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  2. Celtic music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_music

    Celtic music is a broad grouping of music genres that evolved out of the folk music traditions of the Celtic people of Northwestern Europe (the modern Celtic nations). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It refers to both orally-transmitted traditional music and recorded music and the styles vary considerably to include everything from traditional music to a wide ...

  3. Ancient Celtic music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Celtic_music

    Carnyx players (bottom right) on a panel from the Gundestrup Cauldron Sculpture depicting a bard with a lyre (Brittany, 2nd century BC). Deductions about the music of the ancient Celts of the La Tène period and their Gallo-Roman and Romano-British descendants of Late Antiquity rely primarily on Greek and Roman sources, as well as on archaeological finds and interpretations including the ...

  4. William Coulter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Coulter

    This first album Celtic Crossing was released in 1995 and reflected Coulter's longstanding love for traditional Celtic music. Inspired by this musical tradition, Coulter produced his own renditions of traditional jigs, reels, and airs, including "The Lark in the Morning," "Sí bheag, sí mhór, [ 6 ] " "Banish Misfortune," "Lagan Love," and others.

  5. Pure Moods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pure_Moods

    Pure Moods is the first United States release of a series of compilation albums of new-age music released by Virgin Records. The original was titled Moods – A contemporary Soundtrack [3] and released in the UK in 1991. This was followed by Moods 2 in 1992. [4]

  6. Gaelic folk music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaelic_folk_music

    The six Celtic nationalities are divided into two musical groups, Gaelic and Brythonic, [1] which according to Alan Stivell differentiate "mostly by the extended range (sometimes more than two octaves) of Irish and Scottish melodies and the closed range of Breton and Welsh melodies (often reduced to a half-octave), and by the frequent use of the pure pentatonic scale in Gaelic music".

  7. Category:Celtic music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Celtic_music

    Celtic music festivals (4 C, 41 P) Celtic musical instruments (10 C, 18 P) Celtic mythology in music (1 C, 14 P) Celtic rock music (5 C, 18 P) F.

  8. Bonny Portmore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonny_Portmore

    "Bonny Portmore" is an Irish traditional folk song which laments the demise of Ireland's old oak forests, specifically the Great Oak of Portmore or the Portmore Ornament Tree, which fell in a windstorm in 1760 and was subsequently used for shipbuilding and other purposes.

  9. Alan Stivell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Stivell

    "Crystal Harp" solid-body (Goas-Stivell, 1987) Alan Stivell was born in the Auvergnat town of Riom.His father, Georges (Jord in Breton) Cochevelou, was a civil servant in the French Ministry of Finance who achieved his dream of recreating a Celtic or Breton harp in the small town of Gourin, Brittany [2] and his mother Fanny-Julienne Dobroushkess was of Lithuanian-Jewish descent.

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