| Safe
in the Harbor |
|
[image temporarily unavailable]
Released
1993
Total Playing Time: 63:52
Available on CD only
Cover art: Jay Steinke |
While
Lee Murdock always strives to present a varied yet balanced "slice"
of Great Lakes heritage in each of his CDs, still this CD, more
than any other, has a decidedly Irish emphasis.
[read
more] |
| |
|
Songs
(click
on mp3 links to hear short audio clips)
The Downtowner
Motel [kevin o'donnell/lee murdock]
Lost on the Lady Elgin [henry c work/lee murdock] => [mp3,
179 Kb]
Yankee Brown [traditional] => [mp3,
275 Kb]
White Squall [stan rogers]
The Spirits of Long Point [lee murdock] => [mp3,
318 Kb]
Rondezvous [lee murdock]
Keeper of the Light [warren nelson]
Watching Lake Michigan Roll [larry penn]
You Damned Old Piney Mountains [craig johnson]
The Gallagher Boys [traditional]
Joshua Johnson [jim craig]
Indiana/Eleanor Plunkett [andy mitchell/t. o'carolan]
Safe in the Harbor [eric bogle] |
|
Starting
with two traditional tunes from Irish settlers of Beaver Island,
Michigan, (The Gallagher Boys and Yankee Brown),
add an instrumental tune by 17th century Irish harper, Turlough
O'Carolan, Eleanor Plunkett. The Carolan tune is appended
to a song written by contemporary songwriter Andy Mitchell, Indiana,
singing of an Irish immigrant in Indiana who can't get past his
longing for his homeland, and so has decided to leave the riches
and opportunity of "Amerikay" to return to Ireland.
Follow that with the Henry Clay Work classic, Lost on the Lady
Elgin, another amazing piece of Irish-American history. When
the sidewheel steamer excursion boat, Lady Elgin, went down off
Evanston, Illinois, in 1861, it took the lives of many people --
mostly Irish-Americans from the city of Milwaukee, who were returning
from Chicago where they went to support their candidate, Stephen
A Douglas, in the Lincoln-Douglas Debates.
This CD also
includes Lee's arrangement of Stan Rogers' song, White Squall,
and Safe in the Harbor, a song written by Australian folksinger
Eric Bogle to memorialize his friend and colleague, Stan Rogers. |