NEW FEST.NOZ UNPUBLISHED
Here we have a double album with traditional or so singers and musicians as well as folk groups. There are no information about the songs and tunes or the people. If we believe the label all these tracks are unpublished and were made especially for this album.
The sentence on the cover means ''Breton music is''.
So to help you to follow and enjoy the music I list below what types of dances are presented here.
A1 the Pennec brothers play a three-part set from the Fisel country made of fisel-bal-fisel
A2 the Pennec brothers play a particular gavotte from the Pourlet country
A3 Yann Vikel Bourdieg sings a laridé in Breton from the Vannes country with the band called an Trouzerion Goh (see my earlier post)
A4 Ar Penseerien (the shipwreckers in Breton) play one gavotte from Inner Brittany
the tune sounds identical to ''estolisan to sperveri'' a wedding song from the Greek island of Rhodes. I knew the Greek song before getting this album and it stroke me immediately. Is it possible that a Breton tune from the Vannes country be more than similar to a Greek tune without any contacts ? or did these ''sonneurs'' adopted this wedding song that can be danced to like an dro ? The Greek song is performed by a traditional female singer and choir with a lyra and a laouto players who were members of a folk ensemble set up by Simon Karas the great musicologist on the album named in French ''Voyage en Grèce-Simon Karas'' published by Le Chant du Monde in the 1970s. I added this track to this album.
B5 the Kergosien brothers play a laridé
A1 Sonerien Du (the Black Pipers/Musicians in Breton) play a set of gavotten-tamm kreiz- gavotten (ar menez)
A2/A3/A4 the Coulouarn sisters sing a gavotten-tamm kreiz-gavotten
A5 the Pennec brothers play perhaps a set of ''ronds'' from Loudéac with a bal between
B1 the Kergosien brothers play an an dro
B2 the Coulouarn sisters sing a set of gavotten ar menez with a tamm kreiz (litteraly the bit in the middle) between
B3 the folk band Kouerien Sant Yann play two laridé (round dance from the Vannetais country)