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Warbelow Range by Warbelow Range

Tracklist
1.Porthole of the Kelp - Garech's Wedding - O'Rourke's4:00
2.The Meelick Team - The Gallowglass - Humours of Drinagh4:48
3.The Pretty Girl Milking Her Cow3:48
4.Bean An Ti Ar Lar - The Fermoy Lasses - The Wind That Shakes The Barley3:55
5.John Brown the Emancipator3:33
6.Sweeney's Dream - Sailing Into Walpole's Marsh - Aggie Whyte's4:49
7.Maids of Selma - Hole in the Hedge - Road to Athlone5:02
8.Cottage In The Grove, The Curlew, Farewell to Ireland4:37
9.South of the Grampians - Toss the Feathers4:22
10.Luca at the Beehive - The Moving Clouds - Splendid Isolation - Dinny O'Brien's5:34
Credits
released February 17, 2019

Produced by Kyle Sanna and Caitlin Warbelow
Arrangements by Warbelow Range
Mixed by Kyle Sanna at Summercamp Studios
Mastered by John Baker at Philadelphia Post
Tracks 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, and 10 recorded by Alexis Berthelot at Studio G (Brooklyn, NY)
Tracks 7 and 8 recorded by Jeff Hill at The Bass Station (Brooklyn, NY)
Additional recording by Kyle Sanna at Summercamp Studios (Brooklyn, NY), Summercamp West (Pasadena, CA), and Hills Academy of Music, Art, and Dance (Torrence, CA)
Liner notes by Caitlin Warbelow
Graphic design by Pixel Parlor (Philadelphia, PA)
Photography by Iain Toft and Jack Hirschorn
Special thanks to executive producers Mike Leahy, Rich Brautigam, Miriam Buhl, Bill Hayden, Buck McAllister, and Nat Rocket

All tunes belong to the traditional Irish and American repertoires except Porthole of the Kelp (Bobby Casey), Garech's Wedding (Paddy Moloney), The Meelick Team (Eddie Kelly), The Curlew (Josephine Keegan), The Moving Clouds (Neillidh Boyle), Splendid Isolation (Brendan McGlinchey), and Luca at the Beehive (Caitlin Warbelow).

A note about the unusual fiddle you will hear on this record:
"The instrument Caitlin is playing is a "vioara cu goarna" or "violin with horn," commonly associated with folk music and dance in the region of Bihor, Romania. This violin uses a resonator to produce sound, and a horn to amplify and give its tones directional. It is likely based on the principles of the Stroh violin from the turn of the century"
-Bob Armistead, my dear friend and mentor who introduced me to this instrument

Enjoy and keep in touch! -Caitlin and the Range
warbelowrange@gmail.com
LicenseAll rights reserved.
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