and so intriguing. Once Dodgson created her, he could no sooner undo his work than any of us can undo any auto-manifesting fabrication, or flight of fancy made real.

For tea, Cook had laid out quite a feast for our guests (she spends no such labors on simple me!) — hardboiled eggs sprinkled with Paprika from the Indies; lovely slices of delicate fish which virtually melted on the palate; cakes a variety of shapes, and cordials a dozen colors. Dodgson remarked most favorably upon the fare, but I noticed Miss Alice refrained from the repast. When I directed her to the fish, she said — most politely, for she is an extremely well-behaved child — ‘Thank you ever so much, Mr. Littlesworth, but once one has seen a fish in all his livery, it is not quite the same to see him spread wide upon a platter, and seems not quite the thing to eat him.’ When I offered her the plate of eggs instead, she remarked, ‘Oh Mr. Littlesworth! I couldn’t  . .not since it was explained to me by a most insistent mother pigeon that only serpents eat eggs. I think I look not the least like a serpent, do you?’ Upon which I hastily reassured her in the negative. Dodgson was of no assistance. He merely smiled — indulgent of Miss Alice or myself I wouldn’t presume to guess.

In desperation, I piled the girl’s empty plate with cakes of every variety, thinking I’d never met a child who would say no to cakes at high tea. But she demurred, fixing me in a dolorous gaze with those enormous eyes of hers. ‘Mr. Littlesworth,’ said she — ‘A girl who grows all out of proportion for the simple act of eating a cake once might be pitied. She might be praised if she does it again to remove herself from a fix. But a girl who makes a habit of eating cakes, randomly and with no thought to the consequences to her size and shape. …’ She shook her pale head with finality. Our Cook is forever speaking of putting herself on a reducing diet, but I had quite the strong feeling that was not what Miss Alice meant at all.

After tea, I asked which portion of the estate my guests would most like to see. ‘Just please, Mr. Littlesworth, not the Conservatory,’ said Alice. ‘The Cheshire Cat has told me often what a lovely place the Conservatory is — how delightful its flora, how accommodating its fauna. He has recommended most strongly that I visit it while here. But I have decided not everything the Cheshire Cat says is true, strictly speaking.’

At which Dodgson laughed. ‘Are we speaking strictly?’ he said. ‘I make a habit of never speaking strictly, if it can be at all avoided.’

And so my guests decided they would explore the library wing itself, which if I do say so has quite a bit to recommend it. It has the shifting corners, of course, and the telescoping stairwell, which expands or contracts according to the seasons and to its willingness to allow access to a particular book. The library has been most accommodating during my tenure as its keeper. We have a benign relationship, this strange old wing and I. I like to think we co-operate to provide excellent archiving and retrieval services for the many, many volumes which come our way from around the globe and around the clock, as it were. I’m not always sure all of our volumes exist in the same temporal frame-work, though they may share the same shelves of magicked planks.

The remainder of our afternoon passed pleasantly. Time went quickly, as it does when spent in good company. The Cheshire Cat made an extended appearance late in the day, his grin materializing first and fading last, beaming down from its position atop the shelves on the upper landing of the belfry. Miss Alice pointedly ignored his presence, and asked me to explain my new toy, a tintype camera. I deferred to the Good Doctor’s superior knowledge, and he rambled for the remainder of the afternoon, blissfully unaware, I believe, that his young companion was engaged mainly in snubbing the looming feline and his enormous smile. I knew already most of that which Dodgson explained, but his enthusiasm was charming. He is a lovely man when his interests are engaged. His stammer virtually disappears, and he is then the most eloquent of scholars, and the very best of company.

Now the light is fading from my tower. Even that light which reaches here, far over the tops of trees fringing Oberon’s wood. I see the Old Mill Pond from my window. If I look very hard, I can make out pale wisps of smoke rising from the chimneys of the School of the Imagination. I picture my friends there, Dodgson perhaps writing in his journal as I do mine. His Alice — that strange, wonderful creature which is so like an actual human child and yet so unlike — perhaps she sleeps. In this odd twilight which exists between day and night, anything is possible. I think a creature so strange and lovely as Alice might outlive even her creator Dodgson and myself. Will she, I wonder, still be teased by the Cheshire Cat long after these papers crumble to dust; long after some future generation of Estate librarians decide this old belfry is no longer useful, or that some of these books must go?

I slide back onto the shelf by my desk this slim volume Dodgson gave me upon his leave-taking. I run a finger along the title inked onto the spine — Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Part of me thinks she will outlast us all, this girl-child entity made real by the power of words alone. For that and for her, I love these books around me all the more.

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What’s New for the 12th of October

“I really didn’t mean to steal it.”  Mr. Williams shook his head. He scratched at his chin nervously. “Why not? That’s what they’re there for. Tunes belong to everybody. So do stories.” — Robert Holdstock’s Mythago Wood

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Finch ‘ere. I’m filling in as Reynard, our Barkeep, is off travelling with his wife Ingrid, our Estate Steward, this week.

Care to have a pint of our new All Hallows Eve Ale? It’s quite good. I’ve been getting stellar comments about it from those who’ve had a few pints. Bjorn, our Brewmaster, always seems to enjoy creating new Autumn libations more than those he does for the other seasons. And he’s hinting that he’ll be doing an authentic Octoberfest beer very soon but he’s kept everything a secret from even me.

Iain is running through the tunes that Red Robin will be playing later this evening in the Sanctuary as he’s the caller. Two violinists, one smallpiper plus a mountain dulcimer player — all from Ashville, North Carolina — and it should be quite tasty to dance to.

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Book reviews.

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Iain has a rather special treat for us as he interviews one of favorite authors: ‘We here at Green Man remember the winter afternoon that Elizabeth Bear  carefully tended a pot of turkey stock that many hours later would become one of the most tasty turkey veggie soups ever encountered by anyone ‘ere. Later that week, I got to interview her about all things culinarily that interested here ranging from her ideas picnic basket and what make a great winter hearty meal to the perfect brownie.’

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Film reviews

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In new releases, I review Mareld, the third album by Nordic instrumental folk trio Mojna. ‘Once again the music on Mareld treats boundaries as nonexistent, blending European classical ideas with Nordic folk, Carnatic song, Balkan rhythms and harmonies, and the spirit of jazz invention.’

I found the music on The Necks’ Disquiet to be disturbing but essential listening. ‘Artists of all stripes are busily reflecting our chaotic world back to us in their myriad ways, to be sure. But this sprawling set of three discs containing around three hours of entirely improvised music captures the zeitgeist in ways that are as magnificent as they are unsettling.’

The Wolfgang Muthspiel trio record Tokyo is more upbeat. ‘As was the case with the trio’s previous two recordings, their music weaves through the warp and woof of jazz, classical and folk music without recognizing any seams or boundaries. The thing that keeps me coming back to this disc in the end is the way it’s always moving forward, even when it’s reveling in the moment.’

From the Archives, Big Earl presented a hefty omnibus review of several CDs of Anatolian music from the Turkish label Kalan: Maras Sinemilli Deyisleri & Ulas Ozdemir’s Ummanda, Erkan Ogur & Ismail H. Demircioglu’s Gulun Kokusu Vardi, Kardes Turkuler’s Dogu, Yarkin Turk Ritm Grubu’s Ten/Skin, and Selim Sesler ve Grup Trakya’nin Sesi’s Kesan’a Giden Yollar. ‘The Kalan label concentrates on the wonderful music of this area, with a particular interest in presenting the traditional forms. This set of discs present but a few facets of Turkish music, giving us a hint at the musical diamond that exists.

He was less than enamored of two CD’s from a performer called Wah!: CD Krishna and Transformation. ‘What we have is more a disc of tepid mid-80’s college rock, mixed with elements of reggae, and some harmonium. Oh, and some truly wretched lyrics, the sort of lyrical religious drivel that drives people away with hands on their ears.’

Naomi was impressed with fiddler Alistair McCulloch’s first release. ‘Highly Strung is a showcase of Alistair’s talent, its wide range of material showing exactly how readily adaptable to any style of fiddling he is.’

Kim was not impressed with the New Age glop on David Lyndon Huff’s Worldbeat: World Music for a New Millennium. ‘Do you want to meditate to monks chanting? Check. Rain sounds? It’s there. Gaelic sounding female vocals? Yup. Indian strings? Got that too. African vocals? Absolutely. Nature sounds? In abundance!’

Rebecca reviewed a sampler of folk singer Jack Hardy’s music from the two-volume, 10-CD boxed set The Collected Works of Jack Hardy. ‘This sampler presents songs from the ten albums Hardy released before 1995. The tracks are not arranged in chronological order, however. This makes it hard to follow any development or progression is Hardy’s work, but the order of the songs is satisfying aesthetically.’

I reviewed some classic Pablo jazz reissues from Concord, starting with Dizzy’s Big 4 featuring Dizzy Gillespie, Joe Pass, Ray Brown and Mickey Roker. ‘The album opens with a tune that was new at the time but became another Diz classic, “Frelimo.” The tune is named for the Mozambique Liberation Front, part of the Africal independence movement that was part and parcel of the American Civil Rights movement by this time. It has elements of African jazz, American funk and a melody and rhythm that to me sound Brazilian, and is mostly quiet with occasional spurts of volume. And some of Gillespie’s signature bop technique of lightning-fast runs played with jaw-dropping precision.’

Another Concord reissue of Duke Ellington & His Orchestra’s The Ellington Suites, a compilation of suites recorded at different times in Ellington’s career. One of them is from 1959, “The Queen’s Suite,” dedicated to Elizabeth II. ‘This whole suite is absolutely lovely, but if I had to choose one piece to preserve forever it would be the sublime “The Single Petal Of A Rose,” which is Ellington solo on piano accompanied only by a lightly bowed bass.

Finally, I revisited another compilation disc, Latin Noir. ‘This is the fifth edition of the Noir Series by Berlin’s excellent world music label Piranha, subtitled “Everything Happens on the Beach.” I can overlook a little marketing gimmick if it brings us such excellent music. This compilation features 13 selections, what the label refers to as “happy sad musical treasures” from Cuba, Argentina, Colombia and New York, with influences from the New World as well as “both sides of the Mediterranean,” which I take as a reference to Iberia and Africa.’

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Our What Not this time is an authors’ look at his work, a work deeply infused with Arthurian, Celtic and English folklore, to wit Robert Holdstock on his Mythago Cycle. Richard reviewed for us the entire Mythago Cycle as the author calls it here  but it’s illuminating to hear what the author has to say: ‘It came as a shock to realise that 2009 is the 25th anniversary of Mythago Wood, the novel I wrote from my dreams, and under the influence of my grandfather’s eerie tales, told to me when I was a child. I loved his stories: frightening and vivid. They shaped me.’  (Holdstock would die in November of the year at the age of 61, having been in intensive care since his collapse with an E. coli infection not long before.) You can read his article here.

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Summer is over, at least in the Northern Hemisphere. In fact, autumn started about three weeks ago. It’s the season when the earth readies itself for its winter sleep, but it’s also a time for festivals celebrating the harvest and summer’s bounty. So, to honor the season, here’s “Aumumn” from Antonion Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons:

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A Kinrowan Estate story: A Pudding Contest

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Her name was Bronwyn ap Tewdwr and she was our guest judge for the annual pudding contest. ‘A pudding contest?’ you ask. And I say, ‘Why not?’ Real pudding, like real ale, is a long way from the packaged puddings that litter grocery stores. And watching a group of talented folk making tasty food is something I always appreciate!

The contest, which covers both sweet and savoury puddings, is held annually in the Fall as a break from the getting-ready-for-Winter tasks all of us are doing. So Mrs. Ware and her Kitchen staff start planning for this by finding interesting ingredients and picking the judge from among the culinarily inclined people that she knows. That person gets a week here gratis and a generous stipend as well.

(You cannot pitch yourself as a judge, as that gets you disqualified. And Mrs. Ware is quite above being bribed even if she has a weakness for Turkish Delight ever since she was a wee girl and read the Narnia books for the first time.)

Now I’ll admit that my only pudding of interest is a dark chocolate one made with bittersweet chocolate. But then I like a dark chocolate bread pudding as well. Maybe even better. The only thing I’ve ever tasted better than that pudding was a dark chocolate bread pudding infused with Madagascar vanilla and a hint of cardamom. Ymmm!

We Swedes have a long tradition of making puddings from scratch. My momor, my maternal grandmother, every Autumn made an apple and almond pudding using a tart apple variety with just vanilla and cinnamon for spicing. Served with warm with a scoop of vanilla ice cream, it was quite wonderful.

Bronwyn decided that though she officially is the arbiter for this contest, anyone interested should have a say. The actual contest took place in what’s called the canning and drying kitchen, as it’s set up exclusively for that purpose. It’s in a building that’s strictly two-season use only as we drain the water before the first real freeze takes place. It’s got two Viking gas stoves, each with eight burners, two sinks for water and cleaning up, and lots of work space.

We started in late morning with sets of four pudding makers, each given ample time to create their pudding from scratch. That group created a pudding using our pear cider; a blackberry and graham cracker pudding, as those bushes were still bearing; a breakfast pudding with bacon, cheddar cheese and mushrooms; and what the Yanks call an Indian pudding which is made with cornmeal and molasses.

Before we wrapped it up many hours later, we’d seen made and had sampled puddings such as black pudding and haggis pudding, groaty pudding (soaked groats, beef, leeks, onion and beef stock), kugel, a Yorkshire pudding, steak and kidney pudding, and several spotted dick and a suet and fruit based concoction. There was even a stellar Christmas pudding that Mrs. Ware said she’d be making for our Christmas eventide meal.

There was a three-way tie for best pudding between the breakfast pudding, the pudding using pear cider and the kugel, which was the work of Rebekah, a Several Annie, one of Iain’s Library Apprentices, from Israel.

All in all everyone was happy with both the food and the comfortable companionship in a contest no one took too seriously. Most of us went for a long walk afterwards to work off the feeling of needing a good nap this engendered.

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