ALASDAIR FRASER and NATALIE HAAS: Abundance
ALASDAIR FRASER and NATALIE HAAS
Abundance
Culburnie Records
Classic Scots fiddlers like Niel Gow saw little contradiction between playing for a fashionable drawing room audience by day and sawing out tunes for village peasants in the evening. After all, bowed instruments (including viola and cello) were more about the dance than the musician. If it set Scottish toes a tapping, it scarcely mattered if they were shod in silk or leather. That spirit of court and pub pervades the latest release from Alasdair Fraser and Natalie Haas. Superlatives fail for these two, but does it surprise anyone to hear this is a stunning release? It differs from previous projects in several ways. First, the feel is more courtly than plebian. There are some wonderful raucous traditional tunes here, including one of the better versions of the 3/2 dance tune âKeys to the Cellarâ (known by many as âCam Ye Ower Frae Franceâ) ever recorded, but thereâs even more stately material such as the strathspey âNiel Gowâs Wife;â Fraserâs birthday tune for a friend, âHoward Boosterâs Style;â and âGlenfinnan,â a slow wedding march composed by Fraser. Another departure involves the integration of a style unavailable to the old masters: jazz. Fraserâs cleverly titled âHot Club dâĂcosseâ hops to Django Reinhart small-combo jazz beats. Perhaps most surprising, Fraser and Haas even integrate some trombone and euphonium into âThe Kelburn Brewer.â But style scarcely matters with masters such as these. Think I exaggerate? Who else could make a playful song about a kitten on the back of a gull (âOn the Wings of a Skorrieâ) sound so soul-wrenchingly beautiful?
— Rob Weir