• Rambling House introduction
    Apr 16 2021
    A welcome from the site founder, John Ward, to the website.
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    1 min
  • Checklist for Rambling House
    Apr 16 2021
    A quick word to say don't be put off by the amount of details below - they're just suggestions. It's your Rambling House evening, so just do the parts that appeal. 
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    1 min
  • 2. BF Introduction
    May 4 2021
    Show host, John Ward, started by wishing a very happy Bealtaine 2021 to everyone watching on Facebook live – and a happy Cantor Maggio to our Italian friends.
    The show coincided with the relaunch of the https://ramblinghouse.ie/ website. It opened with the original intro music from the 2009 radio series of Rambling House on ICR followed by Sean Beattie reading the traditional invitation poem made famous by the late Eamon Kelly in his RTÉ radio programme, The Rambling House: -

    ”The ricket is thatched, the fields are bare, Long nights are here again, The year was fine, but now ‘tis time, To hear the ballad men, Boul in, boul in and take a chair, Admission here is free, You’re welcome in the rambling house, To hear the Seanchaí”  
    The roll call of the guests on the show were: -
    ·      Mary Harte, archaeologist and broadcaster ·      Sean Beattie, historian and editor ·      Catherine Rhatigan, musician and producer ·      Seoirse O’Dochartaigh, musician and painter ·      Dessie McCallion, tour guide and oracle ·      Marie and the Magerini of Fabio and Gemateo in Italy

    Each gave their time generously and freely which was much appreciated. Much and all as it was enjoyed, I made the call to gather material for the other three cross-quarter days offline and at a less frenetic pace without IT gremlins abounding!
    Painting is Caisleán Ghleann Ó gCanannáin, Tulaigh an Rí: Feilim” (Glennagannon Castle, Tullynaree, Carndonagh: Felim [of the 4th Race]. It was one of 17 paintings from the series called Seacht Sliocht Uí Dhochartaigh Inis Eoghain (The Seven Races of Inishowen O’Doherty), from the same year. See www.seoirse.com for more.

    © 2021-2022 Racontour Productions. This clip forms part of the Celtic Calendar audio archive from Racontour Productions. Feel free to share if enjoyed, but with a credit or a social media tag to Racontour Productions please.
    SPOTIFY: This platform has allowed us to be creative in ensuring you can access it on your smart phone with ease. Below are the Spotify options: -
    Celtic Calendar playlist - no music, just audio of all four festivals.
    Samhain folklore - music and lore for Samhain
    Imbolc folklore - music and lore for Imbolc
    Bealtaine folklore - music and lore for Bealtaine
    Lughnasa folklore - music and lore for Lughnasa
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    2 mins
  • 3. BF Bealtaine overview
    May 4 2021
    Host John Ward tells us a bit more about the lore of Bealtaine. Recorded via Facebook Live on the 1st May 2021.

    Photo from 1964 in Co. Westmeath, Ireland. Thanks to Coimisiún Béaloideasa Éireann (CBÉ) / Irish Folklore Commission in UCD.

    © 2021-2022 Racontour Productions. This clip forms part of the Celtic Calendar audio archive from Racontour Productions. Feel free to share if enjoyed, but with a credit or a social media tag to Racontour Productions please.
    SPOTIFY: This platform has allowed us to be creative in ensuring you can access it on your smart phone with ease. Below are the Spotify options: -
    Celtic Calendar playlist - no music, just audio of all four festivals.
    Samhain folklore - music and lore for Samhain
    Imbolc folklore - music and lore for Imbolc
    Bealtaine folklore - music and lore for Bealtaine
    Lughnasa folklore - music and lore for Lughnasa
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    3 mins
  • 4. BF Beltany Stone Circle
    May 4 2021
    Speaker: Mary Harte
    Shrine 22: saluting the Sun. 
    Location: 54.851216, -7.604685

    Raphoe is the smallest cathedral city in Europe, but it a site of worship over a mile south of the 'city' that there stands one of the best preserved stone circles in Ireland. Reputedly older than Stonehenge, it consists of 64 standing stones out of an original 80. Beltony is a corruption of Baal tine, the fire of Baal; this suggests that the inhabitants of this area worshipped Baal, the sun god, and ruler of nature. 

    Tradition tells us that the principal ceremonies were performed at the summer solstice; a sacred fire was lit in the centre of the circle of stones, which represented the stars and fire of the sun god Baal. The Irish word for the month of May is 'Bealtaine', and two fires were lit on the first day of this month. 

    Domestic animals were then driven between the fires, so as to gain protection against diseases and the dreaded 'Evil Eye'. This custom has also been practised in other Celtic regions such as Scotland and Brittany. One romantic tale suggests that the outlying stone represents a musician, while the circle of stones represents dancers turned to stone for their revelry during the Sabbath. The more sober explanation is the alignment was used to determine astronomical alignments. We know which version we prefer to believe!
    In this extended audio piece, Mary Harte knows about this hallowed place near Raphoe. Get the accompanying GPS tour here: https://www.racontour.com/dhs/

    © 2021-2022 Racontour Productions. This clip forms part of the Celtic Calendar audio archive from Racontour Productions. Feel free to share if enjoyed, but with a credit or a social media tag to Racontour Productions please.
    SPOTIFY: This platform has allowed us to be creative in ensuring you can access it on your smart phone with ease. Below are the Spotify options: -
    Celtic Calendar playlist - no music, just audio of all four festivals.
    Samhain folklore - music and lore for Samhain
    Imbolc folklore - music and lore for Imbolc
    Bealtaine folklore - music and lore for Bealtaine
    Lughnasa folklore - music and lore for Lughnasa
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    9 mins
  • 5. BF Samhradh Samhradh! - the song of May
    May 4 2021
    Acclaimed artist Seorise O'Dochartaigh tells us about a song that has been associated with Bealtaine for centuries before signing his own version of the song from his 2018 album, Crimson Moon with his sleeve notes below -  see www.seoirse.com for more on this and his other projects. 2. Samhradh! Samhradh! (Summer! Summer!) "This song was sung on 'Baal tine' or 'May day' which was considered as the boundary day that divides Winter and Summer. On this day two separate parties met, the one dressed in the gloomy garb of Winter, the other in the gay dress of Spring. They carried on a sportive war for some time, but the Spring always obtained the victory: they then marched away in triumph, carrying branches with flowers attached to them, proclaiming and singing 'The Song of Joy' or 'We have brought the Summer in' " (Horncastle, Music of Ireland) Thugamar Féin an Samhradh Linn (“Samhradh! Samhradh!”) was sung by groups of children in 1662 to welcome the Duke of Ormond to Dublin as the Lord Lieutenant after the Restoration. It was sung again in 1689 when Patrick Sarsfield and King James landed at Kinsale. Although it displays a certain modernity, derived from continuous oral tradition, the medieval origins of this May Day song are plainly visible. Musically, it resembles the French estampie and verelai. Its wide melodic leaps of a sixth are typical of other music from the medieval period.   In Co. Louth, this song, within living memory, used to be sung by the youths and maidens on May-Eve while they carried around the “May-Baby” (Bábóg na Bealtaine) from house to house. The idea of interpolating the Tchaikovsky into the arrangement came about when I realized that several melodic phrases in the introductory part of the Andantino simplice to his 1st Piano Concerto were almost identical to phrases in the song. The Russian composer frequently used Ukrainian folk tunes in his works. In this case, he uses a simple, expressive melody beautifully decorated like the floral offerings of the Irish May-Day children. Tchaikovsky’s music, like the song itself, is absolutely glittering in sunshine.  Below we have listed the lyrics in both Irish and English.   Samhradh! Samhradh! (Trad. Arr. Seoirse Ó Dochartaigh)                 1. Babóg na Bealtaine, Maighdean an tSamhraidh,  Suas gach cnoc is síos gach gleann,  Cailíní maiseacha bán-gheala gléasta,  Thugamar Féin an Samhradh Linn.   curfá :-  Samhradh! Samhradh! Bainne na nGamhna  Thugamar Féin an Samhradh Linn.  Thugamar linn é is cé ‘bhainfeadh dínn é?  Thugamar Féin an Samhradh Linn.                             2. Thugamar linn é ón choill chraobhaigh,  Thugamar Féin an Samhradh Linn.  Samhradh buí na nóinín ngléigeal,  Thugamar Féin an Samhradh Linn.                             3. Tá an fhuiseog ag seinm ‘s ag luascadh sna spéartha,         Beach agus cuileog is bláth ar na crainn,  Tá an chuach is a héanlaith’ ag seinm le pléisiúir,  Thugamar Féin an Samhradh Linn.                                                           4. Cuileann is coll, trom is cárthainn,  Thugamar Féin an Samhradh linn  Fuinseog  ghléigeal Bhéal an Átha  Thugamar Féin an Samhradh linn.   ENGLISH TRANSLATION Babe of the May-time, Maid of the Summer, Up every hill and down every glen. Girls bedecked both bright and white, We brought the summer with us. chorus Summer! Summer! Milk of the Calves! We brought the summer with us. We brought it with us and who would take it from us? We brought the summer with us. We brought it with us from the branchy wood. We brought the summer with us. Yellow summer of the bright daisies We brought the summer with us. The lark is singing and swinging in the skies. Bees and insects and blossoms on the trees, The cuckoo and chicks are singing with pleasure We brought the summer with us. Holly and hazel, elder and rowan, We brought the summer with us. The brightest ash from the Mouth of the Ford, We brought the summer with us. (© and ℗ Seoirse Ó Dochartaigh, IMRO 2018)  © 2021-2022 Racontour Productions. This clip forms part of the Celtic Calendar audio archive from Racontour Productions. Feel free to share if enjoyed, but with a credit or a social media tag to Racontour Productions please. SPOTIFY: This platform has allowed us to be creative in ensuring you can access it on your smart phone with ease. Below are the Spotify options: - Celtic Calendar playlist - no music, just audio of all four festivals. Samhain folklore - music and lore for Samhain Imbolc folklore - music and lore for Imbolc Bealtaine folklore - music and lore for Bealtaine Lughnasa folklore - music and lore for Lughnasa
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    10 mins
  • 6. BF Boundaries
    May 4 2021
    Speakers: Dessie McCallion in conversation with John Ward

    The boundaries of a property had to be protected on May Day. Here, we talk about some of the customs and rituals that occured to do so.

    © 2021-2022 Racontour Productions. This clip forms part of the Celtic Calendar audio archive from Racontour Productions. Feel free to share if enjoyed, but with a credit or a social media tag to Racontour Productions please.
    SPOTIFY: This platform has allowed us to be creative in ensuring you can access it on your smart phone with ease. Below are the Spotify options: -
    Celtic Calendar playlist - no music, just audio of all four festivals.
    Samhain folklore - music and lore for Samhain
    Imbolc folklore - music and lore for Imbolc
    Bealtaine folklore - music and lore for Bealtaine
    Lughnasa folklore - music and lore for Lughnasa
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    2 mins
  • 7. BF Hawthorn, fire and fairies
    May 4 2021
    Inishowen tour guide, Dessie McCallion, gives a masterclass in these three Bealtaine topics.

    Fairy Dance painting by Howard Weingarden  1942-2011

    © 2021-2022 Racontour Productions. This clip forms part of the Celtic Calendar audio archive from Racontour Productions. Feel free to share if enjoyed, but with a credit or a social media tag to Racontour Productions please.
    SPOTIFY: This platform has allowed us to be creative in ensuring you can access it on your smart phone with ease. Below are the Spotify options: -
    Celtic Calendar playlist - no music, just audio of all four festivals.
    Samhain folklore - music and lore for Samhain
    Imbolc folklore - music and lore for Imbolc
    Bealtaine folklore - music and lore for Bealtaine
    Lughnasa folklore - music and lore for Lughnasa
    Show More Show Less
    9 mins