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Over the Sea to Skye

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It is often played as a slow lullaby or waltz, and entered into the modern folk canon in the twentieth century with versions by Paul Robeson, Tom Jones, Rod Stewart, Roger Whittaker, Tori Amos, and many others.

It was extremely popular in its day and, from its first recording by Tom Bryce on 29 April 1899, [6] it became a standard among Scottish folk and dance musicians. From the 1960s onwards, it became even more widely known and has remained popular in mainstream music genres. Bear McCreary adapted the song as the opening titles of the 2014 TV series Outlander, sung by Raya Yarbrough, changing the text of Robert Louis Stevenson's poem "Sing Me a Song of a Lad That Is Gone" (1892) to " Lass" to fit the story. [3] [13] Sit or stand in a circle and sing the song together – break into two groups and have one group sing the verse and the other sing the chorus. Song and rhyme wordsThe song tells the tale of Bonnie Prince Charlie (Prince Charles Edward Stuart and grandson of James II and VII of Scotland) and his flight from Benbecula to the Isle of Skye, following his defeat at the Battle of Culloden in 1746. It was the final attempt by the Stuarts to reclaim the throne after their last monarch Queen Anne died, at which point the crown was then passed to George I from Hanover. Bonnie Prince Charlie's supporters, however, believed he was the rightful heir to the throne. The Skye Boat Song", by Robert Louis Stevenson, published in the collection Songs of Travel and Other Verses, Project Gutenberg The Isle of Skye has its own breed of dog, the Skye Terrier dogs, which are said to be shy but very friendly. One famous example is Greyfriars Bobby, a Skye Terrier who stayed faithfully by his master’s graveside in Edinburgh for 14 years until his own death. Queen Victoria also owned two of the Isle of Skye Terriers; Dandie and Islay. Conrad, Erin (27 July 2014). " Outlander: Opening Title Sequence – Wait, Is That It?". ThreeIfBySpace.net . Retrieved 12 October 2021. The text of the song gives an account of how Bonnie Prince Charlie, disguised as a serving maid, escaped in a small boat after the defeat of his Jacobite rising of 1745, with the aid of Flora MacDonald. The song draws on the motifs of Jacobitism although it was composed nearly a century and a half after the episode it describes. [3] Especially Stevenson's version, which gives the boat's course (Mull was astern, Rum on the port, Eigg on the starboard bow) seems to describe Charles's flight from the mainland, but that is unhistorical. The only time Charles was in Skye was when he left Benbecula in the Outer Hebrides to avoid the increasingly thorough government searches. It is unlikely that a boat from Benbecula would sail south of Rum to travel to Skye.

The Choral Scholars of University College Dublin recorded an arrangement by their artistic director Desmond Earley for their 2015 album Invisible Stars: Choral Works of Ireland and Scotland [15] Every so often we round a knobbly point of land, hoping to see a swooping bird of prey or dorsal fin in the sea channels. Soon, near the cool reaches of Loch Aline, we are transfixed by blubbery cetaceans, white-tailed eagles and glorious snow-fuzzed summits. There’s no sign of the yachts and other vessels that arrive in summer, just views of lonely chess-piece lighthouses and dazzling empty beaches.Michael Tippett originally included the song, titled as "Over the Sea to Skye", in his arrangements of Four Songs from the British Isles for unaccompanied four-part chorus in 1957, commissioned by North West German Radio, Bremen, for a festival of European folk song. The amateur choir for which they were intended found the songs too difficult, and the first performance took place in July 1958, given by the London Bach Group, conducted by John Minchinton, at Royaumont in France. Tippett's Selected Letters states that he proposed to replace "Over the Sea to Skye" because it was "too strictly held by a publisher here". [ citation needed]

It's not simply the geography," he said. "The changing of the main title comments on an evolution of the characters. We knew that we wanted something dramatic and cinematic." Music - The Choral Scholars of University College Dublin". ucdchoralscholars.ie . Retrieved 12 October 2021. Being an island it isn’t surprising that Skye has a wonderful selection of seafood prepared by master chefs in first-class hotels and restaurants and not only seafood but highland game reared in the shadow of the mountains, vegetables from local suppliers and a renowned single malt whisky from the Talisker distillery (In 2007 Talisker 18-year-old won ‘Best Single Malt In The World’ award) as well as a range of locally-brewed craft ales.Sing me a Song of a Lad that is Gone by Robert Louis Stevenson". Poetry Foundation. 24 May 2018 . Retrieved 12 October 2021. As if to mark his words, we pass through a favourite stomping ground of a west coast community of killer whales, but see only ripples. The abundant marine life – orcas, minke whale, short-beaked common dolphin, Risso’s dolphin, harbour porpoise – is the same year-round, but the cooler weather and shifting winds mean that the seas are eerily quiet and the only traffic is working scallop and langoustine boats. If you can take the unpredictable winter weather, you can see some truly stunning places John MacInnes, master mariner It's sung by the character Claire Louise McLeod (played by Lisa Chappell) on season 1, episode 5, "Taking the Reins" of the Australian TV series McLeod's Daughters. [ citation needed] a b c "10 facts about Bonnie Prince Charlie and the Jacobites". History Extra. Immediate Media Company. 12 May 2016 . Retrieved 12 October 2021. . Songs of the North (20th edition: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project.

Esther Ofarim - Esther and Abi Ofarim - Esther & Abi Ofarim - Ofraim אסתר עופרים". esther-ofarim.de. [ failed verification] The song was played by pipers as the coffin of Her Late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II travelled up the Long Walk to Windsor Castle on 19 September 2022. Media comment included speculation that this was to 'put to rest' the conflict between the Jacobite and Hannoverian houses. [ citation needed] While that seems like a lofty statement, anyone who hears the folksy Celtic notes and bagpipes—plus the tell-tale lyrics to "Sing me a song..."—that make up the opening credit sounds will know exactly what I'm talking about. Called "The Skye Boat Song," the tune manages to be sensual and romantic, earthy and mystical, all of which perfectly describe Claire and Jamie's love story. Mrs R. L. Stevenson. "Prefatory Note". In Robert Louis Stevenson. Poems. Volume I. p. 58. London: Heinemann, 1924. The visitor was Elizabeth Anne Ferrier who stayed with Stevenson in June 1885 (Robert Louis Stevenson. Letters, Volume V. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1995).Sir Harold Edwin Boulton wrote the celebrated lyrics, which starts with the famous line; 'Speed bonnie boat, like a bird on the wing', in the 1870s after becoming interested in Scottish folk songs at Oxford University. A Gaelic proverb is apt on the first day’s sailing, from Corpach to Tobermory: Am fear a bhios fad aig an aiseig gheibh e thairis uaireigin. Which means, “He that waits long for the ferry will get across sometime.” McColl, Norton. "Discography". Paul Robeson Centennial Celebration. University of Chicago . Retrieved 12 October 2021.

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