Sleeve Notes:
When Tommy Makem was knee high to a mandolin he sang the songs of our heritage,
lullabied by his mother. Sarah, who has, probably, the best collection of folk songs in
these islands. Makem and music have grown strong and resonant together. From the
songs of generations past, he gravitated towards writing his own material.
On a car journey from Keady to Dundalk. an old woman tending
cattle in a field skirting the Border inspired him to write
the classic: "Four Green Fields'! It was penned long before
the bombs, bullets and bloodshed of the present Northern
crises. It is not a rallying cry to violence: more a plea for
justice through peaceful means.
This album features a number of Makem's tunes: "The Winds Are
Singing Freedom" is another in the mould of "Four Green
Fields"—but again the call for a just settlement between
divided communities.
Tommy Makem gained international repute while he sang with the
Clancy Brothers, starting in the folk clubs of America,
through the university campus and then the big concert halls
of three continents. He decided to pursue a solo career a
number of years ago - basing his performance on a lovely
mixture of old songs and new, poetry, stories and humour. The
music of Makem, the poetry of Yeats and Kavanagh; the
reminiscences of northern folklore have entertained audiences
from Brisbane to Belmullet. Someone once described him as a
latter-day Bard of Armagh.
So he is.
This album will convince you, if there were any lingering doubts.
Michael Hand