St Anne’s Reel - David Grier Ft. Stuart Duncan

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  • čas přidán 2. 04. 2019
  • From David Grier’s CD release party at The Station Inn. 4-2-19
    David Grier - Guitar
    Stuart Duncan - Fiddle
    Casey Campbell - Mandolin
    Cory Walker - Banjo
    Todd Phillips- Bass
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 32

  • @DustinGraham-uf3by
    @DustinGraham-uf3by Před 5 měsíci +3

    David Grier sounds great and so does Stuart Duncan. David has the best variation of fiddle tunes.

  • @procarpenter1788
    @procarpenter1788 Před 2 lety +4

    Stuart Duncan is the best fiddler walking the earth right now, full stop.

  • @joeosborn123
    @joeosborn123 Před 3 lety +28

    And that, my friends, is a MASTER fiddler. ❤

  • @Gently469
    @Gently469 Před 3 lety +8

    What a shame to not have David's volume up more

  • @michaelveis8937
    @michaelveis8937 Před 3 lety +3

    Great rendition of the Ballad of St. Anne's Reel. St.Patrick's Day is right around the corner.

    • @techno-dweeb4069
      @techno-dweeb4069 Před 2 lety +1

      (This is NOT a snarky reply, so please don't take offence). This tune is St Anne's reel, an excellent fiddle tune first recorded in 1947 I believe. In 1979 David Mallet wrote and recorded a wonderful expansion on the original, The Ballad of St Anne's Reel. A beautiful fiddle tune, beautifully reprised and enlarged by David Mallet. Very good music all around, we are all the richer.

    • @alangiolma4278
      @alangiolma4278 Před 2 lety +1

      Just to clarify,The Ballad of SAR is a song with lyrics which incorporates the fiddle tune in the chorus.It's been recorded by many including a nice version by the late John Denver.

  • @davesiler4064
    @davesiler4064 Před 5 lety +1

    Great tune, great performers! It don't get no than this!!!

  • @fortbumper
    @fortbumper Před 4 lety

    good tunes thank you !

  • @josephanderson7237
    @josephanderson7237 Před 2 měsíci +1

    ZZ Top Hat. 🎩

  • @ballofwax9yards
    @ballofwax9yards Před 3 lety +1

    Very well done.

  • @traylong
    @traylong Před 4 lety +9

    St Annes reel is a composition from the great Manitoba Metis fiddler Andy Desjarlis. who composed this tune and is credited with at least 200 compositions and over a dozen albums. If you are unfamiliar with him it is because he is an unsung composer who needs to be recognized since he is not well known unfortunately outside of the Metis community (an Indigenous nation in Canada). He had released more than a dozen albums in his heyday (1950s-60s). check out his version of St Anne's reel at @​ , He also composed another fiddle standard Whiskey before breakfast @

    • @davemorrison3298
      @davemorrison3298 Před 4 lety +1

      Wow! No idea.. thanks for the info! Did another link on CZcams get left out?!

    • @joeosborn123
      @joeosborn123 Před 3 lety +3

      Thanks for the note. Did he really compose St. Anne's and Whiskey BB? That would be incredible if he did- I often wondered about the origins of those tunes. But internet research seems to show that St. Anne's for sure goes farther back than Desjarlis' time. Both tunes seem clearly to be of Canadian origin, and Desjarlis recorded great arrangements to be sure, but I'm not convinced he was the original composer.

    • @daves.9479
      @daves.9479 Před 3 lety +3

      Unfortunately, the great fiddle tradition of our (US) neighbors to the north is largely unknown down here. However, Fiddler'S Companion has this to say about the origin of St Anne's Reel: "According to Anne Lederman (in her article on “Fiddling” in the Encyclopedia of Music in Canada, 1992), tune was first recorded by Québec fiddler Joseph Allard as “Reel de Ste Anne”-which became popular in English-speaking Canada as “St. Anne’s Reel.” While this is not proof that “St. Anne’s” origins are French-Canadian (as Allard spend much of his youth in upper New England, where he played in fiddle contests, and presumably came into contact with regional musicians), it is suggestive. There are at least two bays by this name in eastern Canada, as the French alternate title above would suggest, though it is not known if those features explain the origin of the tune’s title. There is a French community called Baie Sainte Anne, on St. Anne’s Bay, near the mouth of Mirimichi Bay, New Bruswick. “St. Anne’s” was popularised by Radio and TV fiddler Don Messer (who had the title as “Sainte Agathe” in his 1948 Way Down East collection), and has been assimilated into several North American and British Isles traditions and remains a popular staple of fiddlers’ jam sessions. "

  • @douglaspeters6990
    @douglaspeters6990 Před 2 lety

    That made me happy😀

  • @jdnell
    @jdnell Před 2 lety

    Well rendered.

  • @gutbucket260
    @gutbucket260 Před 3 lety +5

    How cool would it be to see a rabbit pop out of Dave's hat?

  • @garykaufman8128
    @garykaufman8128 Před 5 lety +5

    Well, now, it'd be nice if the banjo player was in the video, after all, he took a neat break (sheesh!).

  • @billwagner5419
    @billwagner5419 Před 5 lety +2

    I'm a happy guy

  • @bigdaddy3919
    @bigdaddy3919 Před rokem

    Nice hat Mr Greer

  • @shineoncoffee4772
    @shineoncoffee4772 Před 5 lety +1

    did he have that hat on the entire show?

  • @spmacdonald
    @spmacdonald Před 3 lety

    Who is playing the 5-string?

  • @bobjackson3735
    @bobjackson3735 Před rokem

    Not my tempo top hat!!! 😂

  • @davesiler4064
    @davesiler4064 Před 5 lety

    better