other titles...
- Shetlan
- Unst Boat Song
- Da Narrowa Wheel
- Da Day Dawn
- Baloo Balilli
- Boannie Tammie Scolla
- Da Selkie Wife's Sang
- Da Full Rigged Ship
- King Orfeo
- Unst Bridal March
Astrid Williamson
Shetland Suite
Incarnation Records / Believe
'Shetland Suite' is Brighton-based and Shetland-born singer-songwriter, Astrid Williamson’s, tenth studio album and comprises an evocative fusion of folk, electronics and field recordings on which Williamson plays everything.
It is a mixture of songs sung in Shetland dialect; tunes Williamson had learned on the fiddle whilst growing up and two songs sung in Old Norse or Norn, the language common to the Islands prior to Scots linguistic primacy which began in the mid 16th century (‘Unst Boat Song’ and ‘King Orfeo’).
Two non-traditional pieces also appear on Shetland Suite, ‘Da Selkie Wife’s Sang itself’, and ‘Shetlan’, which were written respectively by Mary Ellen Odie of Yell, and J. Peterson, the latter work being a popular poem to which Williamson wrote a new melody. Often unassuming in their melodic simplicity, the pieces lend themselves to evolving harmonic development, unfolding in low strings and organ drones (‘Da Narrowa Wheel’, ‘Bonnie Tammie Scolla’, ‘Baloo Balilli’). This is then augmented with choirs of layered harmonies, Williamson’s rhythmic voice creating textures such as whispering (‘Da Selkie Wife’s Sang’, ‘Shetlan’), breath recordings transformed into rhythmic loops (King Orfeo, Bonnie Tammie Scolla) and chants (‘Da Narrowa Wheel’).
In places, we can hear her de-tuned voice creating darker and deeper qualities (‘Da Selkie Wife’s Sang’). Rhythmically, there is also hand-clapping, knee slapping, table knocking and the occasional taiko sample to create the beats in songs such as ‘Boannie Tammie Scolla’ and ‘King Orfeo’. Field recordings of sea and wind enhance the naturalistic atmosphere, while subtle use of ambient electronic atmospherics imparts an ethereal quality to the album. 'Shetland Suite' is Williamson’s heartfelt tribute her mother, but also a love letter to these beautiful pieces of music.
Williamson lived in Shetland until she was fourteen years old and it was there that her mother introduced her to these songs. A piano teacher by profession, her mother took on a goddess-like status to the young Williamson as she listened to her mezzo-soprano ‘Selkie Wife’ drifting through her bedroom wall on a Saturday night. In stark contrast, the last time she heard her mother sing was during Covid shortly before she died. Although ravaged by dementia, and no longer able to speak, she could still remember the words to these songs – a poignant reminder of the power of music and how it becomes part of our lives.