Bonaparte's Retreat - Aly Bain

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  • @Anthony-ck2dc
    @Anthony-ck2dc Год назад +7

    My pap used to play this tune on a banjo clawhammer style 55 years ago....he called it"milking the strings" He was born in 1895.....It's good to hear this old tune again....thank you kindly...GOD BLESS YOU ALL

  • @DrummerBoyJason
    @DrummerBoyJason 16 лет назад +22

    Such effortless fiddle playing. The ability to play with such rhythm, power, and grace in the slower airs is the mark of a master.

  • @jackmccully2944
    @jackmccully2944 11 лет назад +64

    I never liked the sound of the fiddle when I was young, but this sends shivers of pleasure down my spine. Just shows how your musical tastes can mature when you are 75.

    • @1LSWilliam
      @1LSWilliam 5 лет назад +4

      Or even earlier!

    • @janeshears413
      @janeshears413 4 года назад +3

      Depends who is playing it of course! 😜

    • @AikiFuz
      @AikiFuz 3 года назад +4

      I’ve been playing for almost 5 years, and I don’t always like the sound either. 😉

    • @t24hy44
      @t24hy44 2 года назад +2

      @@AikiFuz My sister played the violin, though it sounded more like a badly wounded animal; the dogs and cats throughout my neighborhood raised a ruckus whenever she started to play. 😵‍💫

    • @AikiFuz
      @AikiFuz 2 года назад +2

      @@t24hy44 Luckily my family has never minded. It actually makes the dog curl up in her bed in that room and fall deeply asleep, since she's a rescue and what she wants most (after food) is to know exactly where I am. =)

  • @jeanlloydbradberry9099
    @jeanlloydbradberry9099 Год назад +13

    One of the most beautiful fiddle performances ever heard! The Flight of the Eagles (Napoleon's flags turned and flew, and suddenly, the men knew that they would live to return home, and like a miracle from the Old Testament, would, God willing, see their families once again! What joy!)

  • @hamrzlawnlake
    @hamrzlawnlake 16 лет назад +29

    How do these guys not break into tears to be in that room together, and play something so sweet.

    • @Kinkle_Z
      @Kinkle_Z 18 дней назад +1

      I break into tears every time I hear it... it's what I want played as they lay me in the ground.

  • @niallmac44
    @niallmac44 13 лет назад +41

    This has me remembering visiting Glasgow in 1969 and playing bodhran in the Old Scotia Bar and thinking this was a damn good fiddle player I was playing with. Aly Bain.

  • @mark4320
    @mark4320 2 года назад +8

    Speaks volumes, a library would be challenged to find space to preserve what he and Michael express in this song. Phenomenal.

  • @12marigold
    @12marigold 14 лет назад +17

    He plays so beautifully and seems so humble about his playing.

  • @tdbsnr
    @tdbsnr 11 лет назад +18

    Aly Bain at his best, radiates dignity, humility, dedicates his life to the music & young musicians coming through.

  • @tomtscotland
    @tomtscotland  17 лет назад +10

    Emotional interpretation is more important than technical brilliance. Aly's first few "simple" notes in this tune reaches a place in your soul.

    • @singinsisters1108
      @singinsisters1108 4 года назад +1

      If you want to reply to a comment, there is a section so you can reply to them, except they’ll know if your talking to them

    • @cottonpatch2000
      @cottonpatch2000 Год назад +1

      Aye. It's bonnie

  • @ADonovan43
    @ADonovan43 12 лет назад +24

    My father liked this melody, I have heard him play this on the piano and the violin.When he would go to the tavern to have a few beers ,he would sit down at the Piano and he would play Bonapartes Retreat first ,just to warm up his fingers.At the sound of last call for alcohol my father would play Danny Boy and every one in the taveren would join in by singing.they would also take one of the mugs of beer that sat on the top of the piano bought for my Dad by the bars patrons.Take care Adonovan43

  • @buniluvr
    @buniluvr 16 лет назад +3

    Loved seeing ALL of you playing together. You all radiate the spirit of this beautiful music. TONS of stars to you ALL!
    cheers

  • @michaelparker8005
    @michaelparker8005 11 лет назад +17

    the most soulful rendition I've ever heard

  • @Kinkle_Z
    @Kinkle_Z 4 года назад +6

    Aly Bain rocks. So glad this series was made! I play this fiddle tune too.

  • @TheRgvbirdman
    @TheRgvbirdman 8 лет назад +11

    Takes me back to high school days when I first heard it. a beautiful rendition. Aly Bain is sensational.

  • @aprilwino
    @aprilwino 16 лет назад +3

    Absolutely beautiful rendition...These melodies are the source of Amrerican Folk & Southern Soul music.

  • @Beshimi
    @Beshimi 16 лет назад +4

    the note Aly plays at 2:12 is haunting. thank you for sharing this.

  • @dagda54
    @dagda54 12 лет назад +5

    Great stuff-- had forgotten how much I like Aly Bain's style! Thanks for posting!

  • @stevepaulmarlow
    @stevepaulmarlow 10 лет назад +7

    Absolute ace playing by all of the band.
    Great fiddling Aly.

  • @MrThedoog84
    @MrThedoog84 12 лет назад +7

    Just met aly Bain in Galway tonight, what a genuinely nice man!

  • @rtp8844
    @rtp8844 9 лет назад +9

    That is old time for the 21st century. Beautiful.

  • @jugglerj0e
    @jugglerj0e Год назад +1

    Amazing! This traditional piece is what inspired composer Aaron Copland to write his western classical piece called "Hoedown" for orchestra. This is such a beautiful song. Great Playing

  • @MartinJames389
    @MartinJames389 12 лет назад +32

    The bitter retreat from Moscow, through a land burnt and ravaged to deny them food, of the starving remnants of Napoleon Bonaparte's Grande Armée in 1812. It was less than half French, the rest recruited from many places. The biggest element was the expelled Gaelic clans of Ireland (romanticised as "The Wild Geese"), with Scots, Germans and Poles also prominent. Of around 685,000 who invaded (thought to be the biggest army ever assembled up to that time), less than 100,000 survived.

    • @althesmith
      @althesmith 6 лет назад +10

      I think the German and Austrian elements far outnumbered the Scots in Boney's army. Read the excellent work 1812 by Paul Austin. In any case, by the halfway mark of the campaign, both the Prussian and Austrian commanders knew they would be facing disaster and made their own arrangements with the Russians to gracefully back away from Russia.

    • @helenchappell6502
      @helenchappell6502 5 лет назад +6

      The moral, which Hitler didn't learn,was never open a second front.

    • @cottonpatch2000
      @cottonpatch2000 5 лет назад

      Bravo @Martin James. Thank you

    • @UISTMAN59
      @UISTMAN59 4 года назад +4

      @@helenchappell6502 WE;re all mighty glad he didn't learn that lesson :-)

    • @sinuhe0171
      @sinuhe0171 4 года назад +2

      After Great Retreat the Poland loss their freedom until 1918. W ith Napoleon went 100 thousands of polish officers and soldiers, although they fought with bravery, more than half lost their lives in Russian snows. There is superb film The Duelist from 1977, describing the very times of honour.

  • @MuchoSuavo
    @MuchoSuavo 12 лет назад +2

    One of the most beautiful things I've ever heard.

  • @leeleeturn
    @leeleeturn 8 лет назад +10

    gorgeous, exquisite, thanks for this beauty

  • @GEORGEROV
    @GEORGEROV 12 лет назад +6

    Aly did a version with Phil Cunningham on accordion on the dvd 'Another Musical Interlude ' and that surpasses any other version I've heard . Mind blowing !.

  • @Bengiskahn
    @Bengiskahn 11 лет назад +17

    And Shetland, from whence Mr Bain hails, remains as Nordic as Scottish. The identity of any people comes from history, community and shared experience, not political nations. music has always been a means of sharing this.

    • @lennart2089
      @lennart2089 3 года назад

      yes, very scandinavian sounding, Shetland is a mixture of heritage.

  • @GladysWils
    @GladysWils 5 лет назад +2

    Beautiful!! Lovely to fiddle along with...

  • @nmfiddler1
    @nmfiddler1 11 лет назад +1

    Beeyouteefull Aly. I sure miss you guys. It's hell to get old and not get around like I used to. Keep up the good work.

  • @WoodenYouKnowIt
    @WoodenYouKnowIt 13 лет назад +3

    @Dunbardoddy I know exactly what you're saying. so many kinds of music are the result of a blending of some very RICH cultures too. But, being a guitar player here in Tennessee, I can tell you that every bluegrass musician that I know absolutely loves this style of music right here as well. When I sit in a jam session with some of these folks, most of the music is, like you said, faster paced, but if someone starts to play this style, everyone will jump right in and make some beautiful music.

  • @smck001
    @smck001 11 лет назад +11

    Every note screams Aly Bain. Genius.

  • @jeanm6707
    @jeanm6707 10 лет назад +12

    Michael Doucet representing La Louisiane!!! Hell yeah!!!

  • @pjr7754
    @pjr7754 5 лет назад +1

    My Scottish husband's favorite song.....played at his funeral. Thanks Aly.

    • @joline2730
      @joline2730 3 года назад

      This is not a song !!! No words. 🤔

  • @lastpubrunner
    @lastpubrunner 16 лет назад +2

    I was talking to Aly recently and he mentioned that when he was young, he wanted to play as quickly as possible. He went on to say that he felt that he had improved as a player by playing the slow airs. He said that most players, rarely make the transition from playing fast to playing slow; they just don't believe that they can 'gain' anything from playing that type of music.

  • @cottonpatch2000
    @cottonpatch2000 6 лет назад +1

    will listen to those fiddles play all day

  • @tomtscotland
    @tomtscotland  17 лет назад +1

    Totally agree - I must get to see Aly one day - his playing has great tone and clarity.

  • @lindafields4613
    @lindafields4613 10 лет назад +3

    Wonderful heart and soul played here. Thank you.

  • @mactcampbell
    @mactcampbell 17 лет назад +2

    Interesting that you mention Jean Carignan. I spent 5 hrs. at a wedding in Cape Breton with his piano player, Gilles Lozier this summer. Lozier is also an excellent fiddler. I always regreted not meeting Carignan in person and playing with Lozier that night made me regret it even more. He was extremely talented.

  • @texasred251
    @texasred251 8 лет назад +3

    It takes this old steel guitar player back to My Old Kentucky Home.

  • @lindafox7822
    @lindafox7822 5 лет назад +1

    That’s awesome. I used to listen to this tune as a little girl. It’s so pretty the.way y’all play it. Thank you.

  • @fakehorse2818
    @fakehorse2818 Год назад +1

    That's so beautiful

  • @Tom-ys5ik
    @Tom-ys5ik 6 лет назад +2

    Simply beautiful

  • @RUuser
    @RUuser 17 лет назад +2

    I was lucky enough to see Aly Bain with the Boys of the Lough around 1980. He's done much to get great music out.

  • @debbyrd
    @debbyrd 12 лет назад +1

    I can't get enough of this.

  • @cottonpatch2000
    @cottonpatch2000 6 лет назад

    I always find it great how Willie Nelson introduced me to old time folk music. Thanks, Willie for making Red Headed Stranger

  • @saram4271
    @saram4271 7 лет назад +2

    A sweet, sweet tune played by some of the great masters. Thanks for posting it.

    • @scottrichard2735
      @scottrichard2735 2 года назад +1

      It’s addicting listening to him, always leaves one in a state of awe🥰 If I may ask, when did you became a fan?

    • @saram4271
      @saram4271 2 года назад

      @@scottrichard2735 Hmmmm....probably way back when he was with The Boys of the Lough, early on when I first started visiting England and Scotland in the 1990s. He was playing in Oban one night when I was on my way to Mull & Iona the next day. When did you first come across his music?

    • @scottrichard2735
      @scottrichard2735 2 года назад

      @@saram4271 I think that was in 80s, my Mom was a great fan of his and never stop talking about how wonderful he plays. So where are you from?

    • @saram4271
      @saram4271 2 года назад

      @@scottrichard2735 From Ohio, but I first heard the music of Aly Bain when I lived in Canada.

    • @scottrichard2735
      @scottrichard2735 2 года назад

      @@saram4271 That’s nice, sounds like you pretty much enjoyed exploring. Well, I’m from Poland but I reside here in Seattle, WA. My mom was an American from California. So what are some of the places you’ve visited?

  • @dogmom240
    @dogmom240 2 года назад +1

    Reading the book 'The Bald Eagle' where this song is mentioned. Had to look it up and listen, very nicely done. The book is on the journey of our national bird.

  • @fredkoning
    @fredkoning 11 лет назад +2

    Beautiful rendition, love it!

  • @TheZwieblekopf
    @TheZwieblekopf 12 лет назад +2

    Danny Thompson is GREEAAAT!!!! That is why he is there.

  • @tomtscotland
    @tomtscotland  17 лет назад +4

    Thanks - I'll need to check-out Chieftain's version - I can't find on RUclips.
    Whilst I've uploaded many videos - this is definately one of my favourites - when Aly B cuts in with the fiddle it's a hair standing on end momeent!

  • @tejaspics
    @tejaspics 3 года назад +2

    Goosebumps.

  • @NZCountryMusic
    @NZCountryMusic 10 лет назад +2

    Lovely Instrumental - Enjoyed

  • @WoodenYouKnowIt
    @WoodenYouKnowIt 13 лет назад +2

    You can certainly see how this type of Scottish music helped form the roots of American Bluegrass. If you'd simply step up the pace, improvise the lead with a breakdown, you'd have it. It's not a far stretch at all. I love THIS!

  • @WillFlyGuitar
    @WillFlyGuitar 17 лет назад

    Many thanks for posting this - I despaired of ever seeing any of the Transatlantic Sessions 2 again. Great playing by all - especially Aly - and Danny Thompson's bass playing is, as ever, wonderful. I wished he'd been on the Sessions 3... :-) Will

  • @listentofiddlepipes
    @listentofiddlepipes 11 лет назад +23

    This tune is outstanding. While listening, I can see Napoleon full of anguish as he marches his troops out of Russia in the bitter cold...

    • @jasonanthony9517
      @jasonanthony9517 3 года назад

      Satisfying. One can only hold so much power

    • @DanPurdy1
      @DanPurdy1 2 года назад +2

      He abandoned his troops and set out by himself for France. Most of his army was foreigners as paid hands. The Irish who had to make their own way back to Ireland, many dead, many sick, wrote this on their way home.

    • @adrianjohnson7920
      @adrianjohnson7920 Год назад

      @@DanPurdy1 Thank you for this comment. You can see for free on RUclips the 1950's film "Desiree" with Marlon Brando as Napoleon. (Perfect casting) The scene is heartbreaking when Desiree's old nurse begs Napoleon -- just returned from Moscow -- to send the warm shawl she knitted to her nephew, who's in his army and perhaps already dead.
      It's a good film based on the excellent historical novel by the same name by Ann - Marie Selenko based on the amazing, true story of how Napoleon's jilted fiancee became the reluctant queen of Sweden.
      BTW The author was in WW II resistance to Hilter and the book was a deserved best seller after the war.

  • @Kinkle_Z
    @Kinkle_Z 7 лет назад +8

    So fucking beautiful it's almost unbearable. Been trying to play this on fiddle for 20 years (started playing it on frailing banjo in 1966) and I still can't get there...but at least we have this. the way this tune should be played... Losing, retreating, moving forward...the pain, the beauty, the understanding, the dignity. Aly Bain has NAILED it!

    • @GwenHolt
      @GwenHolt 3 года назад +1

      If you're not a writer, you should be.

  • @maureenarmstrong2307
    @maureenarmstrong2307 4 месяца назад

    Saw Aly play live many times, along with Phil Cunningham.. Brilliant.. Used to be a Folk Club in Dumfries.. One night, Aly got shall we say.. Very MERRY.. He ended up sitting on the floor, leaning on the wall, still playing.. Alsolutely tremendous.

  •  7 месяцев назад +1

    i always felt this dirge like version captured the mood of a retreating army better than the upbeat versions i also like.

  • @plouchartpatrick4644
    @plouchartpatrick4644 4 года назад +1

    Just amazing !!

  • @brujaderio
    @brujaderio 12 лет назад +1

    Magnificent piece!

  • @Azathoth43
    @Azathoth43 16 лет назад

    hauntingly beautiful.
    thank you for sharing this.

  • @mikel8638
    @mikel8638 5 лет назад

    Thanks for the post. I was having trouble finding what I was looking for. This was it today!

  • @giordanengo1
    @giordanengo1 13 лет назад +1

    J'aime particulièrement cette musique qui a le mérite d'être "genuine "et d'être remarquablement interprétée ! Bravo à tous
    ! Je m'abonne ( of course ! )

  • @franksabatino7576
    @franksabatino7576 3 года назад

    An intriguing, soulful version of a wonderful old tune.

  • @robinhood48
    @robinhood48 16 лет назад

    They play and we break into tears!

  • @athole1954
    @athole1954 6 лет назад +2

    out of this world aly at his best

  • @jodimw8
    @jodimw8 5 лет назад +1

    so beautiful!

  • @cornelis1950
    @cornelis1950 8 лет назад +1

    wonderful music,thanks for sharing

  • @gavinkilty108
    @gavinkilty108 13 лет назад +3

    Violin playing at its most beautiful

  • @tomtscotland
    @tomtscotland  17 лет назад +1

    Aly was the driving force behind the Transatlantic Sessions. These followed on from a programme he made which looked at fiddler connections "across the water".

    • @DanPurdy1
      @DanPurdy1 Год назад

      Jerry Douglas also helped put those sessions together.

  • @PKImagePhotography
    @PKImagePhotography 10 лет назад +10

    The beauty and ease of Aly Bains fiddle....

  • @smck001
    @smck001 12 лет назад

    Nationality matters not a stuff. When your artistry has reached the heights that Ally's has you are surpassing national boundaries. Ally should be celebrated as a world musician, one whose every note is so perfectly Ally Bain that it can be no one else.

  • @nmfiddler1
    @nmfiddler1 8 лет назад +2

    Sounding good Old friend. Keep up the good work.

  • @FrenchieFrench1555
    @FrenchieFrench1555 5 лет назад

    Truly beautiful music.

  • @aprilwino
    @aprilwino 13 лет назад +1

    So much of the rural south was settled by Scots-Irish immigrants that it's no wonder where our Bluegrass and Americana roots music came from.........it's right here in front of you.

  • @tdbsnr
    @tdbsnr 12 лет назад +7

    What an absolutely gorgeous track, Aly Bain & the lads at their best! Forget Yehudi Menuhen, Aly's the main man. I hope I get to see him live before he (or I) die.

  • @noelmcgl
    @noelmcgl 17 лет назад +3

    This is the best version of Bonaparte's retreat we have heard. I hesitate to say it but it is actually better(?) than than or at least as good as the Chieftains. ACtually it's better.

  • @fireorb2
    @fireorb2 3 месяца назад

    Damn this vid is from 07 takes me back to the early days of RUclips.

  • @charlie1pipes
    @charlie1pipes 15 лет назад

    So So Beautiful!

  • @markhosmer10
    @markhosmer10 9 лет назад +7

    Go to the Feb. 6, 1999 Prairie Home Companion show on their website. There is a live version with Ally and Phil Cunningham on accordion, plus some subtle drumming. It's even more haunting than this one...make me tear up.

    • @ivanrorick
      @ivanrorick 9 лет назад +2

      +Mark Hosmer Oh wow THANK YOU for the heads up! That version is amazing! Listening to it over and over now.The fiddle and accordion blend together perfectly.

    • @MagnificentFiend
      @MagnificentFiend 7 лет назад

      Mark Hosmer Any chance you could provide a link? I've looked in vain so far.

    • @Kinkle_Z
      @Kinkle_Z 7 лет назад

      LINK? Please!!

    • @traceofafiddle
      @traceofafiddle 6 лет назад +1

      www.prairiehome.org/shows/58059.html - starts at 51:20ish

    • @williamwells835
      @williamwells835 6 лет назад +1

      Mark Hosmer . . . That's the one I believe I heard once, too; with the drumming somewhat louder to make it even more haunting. What I want played as they lay me in the grave, or put me on a pyre.
      "The Boys of Barns Straide" by Niamh Parsons is quite haunting, as well.

  • @TexasJon
    @TexasJon 12 лет назад +1

    Great rendition of this! :D

  • @Tygentis
    @Tygentis 15 лет назад

    This version is on the CD, The Ruby (Aly Bain & Phil Cunningham) - Whirlie Records.

  • @yesmhm69
    @yesmhm69 2 года назад +1

    2022 here! beautiful

  • @this0033
    @this0033 13 лет назад

    It's beautiful.

  • @Jeremyramone
    @Jeremyramone 11 лет назад +1

    likewise, it reminds me of the beautiful things in life. cheers from san diego.

  • @eurooscar1
    @eurooscar1 3 года назад

    Very beautiful!

  • @MartinJames389
    @MartinJames389 11 лет назад +13

    It's an Irish tune about the retreat of the Grand Armee from Moscow across Belarus, Ukraine, and Poland in 1812. Fewer than 1 in 6 survived. The Irish refugees, not the French, were the biggest element in the army.

    • @DanPurdy1
      @DanPurdy1 5 лет назад +2

      Yes, written by the Irish on the retreat.

    • @AbrahamLincoln4
      @AbrahamLincoln4 4 года назад +1

      @@DanPurdy1 The Irish must've fought for every army in the world. The French, the Germans, the Spanish, the British, the Americans.

  • @TheBachands
    @TheBachands 16 лет назад

    loved this video! excellent!

  • @NYyankee02
    @NYyankee02 11 лет назад +1

    beautiful!

  • @tomtscotland
    @tomtscotland  17 лет назад

    Thanks for info - will try and get this one.

  • @Finnr100
    @Finnr100 12 лет назад

    Beautiful!

  • @campbellrocksagain
    @campbellrocksagain 13 дней назад

    They played this in the ferry inn Stromness early today. Very good 👍

  • @niallmac44
    @niallmac44 12 лет назад

    Just thinking of some time in 1969 being in the Scotia Bar in Glasgow without my bodhran. I heard this fiddle player play and had to pick up a crate off the floor to play on. I bloodied my finger but got to play with Aly Bain.

  • @Utoober67
    @Utoober67 15 лет назад

    Speechless.

  • @derekwhitenz
    @derekwhitenz 12 лет назад +2

    That casualty rate sounds appalling - but remember - many of those foreign conscripts from central Europe were not willing supporters of Napoleon. As things began to turn against him it is on record that they began to desert in mass, taking their guns and equipment with them and simply joining the pursuing Russians to fight against the hated French. It is now impossible to determine the numbers involved but it needs to be remembered when reviewing the figures. Love the tune, by the way.

  • @daviemcf
    @daviemcf 15 лет назад

    Amazing music!!

  • @MartinJames389
    @MartinJames389 12 лет назад +2

    Both Scots and Irish people negotiated French assistance to get rid of the English several times. The deal was usually something like "Certainment, but you boys just come and help us with this war we're involved in first, then we'll send forces to help you."
    OK, a bit of a caricature, but true enough in this case. It never ended well.

    • @alexandermacrae9397
      @alexandermacrae9397 7 лет назад

      Origin of Bonaparte's Retreat, listen to this ancient Gaelic song that long predated Napoleon never mind the 1960s, ruclips.net/video/bzXswoAUi0U/видео.html. That warrior song as a slow march is where it came from.

  • @mactcampbell
    @mactcampbell 17 лет назад

    My, must we be so severely critical. Nice playing, Aly. I haven't heard O'Connor's version but we must be mindful never to let technicalities become detriment to the melody. I remember playing in session with Aly in Dr. Angus MacDonald's house in Cape Breton back in the early 80s and it sounds
    good to hear him again. It sure didn't appear to me that Aly was playing in an international competition on this video.
    Mac Campbell
    Port Hawkesbury, NS Canada

  • @sgtcrab1
    @sgtcrab1 11 лет назад +1

    Hey thanks! I googled that! What a great story.

  • @widd2
    @widd2 14 лет назад

    Great version, love the chords.