Sings the songs of Robert Burns | ||||
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Studio album by Eddi Reader | ||||
Released |
12 May 2003 3 February 2004 |
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Recorded | By Robert Rankin at CaVa Studios, Glasgow | |||
Genre | Folk | |||
Length | 45:34 | |||
Label | Rough Trade | |||
Producer | Boo Hewerdine | |||
Eddi Reader chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
PopMatters | not rated link |
Daily Telegraph | CD of the year |
BBC | not rated link |
The songs of Robert Burns Deluxe Edition | ||||
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Studio album by Eddi Reader | ||||
Released | 12 January 2009 | |||
Recorded | By Robert Rankin at CaVa Studios, Glasgow | |||
Genre | Folk | |||
Length | 75:28 | |||
Label | Rough Trade | |||
Producer | Boo Hewerdine, Eddi Reader | |||
Eddi Reader chronology | ||||
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Deluxe Edition | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Sunday Mail | Avril Cadden |
The Big Issue | |
The List | Donald Reid |
thelondonpaper | Link |
The Sun | Link |
Sings the Songs of Robert Burns is the seventh studio album by Eddi Reader. It was released in the UK on 12 May 2003.
The album was premiered at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall as part of the Celtic Connections Festival in January 2003 and on release garnered Reader some of the best reviews of her career.
Reader explained how the album came about in the extensive liner notes, how when her family was relocated to the Ayrshire town of town of Irvine (Burns was from Ayrshire), how it "saved my life to be introduced to an alternative Scottish beauty and language... I often thought Robert Burns was for the highbrow and not the likes of me, the hardly educated, council estate, overspill girl. Now I see that I was wrong and that I am precisely the person Burns wrote for."
Reader says she has discovered in Robert Burns something she believes has been overlooked in the approach to his work, and she believes that her interpretations of his poetry will reach more ears than have previously heard him.
She explains: "I sang My Love's Like a Red, Red Rose to a bunch of 'worse for the drink' people in a bar in Glasgow one cold January night and I felt something happening between me and the words and the people listening, something profoundly moving. After all my travels singing songs to people, I recognised this as being a vein of emotional gold as yet unmined ... I began to be spooked by him and started on a journey to find him, Robert, the guy from Ayrshire that I would have drunk with, walked with and probably got into trouble with. I wanted to show him off to everyone, sit folk down and say 'no! no! listen, listen, really listen, listen to this...'"
A new edition of the album, with seven extra tracks, was released in the UK on 12 January 2009. The album was re-released to coincide with the 250th anniversary of the birth of Robert Burns.
Of the seven additional songs, two were from the original 2003 sessions ("Green Grow the Rashes O", "Of A' the Airts"), three were previously available on 2007's Peacetime ("Ye Banks and Braes", "Aye Waukin-O" and "Leezie Lindsay") "Dainty Davie", also from that session was previously unreleased, and "Comin' Thro the Rye/Dram Behind the Curtain" was a brand new recording. "Dram Behind the Curtain" was written by the Scottish Highlands composer and accordionist Mairearad Green.
The album was promoted, like its original release, with two sold out shows at the Celtic Connections festival in Glasgow. The deluxe edition is dedicated to Kevin McCrae, the Scottish composer, arranger, conductor and cellist, who died in April 2005. McCrae conducted and arranged the strings on the original album. The additional tracks are: