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Symphonie Celtique ("Celtic Symphony"), subtitled "Tir na nOg", a folk-rock album by Alan Stivell, originally released as a double LP in 1980 by CBS France, catalogue number CBS 88487. In 1987, it was published by Rounder Records in CD 11523.[1] Digitally remastered and reissued on CD by Disques Dreyfus, catalogue number FDM 36196–2.
Composed entirely by Stivell, featuring instrumental arrangements by Stivell assisted by Christopher Hayward and Michel Prezman, and with over 70 musicians contributing, this was a large undertaking. As well as embracing the classic Stivell fare of Breton, Scottish and Irish instrumentation, this early nod at world music includes oriental and African sounds as well as a full orchestra and lavish production values. On the original vinyl release, the "three circle" symphonic construction was emphasised in the track listings to a greater extent than with the subsequent CD reissue.
The original double LP was packaged in a gatefold sleeve whose interior featured a still from the Roman Polanski film Tess depicting Stonehenge in the mist.
Reception
Stivell, further back in France, reached a European then global reach.[2] In Italy, class Stivell 52nd best rock musician of all time ("Best Rock Musicians of all times") in the "String / Wind" category. Italian free radio stations broadcast his music, which led him to play in the wake before 11,000 people in Rome and 14,000 in Milan. In Great Britain, Andy Morgan believes that "Stivell's early crative development reached a climax with the staging of his Symphonie Celtique. Is the ultimate expression of everything Stivell felt about his Celtic roots and their place in the wider cultural context."[3]
Track listing
This track listing is as presented on the sleeve of the original LP release; this differs slightly from that of the CD reissue. All music was composed by Alan Stivell.
KELC'H UNAN: First Circle (20:45)
BEAJ d'an Ec'honderiou Diabarzh - voyage to our inner spaces
HIRAEZH d'an Amser dremenet ha da-zoned - nostalgia for the past and the future
"Gwerz 1" and "Loc'h ar Goulenn" - "Song 1" and "Profound lake that I interrogate"
DIVODAN en Holl Veur - dissolution in the Great All
KELC'H DAOU: Second Circle (18:24)
EMSKIANT newez tost d'ar Mann en Eil Bed kenstur - regaining consciousness near the Nothingness in the second parallel world
KENDASKREN Gant an Hollved - vibratory communion with the universe
IMRAM d'an Inisenn - in quest of the Isle
DILESTRAN was Inis gWenva - landing on Blissful Isle, the isle of the Pure World, the third world (or the third life, that of perfection or harmony)
KELC'H TRI: Third Circle (33:15)
AR C'HAMMOU KENTAÑ war an Inisenn - first steps on the Isle
Kawadden AR GEODED SKEDUS: Tir Na Nóg - discovery of the Radiant City
AR BALE TREMA 'R GEODED - the march towards the City
GOUEL HOLLVEDEL - universal festival
AN DISTRO trumm e-barzh ar Bed Keñverel ha Goulenn - sudden return to the relative and interrogative world
^André-Georges Hamon (pref. Glenmor), Chantres de toutes les Bretagnes : 20 ans de chanson bretonne, Paris, Jean Picollec, coll. Biblio Celtique, 1981, p. 465
^Anny Maurussane and Gérard Simon, Alan Stivell ou l'itinéraire d'un harper hero, Culture & Celtie, 2006, p. 137