Battlefield Band
is a Scottish traditional music group. Founded in Glasgow in the 1970s, it has undergone many changes of lineup, though founding member Alan Reid has remained a constant presence. Several former members, notably John McCusker, have developed distinguished solo careers. The band is noted for its combination of bagpipes with other instruments, and its mix of traditional songs and tunes with new material.
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BATTLEFIELD BAND TICKETS
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History
The band's current brand of music was developed when
Brian McNeill and Alan Reid were joined by (vocals, guitar, cittern, Appalachian dulcimer) and Duncan McGillivray (pipes and whistle).
Stand Easy
, the album they recorded in 1979, still stands up as one of the band's finest. The next line-up included
Dougie Pincock (bagpipes) and
Jim and
Sylvia Barnes, Alan Reid (vocals and electric keyboards) and Brian McNeill (
fiddle). Reid has been a member ever since.
Instruments and themes
Every line-up since the
Stand Easy
album (depending on how you count: either the band's third or fifth album) has had a bagpiper, and sometimes two. For a mainly instrumental and traditional band, the presence of electric keyboards is unusual but even more unusual is the absence of
percussion. Every album revives some well-researched, long-dead Scottish songs and tunes as well as modern compositions (often original ones). The music ranges from the usual drinking, friendship and hard times to history, geography and politics. As one of the most well-travelled folk bands of the past 20+ years it is no surprise that there have been some exhausted members.
The band's penultimate album,
The Road of Tears
, deals explicitly with the theme of displacement. Many of the songs deal with emigration, both voluntary and forced.
Battlefield Band's newest release (2007),
Dookin'
has a decidedly lighter feel, after the eloquently somber tone of
The Road of Tears
.
Dookin
includes the patented mix of vocals, with lead being shared by Alan Reid and Sean O'Donnell, and brilliant instrumentals.
Current members
- Alan Reid - keyboards/guitar/vocals (also only remaining, founding member of the band)
- Alasdair White - fiddle/tin whistle/banjo/bouzouki/Highland and small pipes/bodhran
- Mike Katz - Highland pipes/small pipes/various whistles/bass guitar
- Sean O'Donnell - vocals/guitar
Note: Sean O'Donnell is the most recent addition to Battlefield Band. Irish, he replaced former Irish vocal/guitarist Pat Kilbride July 2005.
Past members
- Brian McNeill - fiddle, writes detective novels, teaching with the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Dance
- John Gahagan - (fiddle/whistle) now working as a graphic artist in Glasgow and continuing to play music.
- - vocals, guitar, cittern and Appalachian dulcimer.
- John McCusker - fiddle, replacing McNeill seemed like an impossible task, but McCusker, still a teenager at the time, did it.
- Davy Steele - (1948–2001) sang with Drinkers Drouth, Ceolbeg and Clan Alba as well as making solo albums.
- Dougie Pincock - (bagpipes) now director of the National Centre of Excellence in Traditional Music (Sgoil Chiùil na Gàidhealtachd) in Plockton.
- Duncan MacGillivray - (bagpipes) has won many piping competitions, including the Gold Medal at the Northern Meeting in Inverness in 1997.
- Iain MacDonald - (bagpipes) was the musician in residence at the Gaelic College on the Isle of Skye.
- Alistair Russell - (guitar, vocal) during his 13 years in the band he claims to have travelled one million miles. Now acclaimed as a soloist.
- Pat Kilbride - (guitar, vocal) lived in Brittany, Belgium then the USA. He has recorded with "The Kips Bay Ceilidh Band" and done solo albums.
- Ged Foley - (guitar, vocal, Northumbrian pipes) has recorded with Patrick Street and the House Band
- Karine Polwart
- Jim and Sylvia Barnes - (bouzouki & vocal/dulcimer) came to Battlefield Band via Kentigern. Jim died in 2004.
- Jamie McMenemy - (bouzouki, vocal) still a very active musician and co-founder of the Breton group Kornog, now lives in Brittany
Discography
- Farewell to Nova Scotia (album)
(1976) (or Scottish Folk
)
- Battlefield Band
(1977)
- Wae's me for Prince Charlie (album)
(1978)
- At the Front
(1978)
- Stand Easy
(1979)
- Preview
(1980)
- Home is Where the Van Is
(1980)
- The Story So Far
(1982)
- There's a Buzz
(1982)
- Anthem for the Common Man
(1984)
- On the Rise
(1986)
- Music in Trust Vol 1
(1986)
- After Hours: Forward to Scotland's Past
(1987)
- Celtic Hotel
(1987)
- Music in Trust Vol 2
(1988)
- Home Ground - Live From Scotland
(1989)
- New Spring
(1991)
- Quiet Days
(1992)
- Opening Moves
(1993)
- Farewell to Nova Scotia (1CD)
(1996) (= Scottish Folk
reissue on CD)
- Threads
(1995)
- Across the Borders
(1997)
- Live Celtic Folk Music
(1998)
- Rain, Hail or Shine
(1998)
- Leaving Friday Harbor
(1999)
- Happy Daze
(2001)
- Time and Tide
(2002)
- Best of Battlefield 1976 - 2003
- Out for the Night
(2004)
- The Road of Tears
(2006)
- Dookin'
(2007)
- Zama Zama
('Try Your Luck') (2009)
Solo albums by past and former members
Davy Steele
- Long Time Getting Here
(1984)
- Summerlee
(1994)
- Chasing Shadows
(1998)
Brian McNeill
- Monksgate
(1978)
- Unstrung Hero
(1985)
- The Busker And Devil's Only Daughter
(1985)
- The Back o' the North Wind
(1991)
- No Gods
(1995)
- To Answer the Peacock
(1999)
Brian McNeill and Tom McDonagh
- Horses for Courses
(1993)
Brian McNeill and Iain MacKintosh
Brian McNeill and Alan Reid
Iain MacKintosh and Brian McNeill
Alistair Russell
- Getting to the Border
(1984)
- A19
(2002)
Alistair Russell and Chris Parkinson
- Paddy Goes To Huddersfield
(2001)
Alan Reid
Alan Reid and Rob van Sante
- Under the Blue
(2001)
- The Rise and Fall o' Charlie
(2009)
John McCusker
- John McCusker
(1995)
- Yella Hoose
(2000)
- Goodnight Ginger
(2003)
Blazin' Fiddles (includes John McCusker)
Mike Katz
- A Month of Sundays
(2004)
Dougie Pincock