rareTunes

Menu

Skip to content
  • Home
  • Folk
  • Tunes
  • Photies
  • Genres
  • Texts
  • Art
  • Shorts
  • rareTube
  • FAQ
  • Press
  • Contact

Mary Garden : The famous Scottish opera singer and actor sings her national songs

December 31, 2020December 31, 2020raretunes

https://raretunes.org/mary-garden-2/

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Like this:

Like Loading...
Uncategorized

Post navigation

← A captivating illustration of the linked traditions of song and piobaireachd
In regards that matter : a new tune from Fraser Fifield →

Image

Many thanks to our friend artist Michael McVeigh for sharing the fine painting on our home page that he completed during lockdown.

New Tunes

  • The Scattering ~ The Whistlebinkies with The Cutting Crew in 1988
  • Karel Fialka
  • Jack Lorimer
  • The Fluted Land
  • In regards that matter : a new tune from Fraser Fifield

Background

RareTunes was started in 2006 by Stuart Eydmann and the late Derek Hoy who saw the need for such an archive and wished to demonstrate its potential. It remains an independent, not for profit project undertaken without external funding.

For more information see the FAQ and PRESS pages.

Views

  • 47,984 hits

Rare

In modern Scots, 'rare' is applied to something special or particularly enjoyable. The Dictionary of the Scots Language quotes Ian Rankin in 'Black and Blue' (1999) writing: "Jings, but it was rare to be home."

Search

Enter your email address to follow RareTunes and receive notifications of new material by email:

Join 96 other followers

Creative Commons

Most of the recordings here are made available under Creative Commons licences, allowing you to copy and share them freely for personal enjoyment or for educational purposes. However, commercial use or reworking and building upon the material requires the owner's agreement and the source should be credited.

Most of our recordings are archived in high quality on the Internet Archive but some are hosted as MP3s on our site server. For more information visit the FAQ page.

Blog at WordPress.com.
%d bloggers like this: