HALTADANS
EP
Discussions of Shetland Islands fiddling often begin with
Aly Bain and proceed to Fiddlers' Bid, the later so famed that locals simply
call it Da' Bid. Both Bain and Da' Bid deserve their accolades, though they
would recoil at attempts to locate them in fiddle creation stories. The Shetlands
fiddle tradition is ancient and is said to have originated with fairies
("peerie" folk) and trolls ("trows"). That said, Bain and
Da' Bid touched off a revival within the Shetlands analogous to that of Cape
Breton Island in Canada. Travel up that way–as I did a few years ago–and you'll
encounter an array of amazing ensembles, only a handful of which are well known
on the Scottish mainland. Among them is Fullsceliidh Spelemannslag.
Maurice Henderson is the link between Fiddlers' Bid,
Fullsceliidh, and the newer unit known as Haltadans featured on a new EP. He's
a member of all three and Haltadans is essentially the 10-member Fullsceliidh
Spelemannslag cut in half. Like most Shetlands lineups, Haltadans is fiddle
driven. The strings of Henderson, Lois Nicol, and Ewen Thomson shape melody
lines, and Grant Nicol's guitar and John Clark's bass syncopate their ringing
strings. (Another Shetlands link: Thomson is a Fair Isle luthier who makes the
instruments for many great Shetlands fiddlers, including Chris Stout.) Haltadans' music is lively, energetic,
and danceable. Its 5-track EP opens
with a set of reels and proceeds to a set of polskas. The polska–as opposed to
a polka–is a Swedish musical form usually rendered in 3/4 timing. The second
tune, "Eklunda Polska No. 3" was learnt from Aly Bain–those
connections again! Haltadans follows with a traveling tune, a lovely waltz, and
a set that begins with an Irish feel, courtesy of Thomson's tenor banjo, and
finishes with a piece penned by Henderson within the band's namesake stone
circle. About that name, it's an Anglicized version of Hjaltadans, an ancient
stone ring on the island of Fetlar whose outer ring is said to be the petrified
remains of trolls, whilst the two in the center are a fiddler and his wife. The
placename roughly translates as "limping dance." Lift a glass of
winter cheer, play these five tracks with the volume cranked up, and you'll
probably be hobbling a bit when it finishes 22 minutes later.
Rob Weir
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